Illinois State Bank of Quincy v. Pedersen

350 S.W.2d 102, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 533
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1961
Docket23013
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 350 S.W.2d 102 (Illinois State Bank of Quincy v. Pedersen) 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
Illinois State Bank of Quincy v. Pedersen, 350 S.W.2d 102, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 533 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

CROSS, Judge.

In this action plaintiff, Illinois State Bank of Quincy, sues defendants, John Pedersen and Vella Pedersen, on their promissory note executed to Norris Implement Company of Unionville, Missouri. The note represents a purchase price balance allegedly due that company resulting from the sale of two trucks to defendants. Plaintiff bank sues as purchaser and trans-; feree of the note.

There have been three trials of the case, but no former appeals. The third and last, trial resulted in a jury verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff, against both defendants, in the amount of $5,105.37,-from which defendants appeal. There have been two hearings on the appeal, the first of which was set aside by this court’s order. granting a rehearing. The submission before us is on the rehearing.

An unfortunate circumstance has plagued the parties, the trial court and this court. The court reporter died before her notes taken at the trial appealed from were transcribed. Numerous delays occurred while counsel endeavored to agree upon the transcript. It appears before us in primarily narrative and sketchy form, essentially reconstructed from the notes of counsel. The parties are not in agreement on several points. In those instances the trial judge has incorporated rulings based on his individual memory and trial notes.

Defendants do not deny either that they executed the note sued on or that they defaulted after making only two of twenty-four monthly payments provided for by the instrument. They insist that if the transaction is a conditional sale, plaintiff is not entitled to bring an action on the note for any claimed deficiency after their default and plaintiff’s repossession of the chattels. Alternatively, defendants say that if the transaction is not a conditional sale, but a sale involving a note and chattel mortgage, the note is nonnegotiable and without consideration, and that no action lies upon it. They admit in answer that they do not know which of the alternatives is true. We proceed to set out such additional facts as are pertinent to the issues presented.

Defendants’ purchase of the trucks was initiated on June 20, 1956, by John Peder-sen’s signature of a form entitled “Order for International Motor Truck” addressed to Norris Implement Company, ordering two new International Trucks at a total *104 price of $14,549.07, credited .with a trade-in allowance of $3,749.07, leaving. an unpaid cash balance of $10,800. The order provides that such balance was “To he evidenced By installment conditional sale note or contract payable in 24 equal monthly installments — beginning August ■ 15, 1956”. The order also contains the following provision : “At the request of seller, purchaser agrees to execute a chattel mortgage covering the property ordered hereunder to secure payment of Said note or contract”.

On June 23, 1956, defendants executed a single page instrument, designated "Missouri — Installment Note and Chattel Mortgage”, containing pertinent provisions as follows:

“For value received, I promise to pay to Norris Imp. Co., or order, at Union-ville, Mo., the sum of $12,207.84 * * * in twenty-four installments of $508.66 ■ * * * commencing August 15, 1956. * * *
“If default be made in the payment of this note or any installment or part ' thereof, the payee, owner or holder thereof may declare this note and all installments thereof immediately due and payable. * * *
“In consideration of said sale and to ■ secure the payment of the above described indebtedness, I do hereby grant, bargain, sell, mortgage and convey to Norris Imp. Co., payee and mortgagee herein * * * the property above described * * *
“This mortgage is a first lien upon all the property above described without no exception (sic) * * *
“Provided, However, * * * if default be made in the payment of said indebtedness, or any installment or part thereof, * * * or if at any time the owner or holder of said mortgage shall deem himself or itself insecure, then he or it, is hereby authorized : to declare the whole debt due, and to enter upon the premises whereon said property, or any part thereof, may be, and take possession of and remove the same to any place it may deem best and sell the same at public sale * * * after giving not less than ten days’ notice * * *, or at private sale with or without the notice aforesaid * * * and out of the proceeds, is hereby authorized to retain such amount as shall be sufficient to satisfy the said indebtedness * * * returning * * * any surplus, and at any such sale the owner or holder of said mortgage may become the purchaser of said property * * * It is further agreed that I am to remain in peaceable possession of said property until default in the conditions of this mortgage. * * *
“(Signed) John Pedersen
“(Signed) Vella Pedersen.”

Norris promptly endorsed the “note and chattel mortgage” without recourse and transmitted it to plaintiff. The instrument was received by plaintiff on June 26, 1956. Plaintiff immediately paid the purchase price of the note and mortgage by its check issued and delivered to Norris in the sum of $10,800, dated June 26, 1956.

The account became delinquent soon after its inception. Defendants made only two payments, amounting to $1,017.32. Thereafter they were and remained in default. As authorized by the note-mortgage instrument, plaintiff attempted to locate and take possession of the trucks. The vehicles were finally found — one in Biddeford, Maine, the other in Norwalk, Ohio. Plaintiff had both trucks delivered to Quincy, Illinois, where they were parked on a lot for about two weeks, and then taken to Norris in Unionville.

Plaintiff introduced evidence relative to the condition of the trucks when first seen upon delivery to Quincy and to Unionville. One witness testified, “The rubber on the trucks was in bad condition and had virtually no tread, the body was scratched and *105 dented. The entire condition of the trucks was rough”. Another witness stated: “The tractors were rough, body dented and practically no tires, the tires were practically worthless”.

It is uncontroverted that plaintiff has never sold these trucks, either at a public or private sale. They have remained either in plaintiff’s possession, or, at its direction, in the dealer’s possession.

Plaintiff tried the case on the theory pleaded in the petition — that defendants were entitled to a credit against the unpaid balance of the note amounting to the value of the trucks at the time of repossession. Two witnesses for plaintiff testified as to the value of the trucks. One witness stated they “were worth not more than $3,000.00 each at the time I saw them”. The other witness said, “I would place the value of each of these trucks at $3,000.00”.

Defendants, although present at the trial, did not testify and produced no witnesses. They offered and read to the jury part of a deposition given by the bank’s president admitting that the bank had received a copy of the order prior to purchasing the note. Defendants also introduced in evidence portions of a prior and abandoned petition.

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Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.2d 102, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-state-bank-of-quincy-v-pedersen-moctapp-1961.