Hewitt v. Price

102 S.W. 647, 204 Mo. 31, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 14, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 647 (Hewitt v. Price) 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
Hewitt v. Price, 102 S.W. 647, 204 Mo. 31, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 52 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

FOX, P. J.

This cause is now before this court upon appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment and decree of the Barton Circuit Court. The origin of the controversy may thus be briefly stated:

On July 30, 1891, the defendants, S. C. Price and Clara A. Price, executed their promissory note to the plaintiff for nine hundred and forty dollars, due May 1, 1892, drawing interest at the rate of eight per cent [35]*35per annum. This note was executed for the balance of the purchase money for an undivided interest in certain lands situate in Newton county, Missouri, which was conveyed by the plaintiff to the defendants. To secure the payment of said note the defendants on the date of the execution of the note executed a deed of trust to Lee L. Bell, trustee, named' in the deed of trust; the interest was paid on said note to January 1,1894. On August 31, 1898, said note not having been fully paid and satisfied, at the request of the plaintiff the trustee sold the land. At the trustee’s sale the plaintiff became the purchaser for the sum of three hundred and eighty-five dollars; the amount of the purchase price at said trustee’s sale, less the cost of foreclosing the deed of trust, was credited upon the note executed by the defendants, which amount was $366.80. On August 29, 1899, the plaintiff, J. A. Hewitt, appellant herein, instituted his suit in the circuit court of Jasper county, Missouri, for the recovery of the balance due upon said note, which was executed in July, 1891. Upon application of defendants the venue of said cause was changed to the.circuit court of Barton county, and on December 6, 1900, the plaintiff and appellant herein filed his amended petition, upon which the cause was tried. The petition substantially alleged the date of the execution of the note by the defendants, enumerating the credits to which the defendants were entitled and averring that the remainder of the note together with interest was due and unpaid, and prayed for judgment.

The answer of the defendants admitted the execution of the note sued upon, but denied that the credits to which the defendants were entitled were correctly alleged in the petition. Then follows what defendants denominate in their brief an equitable counterclaim, in which it is sought to obtain affirmative equitable relief. We deem it unnecessary to burden this opinion with a reproduction of the answer in full, but shall be [36]*36content with a brief statement of the facts alleged in the answer upon which the respondents predicate their right to the relief sought.

It is alleged in the answer that fraud was practiced upon the defendants and the fact that the deed of trust to secure the payment of the note in the suit was to be foreclosed was concealed from them and they were misled by certain statements of the plaintiff, J. A. Hewitt. First, it is alleged that the price brought at the sale was grossly inadequate and that the defendants had no notice that the sale was going to take place. Second, it is alleged in the answer that the defendant, by reason of an injury received, was incapacitated and unable to attend to business, and that the plaintiff about the 15th of August, 1898, visited the defendant, S. C. Price, and tendered him his sympathy and informed him that he had taken no proceedings to foreclose the deed of trust and that no sale was to be made, when in fact it is averred that the plaintiff at that time and a long time prior thereto had taken steps to foreclose said deed of trust and that the foreclosure proceeding was then pending. It is averred that had he not been misled by the representations of the plaintiff, he or some one else representing him would have been present at the sale, and ha'd it not been for these facts the property would have brought more than enough to have paid the note. It is also alleged that the defendants were not apprised of and did not learn of said sale or the fact that it would take place in time to give bond for the redemption of the land as described in said deed of trust, as was provided by the statutes of this State, sections 7079 and 7080, Revised Statutes of 1889.

The reply of the plaintiff to the new matter set out in the answer consisted of a general denial.

We deem it unnecessary to set out in detail the testimony of the plaintiff and defendants upon the issues as presented by the pleadings. With the views as en[37]*37tertained by tbis court as to tbe decree entered in tbis cause, it is sufficient to say tfiat the court beard testimony, upon tbe issues presented and that upon some of tbe material allegations contained in tbe answer there was a conflict in the testimony. As to where tbe burden of proof rests where it is sought to invalidate a transaction by charge of fraud, will be given attention during tbe course of tbe opinion.

Upon tbe retrial of this cause we are unable to say what testimony may be developed, therefore we shall not undertake upon tbe disclosures of tbe record upon tbis appeal to make a finding of the facts. There will be ample time in which to review all testimony and announce our conclusions as to the sufficiency of it and award such relief as tbe parties may be entitled to when this cause reaches here upon a decree in conformity with tbe law applicable to cases of tbis character.

Tbis cause was submitted to tbe court and on tbe 21st day of September, 1901, during tbe session of tbe Barton Circuit Court, tbe following interlocutory decree was rendered:

“Now at tbis day come all tbe parties, plaintiff and defendants, in tbe above-entitled cause, in person as well as by their respective attorneys, and announce ready for trial; and a jury being waived, tbe issues are submitted to tbe court. Whereupon, after bearing tbe pleadings read and bearing the evidence and argument of counsel, tbe court doth find tbe following to be tbe facts in tbis case:
“On tbe 30th day of July, 1891, tbe above-named defendants executed and delivered to tbe above-named plaintiff their promissory note, now sued on in tbis ease, whereby they promised, for value received, to pay to plaintiff or order, tbe sum of nine hundred and forty dollars on tbe first day of May, 1892, together with interest thereon from date at tbe rate of 8 per cent per annum; and, for tbe purpose of securing tbe payment [38]*38of said note, the defendants at the same time executed and delivered to plaintiff their certain deed of trust, in the usual form, where they conveyed to Lee D. Bell, as trustee, an undivided one-third of the following described real estate, situate in Newton county, Missouri, to-wit: South half of the northwest quarter, and southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, and west half of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter, and six acres in the east half of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter — all in section fifteen, township twenty-six, range thirty-two, with full power in said trustee to sell said real estate, in case of default in the payment of said note, for the purpose of satisfying the same. Defendants paid the interest on said note up to January 1, 1894, but no other or further payment was ever made thereon. On August 31, 1898, pursuant to the terms and provisions of said deed of trust, and at the request of the plaintiff, said trustee sold said real estate at public auction to plaintiff at and for the sum of three hundred and eighty-five dollars, and executed and delivered to him a deed conveying to him the real estate above described.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 647, 204 Mo. 31, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hewitt-v-price-mo-1907.