Kessler v. Kuhnle

138 S.W. 944, 158 Mo. App. 636, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 510
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 944 (Kessler v. Kuhnle) 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
Kessler v. Kuhnle, 138 S.W. 944, 158 Mo. App. 636, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 510 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

About the eighteenth of October, 1907, plaintiff and his wife, appellants here, took a warranty deed for several tracts of land in Lincoln county, from Fred Naxera and Edward H. Knight and their wives, the deed dated August 15th, 1907, and recorded October 25th of that year. As part consideration for the purchase of this land plaintiff and his wife executed their principal note for six thousand dollars, payable ten years after date to the order of Naxera and Knight, with interest from maturity, at the rate of eight per sent per annum, and [639]*639also twenty semi-annual interest notes, each for $180, maturing at periods of six months. To secure these notes plaintiff and his wife executed a deed of trust to one Kuhnle, as trustee. At the time of this purchase appellant Kessler was a member, director and president of a hunting club called The Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club, hereafter referred to as the Club. Afterwards, on February 9, 1909, the Club, claiming that plaintiff was then acting for the Club, instituted suit against defendants in the circuit court of Lincoln county, charging that plaintiff in so taking title to the property in his name and in the name of his wife, had perpetrated a fraud on the Club, and a decree was asked requiring plaintiffs to convey the property to the Club, or that appellants, defendants in that suit, be declared to hold the same for it. That cause being at issue and heard, resulted in a decree in favor of the Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club and against these plaintiffs, finding that plaintiff Kessler, in acquiring title to the property for himself and wife, was not acting in good faith but in fraud of the Club and its members and that in equity and good conscience it should be decreed that plaintiff and his wife held the property in trust for the Club; that the title be divested from Kessler and wife and vested in the Club; that all unpaid rents accruing during the the year 1909 and subsequent should belong to the Club and that on or before the 18th of October, 1909, the Club “reimburse said William P. Kessler and repay to him the sum of five hundred dollars paid by said Kessler on the purchase price of said lands and repay him the sum of two hundred, seventy-six and sixty-five hundredths dollars, the amount expended by him in improvements on said lands and also repay to him the stim of three hundred, sixty dollars paid by said Kessler on said interest notes, less however,, the sum of fifty-six dollars received by said Kessler as rent on said property, under the terms of said lease,” (the [640]*640land being under a ten year lease to the Club from the former -owners). It was adjudged that the Club take up the $6000 note and the unpaid interest notes so as to release Kessler and his wife from all liability thereon, “and that on compliance with said order by said plaintiff (the Club), that the title to said lands vest in plaintiff as heretofore decreed by the court.” Costs were adjudged against Kessler and wife and it was ordered that the Club, plaintiff in that suit, make report as to its compliance with the order at the next term of court. At that term the Club reported in court, that in obediencé to the order of the court contained in the decree it “has taken up from Naxera and Knight the six-thousand-dollar deed of trust and all interest notes secured by said deed of trust that are unpaid, seventeen in number, for one hundred eighty dollars each, and has endorsed on each of said notes, including the principal note of six thousand dollars, a full release of the defendants, William P. Kessler and Lena Kessler, of all personal obligation on each and all of said notes. That said principal note of six thousand dollars and seventeen interest notes of one hundred eighty dollars each constitute all of the unpaid indebtedness mentioned and described in said deed of trust executed by said William P. Kessler and Lena Kessler to Knight and Naxera.” The Club, through its attorney, further reported that it had deposited in court for the use and benefit of-Knight the sum of $1080.65, the amount ordered by the decree to be paid to Kessler by the Club. The notes were exhibited in court and are also in evidence in this case, and each of them bears these indorsements:

“Without recourse.” (Signed). “E. EL Knight.”
“Without recourse on me.” (Signed). “Ered Nax-era.”
“Pay to the order of any bank or banker for .collection.” (Signed). “Mercantile Bank of Louisana, Missouri. E. B. Rule, Cashier.”
[641]*641“In accordance -with the judgment and order of the circuit court of Lincoln county, Mo., the makers of this note Wm. P. Kessler and Lena Kessler are hereby released from all personal liability on this note.” (Signed). “Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club.” (Signed). “A. P. Bohlinger, President. Jacob Gerst, Secretary.”

It was admitted that these indorsements on the notes were in this form at the time of the filing of the report in the case in which the Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club was plaintiff and William P. and Lena Kessler were defendants, being the suit before referred to. In due time appellants here, Kessler and wife, appealed from that decree to the Supreme Court of this state, where that cause is now pending on their appeal, they executing an appeal bond in usual form in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, which was duly approved. Afterwards,- that is after the appeal had been taken in the case of the Club against the Kess-lers, Kuhnle, the trustee named in the deed of trust above referred to, advertised the property' described in it for sale under the terms of the deed of trust, the sale to be held on the 26th of February, 1910.

Whereupon these present plaintiffs, appellants here, instituted this suit to enjoin the sale by the trustee, it being charged in the petition in this cause that the Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club, “or the officers thereof who held said notes for it, have, for the purpose of rendering ineffective any judgment which may finally be rendered in said cause and for the purpose of changing the status of the property embraced in this cause and of jeopardizing the rights and interests therein of these plaintiffs, wrongfully transferred and delivered the said notes to some person or persons who have taken the same with full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances attending said notes and deed of trust, and are now, as al[642]*642leged legal holders and owners thereof, through the above named defendant Edwin Oliver Kuhnle, as trustee, and for the purpose of assisting said Club in such wrongful sale, about to foreclose said deed of trust, by exercising the power of sale contained therein.” Averring that unless defendants in the cause are prohibited and restrained from making the sale plaintiffs will, sustain irreparable injury, and are without adequate relief save in a court of equity, and stating that they are unable to ascertain to whom the notes have been transferred and delivered and cannot therefore state his or their name or names, but “that by reason of being the owner or owners of said notes and of said deed of trust (he or they) has or have an interest in said real estate and is or are interested in the subject-matter of this petition and of this suit,” plaintiffs pray for a judgment enjoining and restraining the Club, Edwin O. Kuhnle, the trustee, and these unknown owners of the notes from selling the property under the deed of trust during the pendency of plaintiff’s' appeal to the Supreme Court, and for general relief.

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Related

Kessler v. Kuhnle
159 S.W. 768 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 944, 158 Mo. App. 636, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-kuhnle-moctapp-1911.