Jewell Pure Water Co. v. Kansas City Towel & Laundry Co.
This text of 74 Mo. App. 150 (Jewell Pure Water Co. v. Kansas City Towel & Laundry Co.) 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.
Opinion
The evidence to the effect that Mr. Laughlin, acting as attorney for the mortgagees, sold the laundry plant [152]*152in conformity to the power conferred by the provisions of the mortgage is undisputed. Nor is it questioned that White bid in the said plant at and for the sum of $5,100. If White was acting for one Brown in making the purchase, as is contended by plaintiff, the latter it appears refused to be bound thereby, or to accept the property, or pay the purchase price. The referee found there was no actual public sale but a subsequent private sale by the mortgagees to Brown for $6,000. It appears that when the sale was made by Mr. Laughlin for the mortgagees to White that a conveyance of the laundry plant was accordingly executed to him by them. But it does not appear that Brown furnished White the money with which to pay the amount bid by him. It does however appear that White drew his check for the purchase price in favor of the mortgagees and od them and that this check was by them accepted.
It does not appear that White had any funds on deposit with the mortgagees out of which the former’s check could be paid, still the check was accepted by them as payment. The clear and unmistakable inference to be drawn from these facts is that under some undisclosed agreement entered into between White and the mortgagees the former was to buy in the laundry plant for the latter and convey the same to whomsoever the latter should direct. It is true that one of the mortgagees testified that there was no arrangement or undei’standing with White by which they were to accept his check on themselves for the purchase price. It does not appear that White was aman of any pecuniary responsibility and it is incredible that the mortgagees, as prudent bankers and business men, as we must presume them to be, would have accepted the check of White on themselves as payment of the purchase price of the laundry plant when he had no funds [153]*153on deposit with them, without some previous agreement for that purpose having been entered into.
White, it seems, bid the amount of the mortgagees’ debt. It does not appear that there was any other bid made. This is an additional circumstance-tending to show that White was acting for the mortgagees. The fact that Brown did not intend to pay cash entirely for the laundry, if he purchased, is another circumstance which tends to prove that White was not acting for him in making the purchase but for the mortgagees. The sale was according to the terms of the mortgage for cash. No doubt the understanding was that White should purchase the laundry plant for the mortgagees and that the former, by direction of the latter, was, upon satisfactory arrangements being entered into between such latter and Brown, to convey the same to Brown. But it appears that after the purchase by White, Brown, under the advice of his attorneys, rbecame suspicious of the title and declined to accept a title from White, or to purchase the property without the title was personally guaranteed by the mortgagees. This we infer caused a change of the prearranged plan of procedure in respect to the transfer of the title. Accordingly, the mortgagees themselves took a transfer of the property from White and then transferred it to Brown, with a guaranty of title, for the increased consideration of $6,000.
We do not think there is any substantial evidence to sustain the finding of the referee, and for that reason the judgment of the court based thereon must be reversed.
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74 Mo. App. 150, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-pure-water-co-v-kansas-city-towel-laundry-co-moctapp-1898.