Funkhouser v. Ingles

17 Mo. App. 232, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 83
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 Mo. App. 232 (Funkhouser v. Ingles) 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
Funkhouser v. Ingles, 17 Mo. App. 232, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 83 (Mo. Ct. App. 1885).

Opinion

Opinion by

Philips, P. J.

As this cause rests wholly upon the sufficiency of the petition, we set it out in full:

"Plaintiffs state that on the 17th day of August, 1880, they executed a note together with one Charles J. Nesbitt, [235]*235for six hundred dollars, payable to the Merchants-National bank at St. Joseph, dne ninety days after date, with interest from maturity at the rate of eight per cent. That plaintiffs executed said note as security and for the accommodation of said Nesbitt, and with the understanding and agreement that said Nesbitt should execute to them a mortgage on a printing' office, including all the furniture, presses, and material belonging thereto, situated in the city of Plattsburg, in said county, and known as the Purifier, to secure against liability on said note.
“ Plaintiffs state that the defendant was at said time, an attorney at law and notary public, doing business in said city of Plattsburg, and as such was applied to by said Nesbitt, and the' plaintiff, George P. Funkhouser, for himself and other plaintiffs to draft a mortgage on said property for said purpose and take the acknowledgment of said Nesbitt thereto; that said mortgage was duly executed and acknowledged, defendant performing theservic'e aforesaid as requested by said parties.
“ Plaintiffs state that defendant was requested by said George P. Funkhouser for himself and the other plaintiffs, and then and there promised and agreed, to place said mortgage in the recorder’s office for record so as to complete and perfect plaintiff’s security against any and all other debts, or mortgages upon said property, which said. Nesbitt might contract. Plaintiffs state that said property was sufficient to indémify them against any loss by reason, of executing said note. Plaintiffs state that said Nesbitt did contract other debts and execute other mortgages on said property for the security of the defendant and other parties to the full value of said property, with the knowledge of defendant, and notwithstanding the-defendant knew such subsequent mortgages were about to be executed, defendant concealed his knowledge of plaintiff’s mortgage, and for the purpose and with the intention fraudulently to deprive plaintiffs of their security and gain priority over plaintiff’s mortgage for' himself and other parties and.in violation and disregard, of his agreement and undertaking to record plaintiff’s [236]*236mortgage, and well knowing plaintiffs relied on Mm to file the same for record, defendant failed to record said mortgage, and without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent, ■destroyed the same. Plaintiffs state that they were by the means aforesaid wholly defeated in their said security; that they have been compelled to pay and discharge said •debt, amounting, principal and interest, to six hundred and-dollars.
■ ‘ Plaintiffs state that said Nesbitt is, and was at the time ■said mortgage was given, wholly insolvent, and plaintiffs Would not have signed said note except for the security .aforesaid, all of which was well known to defendant.
“Plaintiffs state that by reason of the premises they have been damaged to the sum of six hundred and-■dollars, for which they pray judgment, six per cent, interest, from the —--day of-, 1881.”

To this petition, the defendant interposed the following demurrer:

Now here comes the defendant, Charles Ingles, and demurs to the plaintiff’s petition for the following reasons:

1st. Because petition does not state facts sufficient in law to constitute a cause of action.

2d. Because the petition fails to show any consideration paid to defendant by plaintiffs for the promise and undertaking set forth in their complaint.

3d. Because the complaint wholly fails to show any legal liability on part of the defendant to perform the acts complained of in their said complaint.

The court sustained the demurrer, and plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

1. The principal objection urged against the petition is, that it fails to disclose any consideration, moving from plaintiffs to the defendant, for the undertaking, and, therefore, it is a case for the application of the rule: ex nudo pacto non oritur actio. If this were an action based simply on the contract, and seeking to enforce it, the ■demurrer would be well taken. The transaction between plaintiffs and defendant constitutes a mandate. “A mandate,” says Kent, “is when one undertakes, without [237]*237recompense, to do some act for another in respect to the-thing bailed.” Story defines a mandate to be “a bailment of personal property, in regard to which the bailee engages to do some act without reward.”

It is, therefore, much allied in its characteristics to a deposit. The unquestioned rule of the civil law was, that while the mandatory was at perfect liberty to reject the-office, and might at any time discontinue his trust by restoring the property to the owner, yet having accepted the property, and retaining it, he must perform his undertaking, and in default thereof he was held liable for all damage resulting from his nonfeasance, as much so as in the case of a positive misfeasance.

And Sir William Jones, in his work on Bailments, contends that the same doctrine obtains in the common law. Story, however, in his treatise on Bailments, sects.. 170-171, makes a distinction between the nonfeasance and the malfeasance of the mandatory. As to the former,'a valuable consideration being an indispensable element in executory contracts, the undertaking is to be treated as purely gratuitous, and absolutely void. As to the latter there is a liability, resting on the plain principle of justice that the mandatory has, in the first instance, his free will and pleasure to accept or refuse the office, and to renounce it after the undertaking, provided he restores the property and places the mandator in statu quo.

If he accepts the undertaking, it is deemed a part execution of the contract, and it is sufficient consideration to support the contract. ‘ For in such a case there arises, from such a delivery and receipt, a sufficient consideration to support the contract and to found an action for any negligence or omission in the due execution of the mandate. It is not necessary, to constitute a sufficient consideration to support the contract, that the bailee should derive some benefit from it. It will be sufficient if the bailor, on the faith of the promise, parts with some present right, or delays .the present use of some right, or suffers some immediate prejudice or detriment, or does some act at the bailee’s request.” (Story on Bailment, 162, 9th ed.)

[238]*238Cooley on Torts, pp. 629-632, says: “The bailee who accepts a trust for the benefit of the bailor is, of course, obligated to its performance, and he is not discharged from this obligation unless he has done all that can be reasonably required of him in respect to it. But he has not done all 'that can be reasonably required of him if he has been guilty of negligence; for negligence implies fault, and to be in fault in discharging a legal duty to another is to place one’s self under legal obligations to make good the consequential loss.

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24 Mo. App. 134 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Mo. App. 232, 1885 Mo. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funkhouser-v-ingles-moctapp-1885.