Gordon and Vail v. Raymond

186 S.W.2d 849, 239 Mo. App. 321, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 380
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 S.W.2d 849 (Gordon and Vail v. Raymond) 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
Gordon and Vail v. Raymond, 186 S.W.2d 849, 239 Mo. App. 321, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 380 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*324 CAVE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Jackson County canceling a certain note and deed of trust in the principal sum of $3,500, and enjoining the defendants from enforcement of the same.

The petition alleged that the plaintiffs, W. C. Gordon and Merle M. Vail, were the only heirs at law of Aubrey G. Gordon; that plaintiff, W. O. Gordon, was the administrator of the estate of said Aubrey G. Gordon; that the deceased, on March 16, 1936, executed a deed of trust and recorded the same, conveying to Clarence Skinner, as trustee for Estelle Lee Kerns, lots 92 and 93 Eastwood Hills, in trust to secure his promissory note in the sum of $3,500 with interest at 6 %. The petition further alleged that said note was not given for a bona fide debt; was never delivered to defendant, Estelle Lee Kerns; that deceased was not indebted to her and said note was without consideration; that said defendant was not and never had been the legal holder of said note; that the designated trustee, Clarence Skinner, had died; that the sheriff, as substitute trustee, has advertised the property for sale under said deed of trust, but had not gone through with the sale; that the defendant, Walter A. Raymond, as successor trustee, had advertised said property for sale and would sell it unless restrained; that said sale would cause irreparable damage and that plaintiff had *325 no adequate remedy at law. The petition prayed that defendants be enjoined from selling or attempting to sell said property under said deed of trust; and that the note and deed of trust be canceled and set aside and released of record. (Italics oiirs.)

The answer of defendant, Raymond, consisted of a general denial, and admission of his appointment as successor trustee, and admission of the publication of the notice of sale.

The answer of defendant, Mrs. Kerns, consisted of a general denial, and admission of the death of Aribrey C. Gordon, the appointment and qualification of the plaintiff, W. 0. Gordon, as administrator; and admits the execution and recording of the deed of trust by the deceased, but denies the allegations of nondelivery and want of consideration ; admits the death of Clarence Skinner, the trustee, the action of the sheriff as substitute trustee in advertising, but failing to sell said property; admits allegations setting forth the appointment of defendant, Walter A. Raymond, as substitute trustee, and the advertising of the property for sale, arid prays that the petition be dismissed. ,

Trial was had before the court, resulting in a judgment for plairitiffs and against defendants, enjoining the defendants from foreclosing said deed and decreeing that the note and deed of trust be canceled and set aside for naught held, because “the note and deed of trust . . . were never delivered, were without consideration1 and that the defendant, Estelle Lee Kerns, was not thé legal holder of said note.” ‘ From this judgment the defendants appeal.'

Specific errors are assigned to the findings of the court, and error' in admitting and excluding certain evidence.

It is undisputed that, on March 16; 1936, Aubrey C. Gordon signed a promissory not for $3,500, with interest from date at the rate of 6% per annum, payable semiannually, to Estelle Lee Kerns or order; that on the same day he executed a deed of trust to secure the payriient of the debt evidenced by the note; and by said deed of trust conveyed certain real estate therein described to' one -Clarence Skinner, as trustee; and that he, 'Aubrey C. Gordon, recorded the deed of trust in the office of the Recorder of Deeds the following day. . It is also undisputed that the administrator of deceased found the note and deed ’ of trust in a strong box in a trunk belonging to deceased and located in his apartment; and that the substitute trustee would have foreclosed-the deed of trust if he had not been enjoined.

The oral'testimony; offered by plaintiffs, may be summarized as follows: William C. Gordon, administrator and brother of deceased, testified that he was a captain of police in Kansas City; that he and his sister, Merle. M. Vail, of Chicago, were the only remaining heirs at law of the deceased; that he fourid the note and deed of trust in the bottom of a trunk in an-iron box with deceased’s other papers'; that he was not very familiar with deceased’s affairs; 'that he knew' *326 nothing about the execution of the note and deed of trust and did not know of his brother borrowing money from anybody; that deceased had been unemployed for several months prior to his death, and that the only cash he, as administrator, had found belonging to his brother was about $20 in his pocket; that a Miss Hawkinson, (a witness for defendants), was a friend of the deceased, and was with him at the time of his death.

C. A. Tate testified that up until the last eighteen months of the life of Aubrey G. Gordon they were close friends and together almost constantly; but about that time they had a quarrel and had not been reconciled since. Over the objections of defendants, this witness was permitted to testify that at one time or another all of deceased’s properties were in the name of the witness by mortgage, although the witness did not own them; that deceased was in the habit of keeping his property mortgaged in someone else’s name, “but he always kept both ends of the mortgage”; that about 1933 deceased put a mortgage on the property in question in the name of the witness and the witness’ wife, and that prior to March 16, 1936, that mortgage was released so that deceased could sign a redemption bond.

Ralph De Pugh, a deputy sheriff, testified that he handled the foreclosures of the sheriff’s office; that the property in question was advertised and he noticed the advertisement in the Daily Record over the sheriff’s name as substitute trustee; that he talked with administrator, Gordon, several times and learned the facts about the note and deed of trust being found in deceased’s iron box at-the time of his death, and that the administrator then had possession of the note and deed of trust; that he checked the record and found that taxes had not been paid on the property since 1934; that when the note was not produced at the hour of sale, no sale was made. This is all of plaintiffs’ oral testimony. The note and deed of trust were admitted in evidence.

Defendants’ oral testimony, summarized, is: Marie Hawkinson testified that she had known Aubrey G. Gordon and Mr. and Mrs. Kerns for ten or twelve years, and had kept company with Gordon for the past eight years; that they were all good friends; that Mrs. Kerns operated a beauty shop and Mr. Kerns owned and operated a restaurant and tavern; that they had apparently been successful; that in 1935 or 1936 Gordon was having some financial difficulty, but she didn’t know much about it; that about the first of the year 1930 she was present when deceased borrowed $500 from Mrs. Kerns; that she based her statement that he was having financial difficulty on the fact that he was borrowing $500 from Mrs. Kerns; she didn’t know much about his other financial affairs. - In addition to borrowing that $500, she had seen him borrow, from Mrs. Kerns, sums of $50 to $100 at different times; that on one occasion in 1936 she stopped to see Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W.2d 849, 239 Mo. App. 321, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-and-vail-v-raymond-moctapp-1945.