Ferguson-McKinney Dry Goods Co. v. Beuckman

198 S.W. 504, 198 Mo. App. 41, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 8
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 504 (Ferguson-McKinney Dry Goods Co. v. Beuckman) 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
Ferguson-McKinney Dry Goods Co. v. Beuckman, 198 S.W. 504, 198 Mo. App. 41, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 8 (Mo. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

This action, commenced by plaintiff below, now respondent as well as plaintiff in error, counts on a promissory note dated at St. Louis, February 1, 1910, for $2991.18, the note signed by appellant and defendant in error, the amount payable after date on demand with interest to be compounded annually. Judgment is asked for the amount of the note and interest.

The answer, admitting the execution and delivery of the note, after denying any indebtedness thereon, by way of defense states that in the years 1907 and 1908 and prior thereto, defendant was engaged in the mercantile business as a retail dealer in general merchandise in Ozark, Arkansas;. that in those years he became heavily involved financially and failed in business, and .was indebted to many different creditors in various amounts aggregating in all several thousand dollars; that plaintiff was one of these creditors and that defendant at that time owed plaintiff $7623.34;. [50]*50that when defendant became so involved financially, at the suggestion of plaintiff, a compromise or composition was entered into by defendant with his creditors, whereby the latter agreed to accept in settlement and payment of their respective claims the sum of fifty cents on the dollar thereon; that plaintiff urged the execution of this compromise agreement upon, and caused it to be presented to defendant’s creditors for their approval . and execution, and that it was signed and executed by plaintiff and the defendant’s creditors upon the request of plaintiff, and the compromise or composition carried out and the sum of fifty cents on the dollar of the respective claims paid by defendant to his creditors under this agreement; that at the time of the execution of the composition agreement by the defendant’s creditors and at the time it was' carried out and fifty cents on the dollar paid to the creditors, plaintiff urged and insisted secretly that defendant pay plaintiff the full amount of its claim but concealed such demand from the other creditors of defendant and pretended to the other creditors that it was to receive payment of its claim at the rate of fifty cents on the dollar, the same as was to be received by defendant’s other creditors; that by reason of and in pursuance of these demands of plaintiff that defendant pay it the full amount of its claim, defendant did pay to plaintiff on its claim fifty cents on the dollar as provided by the composition agreement,, and in addition thereto the sum of $1181.16 and executed the note herein sued upon for the amount of $2991.18 for the balance of plaintiff’s claim, with interest thereon, and delivered it to plaintiff; that this note now sued upon was given to plaintiff by reason of these secret and fraudulent demands made by plaintiff and in fraud of the other creditors and of defendant and is null and void. Wherefore defendant demands that he be dismissed with his costs.

By way of a counterclaim, defendant, repeating the averments in his answer, alleges that by reason of plaintiff’s secret and fraudulent demands that he do so,' he had paid plaintiff the sum of $1181.16 in [51]*51cash over and above the fifty cents on the dollar, as provided by the composition agreement, and had executed the note in suit for the balance of plaintiff’s claim by reason of plaintiff’s secret, unreasonable and fraudulent demand, as before set out, and he avers that by reason of the premises he (defendant) is entitled to judgment against plaintiff. for the sum of $1181.16, so paid to plaintiff, for which, with costs, he prays judgment.

The plaintiff replied to 'the. answer by a general denial and after a general denial of the averments of the counterclaim it is set up that on September 21, 1909, defendant filed a petition in bankruptcy and received his discharge in bankruptcy on January 18, 1910, after the alleged transactions in the defendant’s counterclaim; that the amount alleged in defendant’s counterclaim to have been paid by him to plaintiff was not scheduled among his assets or filed by the defendant in the bankruptcy proceedings, and that any right, title or interest that defendant may have had in and to the amount alleged in the counterclaim has been divested by the bankruptcy proceedings, and that defendant is thereby estopped to • set np any claim thereto.

What is called a replication was filed to this answer to the counterclaim, denying the averments of it.

The cause was submitted to the court, a jury being waived, and after being taken under advisement the court found for defendant on plaintiff’s cause of action and for plaintiff on defendant’s counterclaim, rendering judgment accordingly. On the same day upon which the court rendered its finding and judgment, the court, at the request of counsel for defendant, filed instructions or declarations of law, two of which were given and one refused. The first of those given was to the effect that if the note sued on was given under the circumstances set out in the answer, plaintiff could not recover. The one marked third asked and given was to the effect that if the court, sitting as a jury, found from the evidence that a few of the credi[52]*52tors of the defendant did not sign the agreement referred to, to accept fifty cents on the dollar for their respective claims, yet if the court further believed from the evidence that plaintiff waived the signatures of such creditors by asking that the terms of the agreement be carried out without other signatures, plaintiff cannot now be heard to complain of the failure of such creditors to sign the contract.

We will notice the second declaration asked and which ■ was refused wherf we hereafter treat of the counterclaim, as it was. pertinent to that alone.

Following the decision of the court, plaintiff moved for a hew trial on the finding of the court against it on its cause of action, which motion was overruled, and plaintiff, excepting, sued out its writ of error.

The defendant also filed a motion for a new trial on'the' finding against him on his counterclaim, which motion was overruled, defendant excepting, thereupon appealing to our court.

Counsel for the respective parties raise many points and have favored us with very elaborate arguments, these arguments accompanied by the citation of numerous authorities. In our view of the case it lies within a very narrow compass.

Considering .the position of plaintiff as plaintiff in error and covering the action of the court in finding against it and for the defendant on the note sued on, we think that the action of the trial court in so finding was sustained by the facts and by authority.

In 5 Ruling Case Law, p. 874, section 7, it is stated:

“The weight of authority is clear that a creditor not guilty of fraud may recover on the original claim and ignore a general composition where another creditor has secretly obtained an undue advantage and a fraudulent preference in the composition.”

We have no such situation here. After stating the rule as above, that authority proceeds:

“But a creditor guilty of a fraud on the other creditors in obtaining a secret preference cannot recover on a note or other contract for the balance of [53]*53Ms original claim remaining after receiving payment under the composition.”

The note at page 38, 27 L. R. A. (1895), to Hanover National Bank v. Blake, 143 N. Y. 404, is cited for this, and a reference to that shows abundant authority in support of the text.

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198 S.W. 504, 198 Mo. App. 41, 1917 Mo. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-mckinney-dry-goods-co-v-beuckman-moctapp-1917.