Leathe v. Title Guaranty Trust Co.

18 F.2d 41, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 1927
DocketNo. 7508
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 18 F.2d 41 (Leathe v. Title Guaranty Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leathe v. Title Guaranty Trust Co., 18 F.2d 41, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871 (8th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

TRIEBER, District Judge.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below, the appellant as plaintiff and the appellee as defendant.

. The action was instituted by the plaintiff for an accounting, claiming a very large sum of money, amounting to about $1,000,000, to be due her from the defendant.

The facts alleged in the complaint, briefly stated, are:

That Samuel H. Leathe departed this life in 1907, and by his will devised a large amount of real estate to the plaintiff, his widow, and also appointed her as executrix under the will. At the time of his death, one Charles H. Knisely was asserting a large claim against the deceased, which had been for some time in the courts prior to Mr. Leathe’s death, and which, on July 2, ,1915, béoame a judgment in the circuit court of St. Louis, amounting to the sum of $192,-263.75, which judgment became a lien on the greater part of said real estate devised to the plaintiff, including most of the parcels involved in this action.

On April 7, 1914 (in anticipation of this judgment, by the circuit court, the Supreme Court- of .the State having finally disposed of the;case in-favor of Knisely, 256 Mo. 341, 166;S. W. 257, leaving only the amount to -be 'determined by the circuit court), the plaintiff entered into a contract in writing with the defendant, where, in consideration of defendant agreeing to guarantee title to all or part of said estate, notwithstanding the said Knisely claim, she agreed, for the purpose of protecting defendant against liability on any guarantees of title defendant might issue, to convey to defendant by warranty deed, and the defendant agreed to hold upon the terms in the contract set forth, certain parcels of land:

Parcel 1. A lot on the south side of Washington avenue and Nineteenth street, on which there was an incumbrance of $75,-000.

Parcel 2. A lot on the north side of Washington avenue and Nineteenth street, subject to an incumbrance of $50,000.

Parcel 3. A block on the north line of Washington avenue, bounded by Twentieth and Twenty-First streets, subject to a first mortgage for $215,000, of which $50,000 had been paid, and a second mortgage for $100,-000, on which $60,000 had been paid.

Parcel 4. A block on the south side of Washington avenue and Eighteenth street, subject to a first mortgage for $150,000, and a second mortgage for a balance of $50,000.

It then sets out some of the provisions in the contract.

That on or about May 19, 1915, the defendant, assuming to act under the provisions of said contract, sold to one Paul Brown the premises described in parcels 1 and 4 for a consideration of $500,000; $225,-0p0 of the purchase money was the assumption by Brown of the mortgages on the property, $100,000 less certain expenses connected with the conveyance was paid in money, and 1,225 shares of the capital stock of the Clayton Road Realty Company were accepted at an agreed valuation of $175,000.

The plaintiff accepted the 1,225 shares of stock at an agreed valuation of $175,000 without any investigation and solely upon the faith in the representations of the defendant in regard to their value.

In May, 1914, plaintiff had caused to be incorporated the Leathe Estate Investment Company, for the purpose of taking title to, holding, and selling parts of the real estate so devised to her, and for said purpose she conveyed to the said investment company certain parcels of the real estate; that in fact she is and at all times has been the sole beneficial owner of said investment company.

On May 29, 1915, after the sale of parcels Nos. 1 and 4, to Mr. Brown, and pursuant to the terms of another contract entered into that day by the investment company and the defendant, she caused the in7 [43]*43vestment company, because of defendant’s wrongful refusal to execute certain guarantees of title, as had been agreed upon, to convey by warranty deed, subject to the provisions in the agreement of April 7, 1914, three additional parcels of real estate, described as parcels 5, 6, and 7. Parcel 5 is a lot of 50 feet on the south line of Washington avenue, near Twentieth street. Parcels 6 and 7 conveyed a large tract on Poplar street. These parcels were subject to a first deed of trust for $215,000, and a balance of $50,000 on a second deed of trust, and a later deed of trust given as additional security to secure a principal note of $50,000.

That the defendant sold parcels 6 and 7 (which will be referred to as the Poplar street property) to Harrison B. Riley and William C. Niblaek of Chicago, for a cash consideration of $300,000, and has advised the plaintiff that, out of the said consideration, it has paid on plaintiff’s account divers sums of money for commissions, guarantees - of title and interest charges, and other sums, includ-. ing the sum of $175,000 made in payment of the several deeds of trust on said property, and that the total amount of unpaid incumbrance on all of the property conveyed to defendant and held by it, had been reduced from the proceeds of the sale to the sum of $140,000, and that defendant then had cash on hand for plaintiff’s account $116,892.84.

On August 10, 1916, the trustee of the mortgages on parcels 2, 3, and 5 advertised them for sale by reason of a default in the payment of the debt' as- it matured, and at said sale they were bought by one Thomas J. Sheridan for a consideration of $147,850; that Sheridan at the time was an employee of the defendant and acting for its sole use and benefit; that on April 9, 1919, said Sheridan conveyed said parcels to one Thos. P. Stevens, also an officer and employee of said defendant, for a recited consideration of $1.

On October 13, 1916, the defendant pretending to act under the agreement between it and the plaintiff advertised and sold to said Thomas J. Sheridan, one of its employees, the 1,225 shares of stock taken in part payment of the sale to Brown, for the sum of $10,000, and in the manner set forth has appropriated all Of said property of the plaintiff conveyed to it in trust.

It is further .alleged that, .in February, 1920, the defendant sold and disposed to persons unknown to plaintiff, said shares at approximately the sum of $91,000, and that the defendant at the time of' said sale to Paul Brown, and the acceptance of said stock as part of the consideration for the conveyance, either grossly misrepresented the value of said stock to the plaintiff,' or else has been guilty of gross negligence in violation of its duty as plaintiff’s trustee, and therefore defendant should account to plaintiff for the difference between the sum of ten thousand dollars and $175,000, the agreed value thereof at the time it was accepted by it from said Brown.

That during July, 1918, the defendant purchased the said Knisely judgment. and caused the same to be assigned to one H. H.. Hopkins, an agent for and officer of defendant, as trustee, and said judgment yet appears of record as in full force and effect; against plaintiff as executrix of her deceased husband.

That parcels 6 and 7 referred to as the Poplar street property were very valuable, and worth at least $500,000 more than the amount reported to have been realized by defendant ($300,000), and that defendant should be compelled to account to plaintiff for at least $500,000.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F.2d 41, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leathe-v-title-guaranty-trust-co-ca8-1927.