Kirby v. Bank of Dearborn

19 S.W.2d 1043, 323 Mo. 356, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 467
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 1043 (Kirby v. Bank of Dearborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirby v. Bank of Dearborn, 19 S.W.2d 1043, 323 Mo. 356, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 467 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*359 RAGLAND, J.

This is a suit to set aside and cancel a deed of trust, alleged to constitute a cloud on plaintiff’s title to twenty acres of land, situate in or adjoining the town of Dearborn, in Platte County.

The deed records of Platte County purport to show the following facts with reference to the title in question. On February 22, 1922, William H. Gabbert and wife, he being then the owner of the title in fee simple, executed a deed of trust on the land to secure to the Bartlett Bros. Land & Loan Company the payment of a note of even date for $2500. On March 16, 1922, Gabbert and wife gave a deed of trust on the same and other land to secure to one Drais the payment of a note for $15,000. This latter deed of trust recited: “This deed is made subject to a first mortgage, dated February 22, 1922, to Bartlett Bros. Land & Loan Company to secure a note for $2500.” Both deeds of trust were filed for record on .the 27th day of March, *360 1922, the one first mentioned being filed four minutes earlier than the other. On May 12, 1924, the land in question was sold at a foreclosure sale had under the deed of trust given to the use of Drais. Plaintiff was the purchaser; upon the payment of the amount of his bid, $10, the trustee executed to him a deed of conveyance which recited: “This deed is made subject to a first mortgage, dated February 22, 1922, to Bartlett Bros. Land & Loan Company.”

By this proceeding plaintiff seeks to have annulled the deed of trust purporting to have been given to the use of the Bartlett Bros. Land & Loan Company on the grounds that it was without consideration and its execution was never completed by delivery.

The Bank of Dearborn (hereinafter called the Bank) closed its doors March 9, 1922. The controversy as to the validity of the $2500 note and deed of trust grows out of transactions had in connection with its attempted reorganization. Two or three months before it was compelled to suspend business the directors passed a resolution assessing the stockholders fifty per centum of their holdings for the purpose of securing enough new capital to continue. Gabbert, who had been cashier for twenty years, owned stock of the par value of $8,000. His assessment, consequently, was $4,000. Of this amount he paid $1500 in cash: for the purpose of securing the funds with which to pay the remainder he applied to the Bartlett Bros. Land & Loan Company (hereinafter called the Loan Company) for a loan of $2500 on the twenty acres of land.

In connection with the negotiations for the loan he signed the note, and he and his wife signed and acknowledged the deed of trust in controversy. These papers had not been delivered but were still in Gabbert’s possession at the time the Bank suspended, though the negotiations for the loan were still pending.

An audit of the books disclosed that Gabbert was indebted to the Bank in a considerable sum. Mr. William E. West, a State Bank Examiner, who as representative of the State Commissioner of Finance was in charge of the Bank and endeavoring to effect a reorganization, induced Gabbert to agree to apply on his indebtedness to the Bank the proceeds of the loan he was expecting to obtain from the Loan Company. Gabbert accordingly wrote the Loan Company on March 7, 1922: “Please pay the proceeds of loan being negotiated through you for the sum of $2500 and dated February 22, 1922, to the Bank of Dearborn, Dearborn, Missouri. Said loan having been negotiated for the benefit of said Bank. ’ ’ After some delay the Loan Company declined to make the loan. Thereafter it indorsed without recourse the $2500 note which had been drawn payable to it, and both the note and the deed of trust purporting to secure it came into the possession of the Bank or rather the State Commissioner of Finance who was at that time, and still is, in charge of its affairs and *361 acting for it. The Bank claims to be the holder ol the note and deed of trust, and that they constitute a valid and subsisting lien on the twenty acres of land.

With respect to the indorsement of the note and the Bank’s subsequent possession of it and the deed of trust the evidence is conflicting: Gabbert testified that his indebtedness to the Bank was ascertained to be $15,000, for which he gave the note and deed of trust to Drais as trustee for the Bank; that West, who had found the $2500 note and deed of trust among the papers in the Bank, requested his consent to conclude the negotiations for the loan and apply the proceeds thereof when obtained on his, Gabbert’s, indebtedness to the Bank; that he gave such consent, but with the distinct understanding that the proceeds of the loan were to be credited on, his $15,000 note; that he gave no further directions with respect to the $2500 note; and that he did not know until long afterward that the Loan Company had indorsed it over to the Bank.

According to the testimony of West, the facts were as follows: Gabbert’s liability to the Bank was in excess of $23,000. In his efforts to discharge this liability he agreed, among other things, that the then pending negotiations for the $2500 loan should be pressed to a conclusion and the proceeds of the loan paid to the Bank. In addition he and his wife gave a note for $15,000 and a deed of trust (to Drais as trustee) to secure the same, covering all of his property, including the twenty acres of land involved in this proceeding. The $15,000 note was also signed by thirty persons residing in the community, as sureties. To further aid Gabbert in effecting a settlement $5209 in cash was raised by popular subscription and paid to the Bank. When the Loan Company finally declined to make the loan, Gabbert agreed with West that the Loan Company might indorse the $2500 note to the Bank, and that the Bank should take the note and deed of trust in lieu of the proceeds of the loan, as at first contemplated, and this was done. By the greater weight of the credible evidence in the case the facts were as detailed by West, and v-~ so find. Mr. Gabbert on the witness stand said that, owing to the deplorable condition of the Bank’s affairs and his own personal involvement therein, he was suffering such great mental distress that many of the things which then took place were inexplicable to him when he afterwards attempted to recall them. That explanation no doubt accounts for the many inaccuracies found in his testimony.

There is no evidence that Gabbert ever made manual delivery of the $2500 note and deed of trust to either the Loan Company or the Bank. He testified that these papers were in his private desk in the Bank when West took charge. As it does not appear that he subsequently removed them or took them into his own personal possession, the inference is that they remained in *362 tbe general custody of West. When Gabbert consented for West to complete tbe negotiations for the loan and receive the proceeds for the Bank, he clearly gave West the implied authority to deliver the note and deed of trust to the Loan Company upon its acceptance of the application for the loan.

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Related

Higdon v. Jones
64 F.2d 296 (Fourth Circuit, 1933)
In Re Cunningham
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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 1043, 323 Mo. 356, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirby-v-bank-of-dearborn-mo-1929.