Green v. Conrad

21 S.W. 839, 114 Mo. 651, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 261
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 839 (Green v. Conrad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Conrad, 21 S.W. 839, 114 Mo. 651, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 261 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

The Keokuk Northern Line Packet Company was a corporation created under the laws of Missouri, and for some years prior to 1880 was engaged in the transportation of passengers and freight between St. Louis and St. Paul on the Mississippi river. On the twenty-eighth of October, 1880, James "Ward et al, recovered judgments in the St. Louis circuit court against William F. Davidson et al. for $1,952; against Davidson alone for $3,435, arid against William F. and Peyton S. Davidson for $20,081. The decree went further and removed William F. Davidson, who was [658]*658president of the said packet company, from his position as president and director and ordered an election to fill his place. The court also appointed Samuel Clubb as receiver of the company.

Appeals were taken from each of said judgments and. three general supersedeas bonds were given and approved by the court. In each of said bonds William F. Davidson was principal and Peter Conrad and Peter Lehman were sureties. The causes were first appealed to the St. Louis 'court of appeals, where they were affirmed “pro forma” and then appealed to this court, the said sureties consenting in writing that their obligations on the bonds for appeal to the court of appeals should continue and bind them on appeal to- this court. Upon a hearing in this court, April term, 1886, the final decree of the circuit court was affirmed, but the judgment was reversed-and remanded to the end that a final decree might be entered in the circuit court in accordance with certain modifications in the amounts made in this court. Ward v. Davidson, 89 Mo. 445.

On the fifteenth of January, 1881, the packet company became insolvent and on that day made an assignment to Chas. Oreen, for the benefit of its creditors, under the laws of Missouri. He qualified as such, and has ever since been the assignee of the corporation. Clubb, who was appointed receiver in 1880, was discharged in 1888, and ordered to turn over all assets in his hands to Oreen, the assignee.

When the decree and judgment above referred to were rendered by the circuit court, October 28, 1880, the said William F. Davidson was the owner of nine promissory notes made by said packet company, a statement of which is' given in the record. These notes were dated on different days, commencing with December 10, 1879, and ending with October 28, 1880, [659]*659and aggregate at their face $27,092.11. These notes have not been paid. When they were executed the said packet company was running a line of packets between St. Louis and St. Paul, engaged in the transportation of freight and passengers. On or about the seventh of October, 1884, the said William E. Davidson, being a resident of Minnesota, and the packet company having a residence and place of business in St. Paul in said state, brought suit against the company on said notes in the district court of Ramsey county, Minnesota. The company was duly served with process, and on the twenty-sixth day of March, 1885, a judgment against the company, and in favor of Davidson upon said notes for the principal and interest thereof was rendered for the sum of $45,778.56, and costs. The judgment is unsatisfied. And on the nineteenth of March, 1887, said William F. Davidson, by leave of court first obtained, brought suit against said packet company in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis upon said Minnesota judgment, and service being had on the company, obtained judgment against it on the tenth day of May, 1887, by default, for $51,626.95. No appeal was taken from this judgment and it remains unsatisfied. This judgment is set forth in the record.

The appellant, as assignee, gave due notice by publication and by mail to the creditors of the corporation, and among others to the said William F. Davidson, of his intention to hear and allow demands against the estate of the said corporation, as required by law, and proceeded to hear and allow demands, but neither the said William F. Davidson, who was then living, presented, nor did the executors of his will after his death present either the said notes or the said judgments or either of them in his favor above referred to for allowance against said assignee. The assets of said assigned estate were wholly inadequate to [660]*660pay the claims which were allowed against the estate in full and no dividend has been paid on any of the allowed claims.

On March 22, 1890, the appellant as assignee of said corporation, filed three suits in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis against Peter Conrad and the administrator, with will annexed of said Lehman, Conrad and Lehman being sureties in the appeal bonds given as above stated. None of the principals were sued.'

The actions were for the penalties of the bond to be satisfied by executions for the amounts of three judgments in the circuit court, rendered in pursuance of the judgment of this court. The court ordered them consolidated.

After the causes were consolidated, Frank I. Johnson, the executor of William F. Davidson, was on his motion made a party defendant and filed an amended answer to the consolidated case. The answers of Conrad and Lehman, after admitting the execution of the several bonds by them as sureties, the affirmance of the judgments against their principals, proceeded to charge the indebtedness of the packet company to William F. Davidson, and the rendition of the judgment in his favor therefor and claim the right by and with the consent of his executor to insist upon that indebtedness as an off-set or counter-claim to the demand of plaintiff, the assignee of said packet company. The plaintiff moved to strike out all the portion asserting the counterclaim, but the court overruled his motion and he excepted. The executor Johnson also pleaded said judgment and indebtedness in favor of his testator as a counter-claim. This, the court refused also to strike out on motion of plaintiff, and he excepted. To these answers plaintiff replied; to the answers of Conrad and of Johnson, the executor, be admitted that Davidson [661]*661had recovered judgment in Ramsey county, Minnesota, for $45,778.56, March 26, 1885; that afterwards by leave of the St. Louis circuit court he sued said packet company on said judgment and recovered judgment May 10, 1887, for $51,626.95. But he denied the right of defendants to a set-off or a counter-claim for said judgment because he had duly notified Davidson of the day for the allowance of claims and he had refused to present said judgment for allowance and therefore asserted he was barred. Further replying, he asserted that the judgments of the packet company grew out of Davidson’s misappropriation of the assets of the company while president, and misconduct and abuse of his trust. He further alleged that Davidson’s estate was entirely solvent, and that if this claim was allowed no other creditor would receive any part of the assets misappropriated by him. The court on motion of defendants struck out the special new matter averred in the reply and plaintiff excepted.

The cause was heard on an agreed statement of facts, which appears in full in the record on file.

The plaintiff asked the court to give the following instructions, that is to say:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 839, 114 Mo. 651, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-conrad-mo-1893.