Laughlin v. Leigh

126 S.W. 743, 226 Mo. 620, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 743 (Laughlin v. Leigh) 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. Leigh, 126 S.W. 743, 226 Mo. 620, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 83 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is án appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis on the 10th day of April, 1906.

The suit was one in equity and there were two counts in the amended petition on which the cause was tried. The first count was for an accounting and judgment for certain mortgaged bonds of the National Hollow Brake Beam Company and other securities alleged to have been received by the defendant in trust for the plaintiff. There was a final judgment for the defendant on the issues joined on that count and the plaintiff has not appealed therefrom, so that count is not involved in this appeal. In the second count plaintiff avers that the defendant during January, 1899, received from the American Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, Illinois, as plaintiff’s agent and for plaintiff’s account, two hundred and seventy-two mortgaged bonds, with certain interest coupons attached, of the Chicago Railway Equipment Company, each of the par value of five hundred dollars; and known and numbered as follows:

[629]*629No. received. Series. Numbers.
2 B 29 and 30
10 D 21 to 30 both inclusive.
10 F 21 to 30 both inclusive.
30 G 1 to 30 both inclusive.
20 H 11 to 30 both inclusive.
100 K 1 to 100 both inclusive.
100 M 1 to 100 both inclusive.

And also received from the said bank two hundred and seventy-two interest coupons, which had previously been detached from said bonds, and had collected them and their interest, said coupons amounting in the aggregate to $13,600, and that defendant had accounted to the plaintiff for sixty-seven of said bonds of the aggregate par value of $33,500, and no more, and that defendant was wrongfully withholding the residue of said bonds and refused to account to plaintiff for any part of the same. The petition concluded with this prayer: “Plaintiff prays the court to ascertain the number of said bonds still in defendant’s possession, but belonging to plaintiff, the identity of all such bonds, the amount of interest collected on account of them and the amount collected by him on those for which he did account and to render its judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant requiring him to account for and turn over to plaintiff all of plaintiff’s bonds still in his possession with the coupons attached thereto, or to pay plaintiff the amount of the value thereof, together with the amount of interest collected or received by him on each or all of them, with interest on such collections from the dates of their respective payments, and for costs.”

The answer pleads with great detail that plaintiff derived his title to said bonds through a written contract from himself and the Chicago Railway Equipment Company; that thereafter the plaintiff entered into another contract with the National Hollow Brake [630]*630Beam Company; that the two contracts together were known as the “Rent Readjustment Matter.” “That before said agreement between plaintiff and said two companies were entered into, it was agreed1 by and between plaintiff and this defendant that the said agreements were to be taken or made in plaintiff’s name alone, but that the plaintiff and this defendant should together carry out said plan and agreements, and on ■joint account, and jointly hear the burden thereof and share the benefits and profits arising therefrom, and that after their said individual indebtedness to and holdings of shares of stock in said National Hollow Brake Beam Company had been equalized, they should be the joint owners of all the shares of stock and the assets of said company, share and share alike, as well as the joint owners of the said mortgage bonds of the Chicago Railway Equipment Company which were not disposed of or used in purchasing or acquiring the outstanding shares of stock in the said National Hollow Brake Beam Company, at par, in the manner in said agreement specified.”

The answer further pleads that the defendant attended to and carried out the details of said agreement; that stock of the National Hollow Brake Beam Company to the amount of 26,223 shares was purchased in part by means of said bonds, which left 362 of said bonds undisposed of; that said 26,223 shares of stock and said 362 bonds under the terms of the said agreements so made by plaintiff with the said Chicago Railway Equipment Company and the said National Hollow Brake Beam Company, and said agreement between plaintiff and this defendant, became and were the joint property of plaintiff and this defendant; that thereafter defendant received the bonds, and accounted for and delivered to plaintiff ISO thereof, and with plaintiff’s full knowledge retained 150 of said 362 bonds as and for his share thereof; that thereafter the bank (in whose possession they were) delivered [631]*631ten of said bonds to plaintiff and ten to defendant, and tbat plaintiff replevied ten more from said bank; tbat tbe remaining thirty-two of said bonds were sold, and tbat defendant accounted to plaintiff for one-balf tbe proceeds thereof.

• Tbe answer further pleads tbat tbe defendant and plaintiff divided tbe stock of tbe N. H. B. B. Co. acquired by them as aforesaid; tbat thereafter tbe plaintiff sued tbe defendant for defendant’s half of said stock; tbat defendant appeared and made defense., putting in issue tbe title to said stock; tbat tbe issues and facts involved in said suit are, or were, tbe same as tbe issues and facts involved in tbe cause of action stated and relied upon by plaintiff in tbe second count of bis petition herein; that tbe cause was tried, and final judgment entered in favor of defendant, adjudging him'to be tbe owner of said stock; wherefore defendant pleads said judgment in bar of plaintiff’s right of action under tbe second count.

Tbe answer finally pleads tbat tbe plaintiff’s claim to tbe stock and bonds was a single right of action, and tbat by bringing two suits tbe plaintiff has split up said single cause of action, and is therefore estopped from maintaining bis present action.

Tbe answer concludes with a counterclaim against tbe plaintiff for $2000 on account of bonds alleged to have been sold by tbe defendant to tbe plaintiff.

The reply admits tbe source of plaintiff’s title to the bonds substantially as alleged in the answer; denies tbe alleged private agreement or contract between plaintiff and defendant; denies tbat any bonds were ever retained by defendant as and for his share thereof ; alleges that one hundred and fifty of them were retained by him under an option, which was terminated without being exercised; admits the suit about tbe stock; denies tbat tbe judgment is a final judgment; alleges tbat tbe cause is awaiting final action in tbe appellate courts of Illinois; denied tbat tbe defendant [632]*632has accounted1 to plaintiff for any of the bonds charged in the petition; denies that the cause of action has been split; and denies the counterclaim.

On June 9, 1902, this cause was referred to Edward Cunningham, Jr., Esq., to try and report his findings on all the issues, and he in due course of time proceeded to take testimony in the cause, but died before making his report.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 743, 226 Mo. 620, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laughlin-v-leigh-mo-1910.