Fager v. Storms

382 S.W.2d 801, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 755
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 5, 1964
DocketNo. 23872
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 382 S.W.2d 801 (Fager v. Storms) 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
Fager v. Storms, 382 S.W.2d 801, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 755 (Mo. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

SAMUEL A. DEW, Special Commissioner.

The plaintiffs sued to recover damages for conversion of certain road machinery. Upon trial without a jury, the court gave judgment for the plaintiffs for $10,000. Defendants have appealed.

This case is related to two companion cases with which it was tried, but not consolidated. They are: Kansas State Bank v. Storms et al., No. 23,873, Mo.App., 382 S.W.2d 805 and State ex rel. for the Use of Fager and Friesen Insurance Company v. Storms-Green Construction Company et al., No. 23,874, Mo.App., 382 S.W.2d 812. A separate judgment was rendered in each of the three cases, separate appeals taken and a single transcript filed in this court. For a more extensive account of the background of the transactions involved in the instant case reference may be had to the case of Kansas State Bank v. Storms et al., supra.

Defendants were prime contractors under a contract with the Highway Commission of Missouri for the construction and preparation of the roadbed to improve Route Í#67 in St. Francois County, Missouri. They subcontracted to Dale Bloom, a contractor, for that part of the job that required the excavation of rock. He owned and operated heavy road machinery and equipment necessary for that part of the road construction. Due to many unforeseen adversities, Bloom became insolvent with his subcontract far from completion.

Defendants, responsible as prime contractors for completion of the entire contract, entered into a written agreement with Bloom, dated December 26, 1958, to assume the unfinished part of his subcontract, to pay all of his debts incurred thereunder, to employ him as a superintendent on the job, and for Bloom to convey to the defendants thereby the road machinery in question, to be reconveyed to him under certain conditions provided for therein, more particularly noted later in this opinion. The written agreement was never recorded.

The plaintiffs were insurance agents in Overbrook, Kansas. They were partners and were cashier and assistant cashier, respectively, of Kansas State Bank in that town and operated their insurance agency in the quarters of that bank. They had furnished Bloom much of his insurance over the past years, and his overdue account with them for unpaid insurance premiums had accumulated to the amount of $13,831.55. To secure that indebtedness to plaintiffs, Bloom, on January 1, 1959, gave them his note for that amount, secured by a chattel mortgage on certain of the road machinery on the above job site in St. Francois County, Missouri. The note and mortgage were made on the bank’s forms designating the Kansas State Bank as payee and mortgagee, but the bank disclaimed any interest in them and promptly assigned them to the plaintiffs. The trial court ruled that the plaintiffs were at all times the true owners of the note and mortgage, which ruling was supported by substantial evidence. The mortgage was thereafter recorded January 17, 1959, in St. Francois County, Missouri, where the property was located and on February 2, 1959, in Douglas County, Kansas, where Bloom resided. The note becoming in default, plaintiffs, on September 11, 1959, demanded possession of the mortgaged property.

Certain parts of the mortgaged machinery and equipment had been seized by the holders of a prior mortgage (Kansas State Bank) and some had been sold by the defendants herein for $5,000 which, it is agreed, was its reasonable market value. Some was still retained by the defendants of the agreed reasonable market value of $5,000. The court found that the defendants had thus converted the mortgaged property to their own use and benefit and that the amount due on the Bloom note held by plaintiffs, with interest, was $10,997.20.

The new working agreement between Bloom and defendants above mentioned, covering the assumption of his subcontract by defendants, purporting on its face to have been executed December 26, 1958 and, therefore, to antedate plaintiffs’ mortgage [803]*803of January 1, 1959, set forth the conditions and reasons for its execution and its mutual purposes, and thereafter it read as follows :

“3. Second Party hereby sells, assigns and transfers all right, title, interest or equity in and to all construction equipment, parts, supplies or other merchandise which he now has on the job.
* * * * X *
“5. When that part of the job heretofore sublet to Second Party has been fully completed, there shall be a final accounting at which time all expenses incurred by First Parties in completing the contract heretofore sublet to Second Party (including all bills which First Parties shall be required to pay that were incurred by Second Party in performing his part of the subcontract) shall then be balanced against all accounts that should be credited to Second Party for the work performed on such sub-contract, after which the surplus, if any, shall be paid to Second Party, and all equipment conveyed to First Parties under the provisions of this contract shall be returned and transferred to Second Party; should such accounting show that First Parties have incurred a loss, then in such event First Parties shall have the right to sell or dispose of all equipment conveyed to them by Second Party under the terms of this agreement, and proceeds from such sale shall be applied to reduce such loss, and the balance of such loss, if any, shall then be an obligation against Second Party”.

The plaintiffs firmly contend that the above agreement was by no means a Bill of Sale for the property referred to therein, nor otherwise a conveyance of title thereto, but a mere security device to secure defendants in undertaking the completion of Bloom’s unfinished subcontract, and that, further, the Bloom agreement though dated December 26, 1958, was in fact not signed and executed by the parties until January 4, 1959, subsequent to Bloom’s note and mortgage of January 1, 1959 held by the plaintiffs.

Defendants just as vigorously argue that their agreement with Bloom was agreed to and executed on December 26, 1958, as it states; that it was error to permit evidence to the contrary since defendant Horace Green, who signed for defendants, had since died; that the agreement did transfer and assign the Bloom equipment to defendants, including all right, title and interest therein to be used in the completion of the Bloom subcontract and to compensate defendants for assuming Bloom’s obligation; that the equipment was not security for the payment of a certain future debt exceeding the value of the property. It is insisted that to constitute the relationship of mortgagor and mortgagee the mortgagor “must retain the ability to recover the property by payment or performance”.

The court found that the Bloom agreement with defendants dated December 26, 1958, constituted a security device and not a bill of sale and “did not transfer absolute title to the defendants of any of the equipment described in the mortgage contained in plaintiffs’ Exhibit 6”. Defendants’ first point of error is that the court should have found that Bloom conveyed the property to defendants by his contract of December 26, 1958.

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Related

Kansas State Bank v. Storms
382 S.W.2d 805 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
382 S.W.2d 801, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fager-v-storms-moctapp-1964.