Hagan v. Lantry

89 S.W.2d 522, 338 Mo. 161, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 522 (Hagan v. Lantry) 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
Hagan v. Lantry, 89 S.W.2d 522, 338 Mo. 161, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 581 (Mo. 1935).

Opinions

This is an equity suit originally brought by W.G. Hagar, guardian of Eulilia Hagan, Virginia Hagan, Horace H. Hagan and Eugene Hagan (brothers and sisters), minors, to establish and declare a trust in certain partnership assets and property of the firm of B. Lantry Sons, or the proceeds thereof, in favor of said minors. The minors, the real parties in interest, were at all times residents of Logan County in the Territory and State of Oklahoma and in 1903 W.G. Hagar was duly appointed "Guardian of the persons and estate" of said minors by the Probate Court of Logan County in the then Territory of Oklahoma. This suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. The guardian, Hagar, died before the trial of the cause and thereupon, each of the wards having attained majority the suit was revived in their names as plaintiffs. At the trial of the cause it developed that subsequent to the revivor and prior to the trial each of the sisters Eulilia Hagan and Virginia Hagan had been paid her full share of the estate and they withdrew as plaintiffs leaving the brothers Horace H. Hagan and Eugene Hagan as parties plaintiffs. On a trial, in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, the chancellor found for the defendants and plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment entered.

We are of the opinion that it will facilitate the presentation and discussion of the pleadings and issues involved, and an understanding of the theory of the suit, if we first undertake a statement of facts, attempting something of a chronological arrangement and history of the various transactions. The estate of the Hagan children, minors, residents of Oklahoma, was administered in the Probate Court of Logan County, Oklahoma. As stated, Hagar, who was their first cousin, was duly appointed, in 1903, by that court, as guardian of their "persons and estates." Two brothers Charles J. Lantry and Henry E. Lantry composed a partnership doing business under the firm name of B. Lantry Sons. The two Lantrys as a partnership, under the firm name, operated on a large scale in both "railroad contracting and farming." In their contracting business they engaged in railroad construction work "dirt work, stonework, ballasting and general railroad work." In that connection they operated "stores" or "commissaries on their works" at which they sold merchandise and supplies to their employees at a profit of "twenty-five to fifty per cent." The number of these stores in operation, at any one time, varied from "two to ten." They carried on railroad construction work at various points in Arizona, California, Illinois, Iowa, New Mexico, Texas and Kansas and owned a large amount of machinery, *Page 165 tools and equipment used in their construction work. They owned and operated a large ranch or farm of several thousand acres near Strong City, Kansas, which was stocked with horses, mules, cattle and hogs, also farming implements and machinery. It seems they also owned other farm lands and real estate in Kansas, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois and Texas. In carrying on their various enterprises the Lantrys borrowed money from time to time. The record indicates that the Lantrys were residents of the State of Kansas. Their "main office" was at Strong City, Kansas. They also maintained an office at Kansas City, Kansas. One Eugene Hagan (not the party plaintiff herein) an uncle of the Hagan children, and also the uncle of Hagar, their guardian, was an attorney and resident of Topeka, Kansas. From his letters, in evidence, he appears to have been attorney for the Lantrys. One witness described him as an "intimate friend" of Charles J. Lantry. Anyway Attorney Hagan in Topeka, acting on the part of the Lantrys, and in good faith, seems to have initiated and carried on negotiations between the guardian Hagar in Oklahoma and the Lantrys in Kansas relative to a loan from the minors' estate of $20,000 to the Lantry partnership and to have recommended and attended to the details thereof. Hagar as guardian arranged to make the loan and, apparently pursuant to Hagan's direction, sent a check in that amount, by mail, to Hagan at Topeka, Kansas. The check was made payable to "C.J. Lantry." Acknowledging receipt of the check Hagan advises Hagar that he is attorney "for the outfit," clearly meaning the Lantry partnership doing business under the firm of B. Lantry Sons, and states: "I cannot conceive anyway on earth that this money could be lost. I regard it much safer than I would in the bank. . . . My best judgment is . . . that they have in money first mortgage bonds and in other property of absolute fixed value more than one million dollars above any liability. They have thirteen thousand acres of land in their ranch that there is not a penny against . . . if there is ever any question about their liability I would be the first man to reach for this money for these children." Attorney Hagan delivered the check and a promissory note for $20,000 was executed and forwarded to Hagar, at Guthrie, Oklahoma, together with 96 shares of bank stock as collateral security therefor. The note was as follows:

"Guthrie, O.T., June 17, 1903.

"On demand after one year from the date hereof, we promise to pay to the order of W.G. Hagar, Guardian of Eulilia Hagan, Virginia Hagan, Horace H. Hagan and Eugene Hagan, minors, the sum of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00), at the City of Guthrie, in the Territory of Oklahoma, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually.

"This note is given for a full and valuable consideration, and is *Page 166 secured by 96 shares of stock of the First National Bank of Topeka, Kansas, which have this day been assigned to the said W.G. Hagar and is delivered with this note as collateral security for the payment of the same.

"B. Lantry Sons by "Chas. J. Lantry. "Chas. J. Lantry."

[1] The parties hereto agree that the note is an Oklahoma contract. We digress here to observe that there seems little, if any, room for doubt, that this note created and was a binding partnership obligation. Somewhere in the course of the printed argument respondents (defendants below) suggest, in effect, that it was not distinctly or directly shown that Henry E. Lantry who died some ten months after the execution of this note ever had actual knowledge of or acquiesced in its execution. It does appear, however, that Henry E. Lantry acknowledged and recognized liability on other notes executed by Charles J. Lantry in the partnership name and signed in exactly the same way this note was signed. Further the showing made as to the nature of the partnership business, the manner in which same was conducted, and the borrowing of money in connection therewith was such as to imply authority on the part of Charles J. Lantry to sign the firm name and negotiate its notes and thereby create an obligation on the part of the partnership. However respondents apparently do not seriously stress such contention and we have perhaps given it more attention than it requires. We shall therefore consider and treat the note as being the obligation of the partnership of B. Lantry Sons. In November, 1903, by bills of sale and warranty deeds Charles J. Lantry transferred and conveyed his undivided one-half interest in the property and assets "owned and controlled by B. Lantry Sons" to Henry E. Lantry who thereby became the sole owner of said property both personal and real. These instruments were filed for record. No notice of dissolution of the partnership was given and the various business enterprises formerly carried on in the firm name of B. Lantry Sons were continued in that name; Charles J. Lantry continuing "in the active management except" as to "finances." Henry E.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 522, 338 Mo. 161, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagan-v-lantry-mo-1935.