Ensign v. Home for the Jewish Aged

274 S.W.2d 502, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 25
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1955
Docket22122
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 274 S.W.2d 502 (Ensign v. Home for the Jewish Aged) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ensign v. Home for the Jewish Aged, 274 S.W.2d 502, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 25 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

DEW, Judge.

Plaintiffs sued to cancel their joint promissory note for $2,500, payable to defendant on demand, on the ground that they executed it under duress. Defendant denied the. plea of duress, pleaded valid consideration and filed the note as a counterclaim. The court found the issues for the defendant on the plaintiffs’ petition and sustained its counterclaim in the amount of $2,500. Plaintiffs have appealed.

It is alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition that defendant is a corporation, doing business as a home for the aged; that it makes certain charges for board and lodging furnished aged persons placed in its care; that plaintiffs placed their mother in said Home and agreed to pay and did fully pay said charges for her care from the date of her entrance until her death, a period of fifteen weeks; that defendant induced plaintiffs to execute their note for $2,500, due on demand, payable to defendant; that plaintiffs did execute said note under duress, in that they did so because defendant threatened to prevent their mother from entering said Home when she was ill and in need of care furnished there; that plaintiffs’ signatures to the note were not their free act and deed, their free will being overcome by the above threat and their mother’s serious condition, and plaintiffs would not otherwise have signed the note; that the note called for payment far in excess, of actual charges made by defendant’ for the services provided ; that the note was without consideration and void. It is further alleged that the note was negotiable, and plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law, being faced with a multiplicity of suits and irreparable injury. It was prayed that the court require defendant to produce the note; that the court decree it null and void, and to grant the plaintiffs such further relief as the court may deem proper.

The answer denied the controversial allegations of the petition; asserted that defendant is a charitable nonprofit organi-sation; that it has no outstanding stock and declares no dividends; that none of its receipts inure to the benefit of any person, firm • or corporation; that it makes no. certain ■charges for care-of aged persons; that it is maintained solely by charitable contributions 1 from its residents, their familys, and assistance from the United Funds of Kansas City, 'Missouri. The answer averred that plaintiffs’ mother was received as a resident of the Home, and that plaintiffs agreed to pay certain amounts as charity to the institution on condition of her admission and care, and are .still indebted to defendant in the sum of $2,500. The answer alleged that defendant was never obliged to admit the mother of plaintiffs but that plaintiffs voluntarily agreed to contribute certain charity *504 to the Home, including the note referred to in plaintiffs’ petition. It was further stated that many of the residents of the Home are without funds, which must be obtained for their care from the charity of others; that plaintiffs’ mother was first refused admission because her husband and the plaintiffs were people of sufficient means to care for her elsewhere; that plaintiffs repeatedly urged defendant to receive their mother and offered said note for $2,500 as an inducement for such admission, and said note was tendered and delivered as a charitable contribution to defendant and to its purposes, and not otherwise. By amendment .the defendant pleaded the note referred to as a counterclaim.

According to the evidence Mrs., Tillie Kaufman was 77 years of age at the time of her death on April 23," 1951. For many years she and her husband Nathan Kaufman, aged 85 years, had been separated. He.paid her $75 a. month. for her support. . The plaintiff Mrs. Ensign, a daughter, is a widow, and-lives with her children in Garrison, Kansas, where she is employed. The plaintiff Mrs. Liebling, another daughter, lives with her husband, a grocer in Kansas Gity, and she is .employed as a typist. Plaintiff Phil Kaufman, a son, owns and operates.a window shade business in Kansas City, and lives in that city with his family. For many years Mrs-. Kaufman had expressed a desire sometime to become :a resident of the - defendant Home of which she always said she was a “member”. No evidence of any such membership was produced except a suggestion that at one time she may have been a member of a Ladies Auxiliary interested in the Home, and that the dues of such members were $3 a year.

In 1950, when plaintiffs’ mother .was 76 years of age, she had a heart attack. Her daughter, Mrs. Liebling, sent her to Research Hospital in Kansas City. After three weeks she was brought back to Mrs. Lieb-ling’s home. Six weeks later she was taken to a convalescent home. She was unhappy and lonely there and in ten- days was again sent to the hospital. After six- or eight weeks she moved to a private, kitchenétte. Plaintiff Phil Kaufman had a family, was in debt, had sickness in his home, and. it was-felt that he had no place to keep his mother. Neither of the other plaintiffs was situated so as to give her mother suitable lodging and care in her home. It being difficult to find a housekeeper to stay with Mrs. Kaufman, all the time and take care of her, an application was made in December, 1950, for her admission to defendant’s Home. A- meeting -was had between plaintiffs, Mrs. Lieb-ling, Phil Kaufman and the defendant’s-Board of Governors.

According to the plaintiffs’ evidence, they were told by counsel for defendant, who was-present at the meeting with defendant’s-Board, that plaintiffs’ father had been investigated, was.a man of means and that it would take $5,000 to get. their mother in the Home; but that since the plaintiffs did not have the money,. it would take a lawsuit against the father to get it. Mrs. Kaufman became ill at this meeting and was taken-away. Plaintiffs were told at the meeting that the suit against their father would have to be for $10,000, of which the defendant would receive $5,000,, and the balance would go for fees. These requirements were told to plaintiff Mrs. Ensign in December, 1950, . when she arrived in Kansas City. An agreement was later signed by plaintiffs with the defendants counsel to bring such an action . against Nathan Kaufman, which agreement ■ was , later abandoned. and. no suit was brought, on account of other arrangements made by plaintiffs to raise the funds; that is, Mrs. Ensign decided that since the suit would be hard on her mother and the Home would get only $5,000, and since the suit would be against her father, then 82 years old, and wreck his estate, and make him, too, dependent on the plaintiffs, therefore, she offered to raise $2,500 in cash out of her own savings, to ■ pay defendant, and suggested that the three plaintiffs guarantee the payment of the other $2,500 when the father passed away. This proposition, believed by plaintiffs necessary to gain admittance for .their mother, and to prevent a suit against their aged father, was made .to the defendant, which accepted it with the additional requirement that plaintiffs pay $150 a month *505 to the defendant Home while their mother remained a resident.

The evidence of the plaintiffs .further tended to show that on December 27, 1950, all the plaintiffs signed and delivered the, note for $2,500, payable on demand, to the defendant, and that Mrs. Ensign, on -December 28, 1950, mailed from Topeka, Kansas, $2,500 in cash to defendant. She ánd¡ Mrs. Liebling also paid the $150 a month during the fourteen weeks and a fraction which their mother spent in the Home prior to her death.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W.2d 502, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ensign-v-home-for-the-jewish-aged-moctapp-1955.