Kessler v. Kuhnle

159 S.W. 768, 176 Mo. App. 397, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 29
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 768 (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, 159 S.W. 768, 176 Mo. App. 397, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 29 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ALLEN, .J.

This case is here upon second appeal. The decision of this court in the cause upon the former appeal will be found reported in 158 Mo. App. 636, 138 S. W. 944, to which reference is made for a more complete statement of facts than is here made.

On or about October 18, 1907, the plaintiffs in this action, William P. Kessler and his wife (appellants here) took title to certain lands in Lincoln county by warranty deed from one Naxera and one Knight and [401]*401their wives. As part consideration therefor, appellants executed their principal note for the sum of $6000, dated October 18, 1907, payable ten years after date to the order of Naxera and Knight, bearing interest from maturity at the rate of eight per cent per annum, and likewise twenty semiannual interest notes, each for the sum of $180, maturing one at the end of every period of six months thereafter, and each also bearing interest from maturity at the rate of eight per cent per annum. To secure payments of these notes, appellant executed a deed of trust upon the land, of even date therewith, to defendant Kuhnle, as trustee.

At the time of this purchase, appellant Kessler was a director and president of the defendant, Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club, a corporation organized under the provisions of what is now article 10, chapter 33, Revised Statutes 1909, and the latter, in February, 1909, instituted an action in equity against appellants upon the theory that they acted for the corporation in purchasing the land, charging that they perpetrated a fraud upon the corporation in taking title thereto in their own names. In that action, viz., Prairie Slough Fishing & Hunting Club v. Kessler et al., the lower court entered a decree vesting the title to the land in the corporation, upon compliance by it with certain conditions named in the decree. From this, judgment of the circuit court divesting them of title, the defendant in that case (plaintiffs . in this) appealed to the Supreme Court, where in a decision recently rendered by that court, as yet unreported, the judgment of the trial court was reversed upon the ground that the corporation was without power to take and hold title to the property in question. Pending the appeal in that case, however, this action was instituted in equity by the appellants to restraiu a sale of the property in question about to be had un[402]*402der the terms of the. deed of trust, default having been made in the payment of the semiannual interest notes, beginning with the one maturing October 18, 1909, which, under the terms of the deed of trust, matured all of the notes secured by it for the purpose of foreclosure. The action was instituted against the trustee in the deed of trust, the corporation, and the unknown holders of the notes. The .respondent Karbe, the holder of said notes, entered his appearance and filed an answer and cross-bill praying for a foreclosure of the deed of trust. The trial court dismissed plaintiffs’ bill and entered judgment for defendant Karbe on his cross-bill, decreeing a foreclosure. The plaintiffs having appealed from that judgment to this court, we held the decree to be erroneous, not in dismissing plaintiffs’ bill and decreeing a foreclosure, but in that the court had failed to find the amount due against the land, failed to foreclose the interest of the corporation therein, and failed to make provision for impounding the surplus, if any, arising from said sale pending the determination of the appeal then pending in the Supreme Court. [See Kessler et al. v. Kuhnle et al., 158 Mo. App. 636, 138 S. W. 944.]

After the cause had been remanded by this court, the plaintiffs filed an amended reply, praying to be allowed to pay into court, for the use of defendant Karbe, the amount of the principal note and interest thereon, and to be subrogated to the rights of defendant Karbe in and to the notes and to all of his right, title and interest in and ,to said lands under and by virtue of the deed of trust. Thereafter said amended reply on motion of defendant Karbe was stricken from the files, and on November 18-, 1911, the court again entered judgment for defendant Karbe, decreeing that he “have judgment upon the notes in evidence for the sum of six thousand nine hundred ninety-three dollars ; with six per cent interest per annum on six thousand dollars of this judgment and eight per cent in[403]*403torest per annum on nine hundred ninety-three dollars of this judgment as found; that, on April 18,1912, the amount of this judgment hearing six per cent interest he diminished one hundred eighty dollars, and the amount bearing eight per cent interest be increased one hundred eighty dollars, and at the end of each six months thereafter until judgment be paid that the amount of this judgment to bear six per cent interest be diminished by the further amount of one hundred eighty dollars, and the amount to bear eight per cent interest be increased by amount of one hundred eighty dollars. And it is further ordered and adjudged that the equity of redemption of the plaintiffs, William P. Kessler and Lena Kessler, in real estate described as follows: (Here follows description of land) “be forever foreclosed against said plaintiffs, and all persons claiming under them. It is further ordered that said real estate be sold by the sheriff of Lincoln county, Missouri, to satisfy this judgment and that special ■fieri facias issue to the sheriff for that purpose. It is also ordered that the net surplus, if any, remaining after sale and after satisfaction of this judgment be paid by the sheriff to the clerk of this court, to be held pending the further judgment of this court.”

Prom this judgment the plaintiffs have prosecuted their appeal to this court.

But little now remains in the case. By the decision of the Supreme Court, above referred to, the title to the land “remains in these appellants, subject to the lien of the deed of trust held by respondent Karbe. The latter is entitled to a judgment of foreclosure and to have the land sold to satisfy the debt and interest, subject to the right of appellants to pay off the same at any time prior to a sale together with any expenses incurred in proceeding to make such sale. All questions relating to the rights of the corporation with respect to the land have disappeared.

[404]*404The decree, however, from which this appeal is prosecuted is erroneous, in Our judgment, in allowing interest on the interest notes, and consequently in the amount found to be due at the time of the rendition of the decree, to-wit, November 18, 1911. The court found the sum of $6993 to be then due, i. e., the principal sum of $6000 and $998 interest. At that time five interest notes of $180 each were due and unpaid, viz., interest notes maturing October 18, 1909, April 18, 1910, October 18, 1910, April 18, 1911 and October 18, 1911 respectively. These five notes together represented the interest on the six-thousand-dollar principal note for a period of two years and six months, i. e., from April 18, 1909, to October 18, 1911, amounting to $900. Each interest note, however, on its face purported to bear eight per cent interest after its maturity. Hence, the amount due was ascertained by computing interest on each of these interest notes from its maturity to November 18,1911, amounting in the aggregate to seventy-eight dollars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 768, 176 Mo. App. 397, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-kuhnle-moctapp-1913.