John Deere Plow Co. v. Gooch

91 S.W.2d 149, 230 Mo. App. 150, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 91
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 149 (John Deere Plow Co. v. Gooch) 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
John Deere Plow Co. v. Gooch, 91 S.W.2d 149, 230 Mo. App. 150, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 91 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

*155 McCHLLEN, J.

This suit was brought by appellant, plaintiff below, against respondents, defendants below, for alleged conversion of livestock. It was tried before the court-and a jury and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff. Each defendant filed a motion for a new trial and each motion was sustained by the trial court. From the order sustaining the motions for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff’s petition alleged that on or about December 19, 1932, it was the owner of nineteen spring calves, nine yearlings, sixty shoats and ten brood sows of a total reasonable value of $855; that on or about said date, while plaintiff was the owner of said property and had the right to immediate possession thereof, defendants, without leave of plaintiff, wrongfully took said property from Pike County, Missouri, and wrongfully and unlawfully converted it to their own use and disposed of the same, whereby plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $855, for which amount plaintiff prayed judgment.

The separate amended answer of defendant Harry Gooch contained a general denial of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, coupled with a specific denial of any indebtedness existing between said defendant and plaintiff and between defendant John Kurz and plaintiff on the date of the filing of the suit, and alleged that whatever indebtedness existed between plaintiff and defendant John Kurz was fully satisfied and paid by said defendant John Kurz by plaintiff converting to its own use a tractor plow and a tractor two row cultivator (John Deere make) on or about the-day of May, 1933, all of which was of the reasonable value of $1200, and that the value of said machinery so wrongfully converted fully satisfied any debt that might have existed between defendant John Kurz and plaintiff.

The separate answer of defendant John Kurz contained a general denial of the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, after which said defendant alleged that whatever indebtedness existed between plaintiff and himself was evidenced by two promissory notes each in the sum of $456.33, dated April 22, 1931, and was fully paid and discharged by the plaintiff wrongfully and unlawfully converting to its own use on or about the -- day of May, 1933, a John Deere tractor, a John Deere tractor two row cultivator, and a John Deere tractor plow, which said machinery, at the time of said conversion, was reasonably worth the sum of $1,000, and that said defendant “therefore offers to set off enough of the value of said machinery so wrongfully taken and converted by the plaintiff from this defendant as will equal the amount that this defendant owed the plaintiff at the time said machinery was so taken and converted to the use of plaintiff.” Defendant Kurz prayed judgment that said set off be made against plaintiff’s claim and that plaintiff’s claim be adjudged satisfied as to said defendant.

For further defense and for a counterclaim, defendant Kurz al *156 leged that the machinery mentioned was wrongfully taken from his possession by plaintiff, and’ that by reason of such wrongful taking and conversion by plaintiff, said defendant was deprived of the possession and the use of said machinery from the date of the taking thereof to the time of the trial of the cause, whereby he was damaged to the amount of $1,000, for which sum he prayed judgment against-plaintiff.

The reply of plaintiff was a general denial.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the court, of its own motion, instructed the jury to find for plaintiff on defendants’ counterclaim, and th'e jury returned a verdict in accordance with said instruction. The cause was submitted by the court to the jury on instructions given on behalf of plaintiff and others given on behalf of defendants, and on the issues thus presented the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff on plaintiff’s cause of action in the sum of $556. The jury also found for plaintiff and against the defendants on the set-off pleaded by defendants.

Plaintiff assigns as error the action of the court in sustaining the defendants’ motions for a new trial.

The evidence shows that on April 8, 1927, defendant Kurz executed a note, and a chattel mortgage securing same, to the Silex Motor Company of Silex, Missouri, for a loan of $2700 made to him through defendant Harry Gfooeh, who was then the manager and part owner of that company. Testifying with respect to this loan and the chattel mortgage securing it, defendant Kurz said:

‘ ‘ I secured it with what I had in the line of stock, machinery, everything I had. I gave them a mortgage on my machinery, my horses, cattle and stuff and the increase. ’ ’

The chattel mortgage mentioned was introduced in evidence as defendants’ Exhibit 1, but it is not set forth in the abstract of the record. In this connection the abstract shows merely that “Said defendants’ Exhibit 1 is admitted and read in evidence and is. in effect as above stated,” referring to the above quoted testimony of defendant Kurz.

On April 22, 1931, defendant Kurz bought from the Hannibal Implement & Supply Company farm machinery consisting of a tractor with power take-off and power lift, a two row cultivator, and tractor plow. In payment of the purchase price thereof Kurz executed and delivered on that date to that company two promissory notes of $456.33 each, secured by a chattel mortgage on the farm machinery so purchased, each said note being a combination promissory- note and chattel mortgage covering the farm machinery mentioned.

One of the chattel mortgage notes covering the farm machinery was payable on or before November 1, 1931, and the other was payable or or before September 1, 1932.

*157 Shortly after the sale of the farm machinery to Kurz the two chattel mortgage notes were duly transferred to plaintiff by the Hannibal Implement & Supply Company. These chattel mortgage notes were introduced in evidence respectively as plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and •2.

On March 17, 1932, after defendant Kurz had defaulted in the payment of plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, the first of the two notes above mentioned, he executed to the plaintiff company a chattel mortgage on eight one year old steer calves, three head of coming yearling heifers, and six calves from one week to three months old, seventeen head in all, as additional security for the payment of said notes. As further additional security thereon, defendant Kurz on May 21, 1932, executed to plaintiff another chattel mortgage, this one being on seven suckling calves, three unborn calves, and certain other personal property of said defendant not necessary to mention here because it is not involved herein. Later on defendant Kurz executed to plaintiff, as further additional security on said notes, still another chattel mortgage which was undated but was filed in the office of the County Recorder of Pike County on October 1, 1932. The last named chattel mortgage covered sixty-nine head of pigs ranging from two to four weeks old.

The three mortgages thus executed to plaintiff by defendant Kurz on the livestock mentioned were introduced in evidence respectively as plaintiff’s Exhibits 3, 1 and 5. The chattel mortgage notes, Exhibits 1 and 2, given by defendant Kurz as security for the purchase price of the farm machinery, each contained provisions as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.W.2d 149, 230 Mo. App. 150, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-deere-plow-co-v-gooch-moctapp-1936.