Laughlin v. Laughlin

237 S.W. 1024, 291 Mo. 472, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 1024 (Laughlin v. Laughlin) 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
Laughlin v. Laughlin, 237 S.W. 1024, 291 Mo. 472, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 243 (Mo. 1922).

Opinions

The petition, filed in 1917, is in two counts. The first count is at law for a balance of $20,404, due on open and running account, extending from January, 1878, to June, 1914. The second is a count in equity, for an accounting for 20 shares of stock of the face value of $2,000 in a coal company, which stock plaintiff loaned to defendant in 1883; also for the proceeds from the sale of two tracts of land in St. Clair County, Missouri, which defendant acquired title to in 1883 and held in trust for plaintiff.

The defense to both counts was a general denial, the five and ten-year Statutes of Limitations, and laches. The answer also contained several counterclaims for money loaned plaintiff by defendant after 1898. *Page 479

The reply traversed the answer and counterclaims.

The evidence on the first count of the petition is very voluminous. We have examined it carefully. It was conflicting and its probative force rested upon the verbal testimony of the plaintiff and defendant. There was no instrument in writing by which a case was made out for plaintiff by documentary evidence. Nor were defendant's admissions sufficient to make out plaintiff's case.

As to the count in equity: The evidence shows that the plaintiff and defendant were lawyers and brothers, the defendant being the elder. He went to St. Louis and commenced the practice of his profession in 1869. He was married, with a family. Plaintiff, then single, went to St. Louis in 1877, and the brothers occupied the same office for many years. The plaintiff soon acquired a profitable business. As early as 1878, he commenced to loan defendant various sums for household and other expenses, on account of which defendant made payments from time to time. Defendant kept no accounts, but left that matter to plaintiff. Their relations were intimate and friendly for many years. In fact, until about 1898, when plaintiff began to insist on a settlement. In the eighties plaintiff did a large amount of work for one Funkhauser, who had large property interests, but had made a bad failure. For his fee, by verbal contract with said Funkhauser, plaintiff was to receive the land in St. Clair County in question here. It consisted of two tracts, one the Sac River Farm of about 1,000 acres, and the other the Monegaw Springs Property of about 1,600 acres. There were two deeds of trust on the property, aggregating about $11,000, subject to which plaintiff was to take the property. Funkhauser did not make a deed to plaintiff, but stood ready to do so on demand. In some manner not clearly shown, plaintiff got the deeds of trust reduced to $2,500 in 1883. He then approached defendant and told him that if he would pay off the $2,500 incumbrance on the property, plaintiff would give him half the proceeds from the sale of the Sac River Farm. *Page 480 Thereupon, both visited the property, which was then in possession of Mr. Mcllheny, a relative of Funkhauser. Mellheny, who seemed to know about the plaintiff's deal with Funkhauser, in the presence of defendant, recognized plaintiff as the owner and, in effect, turned over possession to plaintiff, or both plaintiff and defendant. Plaintiff and defendant spent several days hunting upon and examining the property. Up to this point, there is hardly a substantial dispute. At least, we have no difficulty in determining such to be the facts thus far. Plaintiff further testifies that defendant was satisfied with the property and agreed to his proposition, and then and there agreed to pay off the deed of trust and take over the property and control and manage the property until a satisfactory sale could be made, in the meantime, paying the taxes, but no rent. When it should be sold, plaintiff was to have one-half of the proceeds from the sale of the Sac River Farm and defendant one-half, and plaintiff was to have the whole of the proceeds from the sale of the Monegaw Springs Property. Plaintiff says, further, that when they returned to St. Louis, defendant, for purposes of his own, suggested that the title to both pieces should be conveyed to him and he would hold them for both parties, as agreed aforesaid. That some hitch arose as to Mrs. Funkhauser signing the deed, and, thereupon, it was agreed between plaintiff and defendant, that to secure title which defendant was to hold, as before agreed, instead of paying off the $2,500 incumbrance and a judgment for taxes and taking deed from Funkhauser, they would let the deed of trust be foreclosed and defendant would buy in the property at the trustee's sale. This was done in 1883, and the defendant paid the trustee $2,500 and costs, the full amount of the incumbrance. He received a trustee's deed for all the property covered by the deed of trust, which included the whole of the Sac River Farm and part of the Monegaw Springs Property. The judgment for taxes was against about 600 acres of the *Page 481 Monegaw Springs Property, and to get title to this, it was agreed that it should go to sheriff's sale. This took place about the same time in 1883. Plaintiff bid in the property for $25, paid the bid himself, but by agreement with defendant the sheriff's deed was made to the defendant. Plaintiff also says that afterwards, from time to time, especially about 1890 and thereafter, he vainly sought an accounting from defendant, which defendant always put off with a promise to account in the future and make a good showing, but he never did. About 1888, defendant went into other business in Chicago and was consequently away from St. Louis a large part, if not the most, of the time thereafter. But his legal domicile remained in St. Louis, until 1900, when Chicago was his permanent home and so remained up to the time the suit was brought.

Defendant's testimony is that he never agreed, but always refused, to pay off the $2,500 mortgage. But after visiting the property in 1883, as detailed by plaintiff, he agreed to buy it in at the trustee's sale for the amount of the debt and costs for himself, and if he ever made anything out of it, to give plaintiff something for putting him on to the bargain. That accordingly, such trustee's sale was had and defendant bid in the property, paid the purchase price, $2,500 and costs, to the trustee, who made him a deed, and defendant was ever thereafter the exclusive owner of the Sac River Farm. But he claimed no interest in the Monegaw Springs Property, which he considered of no value, but permitted plaintiff to have the sheriff's deed, under sale for taxes, to that property made to defendant for the plaintiff. Defendant further testified that he never received a cent from the Monegaw Springs Property, and if he ever made any deeds therefor they were brought to him by the plaintiff. That plaintiff, himself, transacted the business and received the consideration, if any, for all such deeds. That more than ten years before the suit was filed, plaintiff abandoned Monegaw Springs and said there was nothing there. Defendant *Page 482 admitted getting a statement of account from plaintiff made out in 1891, afterwards dated February 9, 1892, when he had a conference with plaintiff relating thereto. That account had the following charges against defendant at the close thereof:

"Interest in the Sac River Farm "20 shares Straight Creed Stock ....... $ 200.00 Trip to W. Va., not counted ........... 60.00 Cash advanced by J.L. on farm ........ 350.00 Wood sold Collected by J.L. from Carter Co. .. 78.00 Insurance ............................. 1500.00 Cash advanced by H.D.L. ................. "

At the time defendant introduced this statement in evidence, lines were drawn through the above items.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 1024, 291 Mo. 472, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laughlin-v-laughlin-mo-1922.