Eby v. Wilson

289 S.W. 639, 315 Mo. 1214, 50 A.L.R. 268, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 639 (Eby v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eby v. Wilson, 289 S.W. 639, 315 Mo. 1214, 50 A.L.R. 268, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 616 (Mo. 1926).

Opinions

This is a suit for libel wherein the plaintiffs had a verdict and judgment against George E. Wilson, and Frank R. *Page 1219 Hull, two, of a number of defendants, and the defendants just named were allowed their several appeals to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. Upon the hearing, two of the judges concurred in an opinion for the affirmance of the judgment, but one of the judges dissented, expressing the view that the opinion of the majority was in conflict with certain decisions of this court, and upon his request, the cause has been transferred to this court for final determination.

The plaintiffs were dealers in automobiles at Excelsior Springs, and the defendants Wilson and Hull were, respectively, president and cashier of the Bank of Excelsior Springs. The other defendants joined were directors of that bank. The petition contained six counts, and each count was based upon a letter written by defendant Hull, as cashier; but the letters were worded alike, except that each letter was written to a different person. The plaintiffs dismissed their suit as to the fifth count, and the jury found for the defendants upon all the counts except the first, and upon the first count returned a verdict against defendants Wilson and Hull, in the sum of $3,000 as actual damages. There was a prayer for punitive damages, but no allowance of punitive damages.

The petition set forth the character of the business of plaintiffs, and the further material allegations of the first count are as follows:

"That on or about the nineteenth day of May, 1920, the plaintiff sold to a customer, one Hugo Deiter, a Chevrolet Touring Car, numbered 722,990, and represented said car to be free and clear of any mortgage, and the said Deiter paid the plaintiffs the full price of said car, to-wit, the sum of $886.85; that all of said facts were well known to the defendants.

"That defendants wickedly and maliciously conspired together to injure the plaintiffs in their said business and in their good name and repute as honest dealers in motor cars and trucks, and for that purpose did falsely, maliciously and wrongfully write a certain letter to said Hugo Deiter, in which letter they stated of and concerning the plaintiffs and of and concerning the said car so purchased by Hugo Deiter the following false and libelous matter to-wit:

BANK OF EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, Excelsior Springs, Missouri.

George E. Wilson, President, William H. Lyle, Vice-President, Frank R. Hull, Cashier, W.B. Greason, Asst. Cashier.

April 14, 1921.

Mr. Hugo Deiter, City,

Dear Sir: —

Please be advised that we hold an unsatisfied mortgage on the Chevrolet Touring Car which you purchased from the Eby Motor Company.

Yours very truly, FRANK R. HULL, Cashier.

*Page 1220

"That the defendants meant by said letter, and the said letter was understood by the said Hugo Deiter to mean, that the plaintiffs had wrongfully, fraudulently and dishonestly sold to said Hugo Deiter a car that was mortgaged, without notifying or letting the said Hugo Deiter know of the existence of said mortgage and had collected from him the full value of said car; that plaintiffs were guilty of a felony by fraudulently selling said motor car without the written consent of the Bank of Excelsior Springs and without informing said Hugo Deiter that said car was mortgaged."

There was also an allegation that by reason of the writing and publication of the letters, plaintiffs had lost customers and were injured in their business. The answer admitted the writing of the letters to the persons named in the several counts, and averred that each of the cars was sold without the consent of said bank; that the letters were written in good faith; that the parties to whom the letters were written had corresponding interests in the cars purchased and that each of the said letters was a privileged communication. The answer set up the making of two several chattel mortgages by plaintiffs to said bank, and pleaded also that prior to the writing of the letter to Hugo Deiter, mentioned in the first count. Millard Cheek, one of the plaintiffs, notified defendants that the car sold by plaintiffs to said Hugo Deiter was covered by the mortgages mentioned, and that at the time said letter was written by defendant Hull, he relied upon the statement made by said Cheek that the car sold to Deiter was covered by a mortgage to said bank, and that thereby plaintiffs were estopped from denying that the mortgage covered said automobile.

The substance of the evidence as developed in the trial is stated in the majority opinion as follows:

"For sometime prior to June 12, 1920, plaintiffs were borrowers of money from the bank and had become indebted to it at one time to the extent of $20,000 or $21,000. On June 12, 1920, the bank asked for a chattel mortgage on plaintiffs' stock of automobiles to secure the amount then due. This mortgage was executed and filed with the Recorder of Deeds. It purported to secure $13,000, which plaintiffs then owed the bank. It was agreed orally that plaintiffs should continue to sell cars and plaintiffs continued without interruption to sell automobiles through the summer of 1920. The money received from the sale of the cars was deposited in the bank, and the cars as they were sold were checked off of a list kept by Perrett, the cashier. Nothing was said about releasing from the lien of the mortgage the cars sold. On August 16, 1920, many of the cars covered by the bank's mortgage having been sold, new cars taking their place and the notes evidencing the bank's debt having been changed, the bank took a new mortgage covering the whole of plaintiffs' stock. While the first mortgage was filed it was never released as agreed between the parties, *Page 1221 although the second mortgage was taken to secure the whole indebtedness due the bank on August 16th, the date the second mortgage was taken. The mortgages contained a provision that in case of a sale or disposition of the property covered, the bank could take possession of all the property and sell the same for its indebtedness. The second mortgage also contained a provision contemplating the sale of cars by plaintiffs and provided for an accounting to the bank for the proceeds.

"About this time the defendant Hull became the cashier of the bank and soon plaintiffs became tardy in the payment of their notes and were being continually urged by the bank to reduce their indebtedness. Finally at the time of the writing of the letters complained of the indebtedness had been reduced to $3100. In the meantime plaintiffs and their friends had become the owners of a majority of the stock in the bank and had unsuccessfully attempted to oust defendants as officers of the bank. Hard feeling was engendered over this action. After this, in April, 1921, the bank sent a committee, composed of defendant Wilson, and two members of the board of directors, to plaintiffs' place of business, with instructions to check up the cars then on the floor that constituted the bank's security. The evidence is undisputed that none of the plaintiffs knew that this visit was for any other purpose than to ascertain whether the amount of stock on hand was sufficient to secure the indebtedness. Plaintiff Cheek was in charge and gave the information requested. The committee would examine its list and ask Cheek whether the car had been sold and he would tell them and they would examine the numbers on the car to verify the information that the car was unsold.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 639, 315 Mo. 1214, 50 A.L.R. 268, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eby-v-wilson-mo-1926.