Loeb v. Dowling

162 S.W.2d 875, 349 Mo. 674, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 875 (Loeb v. Dowling) 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
Loeb v. Dowling, 162 S.W.2d 875, 349 Mo. 674, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 524 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

TIPTON, P. J.

This is an action filed' in the circuit court of St. Louis County for damages for the wrongful foreclosure of real estate in St. Louis County, Missouri. After the appellant had started the examination of his first witness, an objection was made to the introduction of any evidence for the reason the petition failed to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This objection w.as sustained by the trial court and the appellant took an involuntary nonsuit with leave to set the same aside. The trial court refused to set aside the involuntary nonsuit, and the appellant has duly appealed.

The appellant’s statement of facts is as follows:

“The petition alleges that respondent John J. Dowling was the president, stockholder, and general manager of the Savings Trust' Company of St. Louis, a Missouri banking and trust company, which became defunct, and was under the administration of the Finance Commission of the State of Missouri prior to the beginning of this action. The petition further states that this corporation loaned to appellant in June, 1929, the sum of $9,500.00, secured by a deed of trust upon the real estate described therein, which consisted of a two-family-flat building of the reasonable market value at the times stated in the petition of the sum of $17,500.00. The principal debt was reduced to $9,000.00 one year after its date through the payment of $500.00 by appellant, but in June, 1932, the balance of the principal, together with interest in the sum of $270.00, became delinquent, and foreclosure of the property was advertised under a power of sale in the deed of trust. It is this transaction of which appellant complains.

‘ ‘ It further appears from the petition that the Savings Trust Company was designated in the deed of trust as trustee, and acted as such during all the times mentioned. It further appears that the notes secured by the deed of trust were held by various customers of the bank, who purchased them at the time the loan was made; that *678 shortly prior to maturity, the Savings Trust Company, through defendant John J. Dowling, notified the noteholders to present their notes to the Savings Trust Company, upon which presentation the Savings Trust Company purchased the notes and became the legal holder of all of them. At this time, and by this action, the aforesaid Savings Trust Company achieved the dual capacity of both trustee in the deed of trust and cestui que trust.

“Not knowing of such situation, efforts were made by the appellant, to procure the renewal of the loan by the bank, but respondent Dowling refused to cause said renewal to be made, and proceeded to advertise foreclosure of the property under the power of sale .in the deed of trust. The petition alleges further that respondent Dowling was personally in charge of this transaction, and that he concealed from appellant the fact that his company had become the holder and owner of the loan, and by reason thereof said respondent was guilty of fraud. It is then stated that pursuant to this notice, respondent Dempsey, an employee and agent of the Savings Trust Company, appeared at the designated place upon the 12th day of July, 1932, the date for which said sale had been advertised, and then merely read aloud the advertisement, did not call for bids, received none and announced none.

“Upon the 8th of August, 1932, twenty-seven days after the purported trustee’s sale, there was recorded by respondent Dowling, acting for the Savings Trust Company, a trustee’s deed of the said Savings Trust Company to one Kieth White, an alleged ‘straw’ party, for the purported consideration of fifty dollars. On the same day he likewise recorded a quitclaim deed to respondents Smith, alleged also to be ‘straw’ parties, from Kieth White, and a new deed of trust upon the property in question executed by the Smiths to secure twenty-one certain promissory notes payable to the legal holders thereof in the total principal sum of $10,500.00, in which deed of trust the Savings Trust Company was trustee. All of these conveyances are declared to have been made and recorded pursuant to the connivance, preconception and fraud of the respondents with the express purpose of defraiiding appellant and depriving him of his property, to the respondents’ benefit.

“It is further alleged that title to the property was conveyed into the hands of certain named innocent holders for value in July of 1933 by respondents Smith. Of the new $10,500.00 loan, it is charged that respondent Dowling personally received the sum of $195.77, and respondents Smith personally received the sum of $734.37.

“The petition further alleges that by reason of the hereinabove stated facts, appellant was deprived of his equity in said property of the reasonable value of $8,230.00, and, because of the willful nature of the respondents’ acts, further prayer is made for $10,000.00 punitive damages.”

*679 Appellant’s petition admits that the indebtedness secured by the deed of trust was past due, when the foreclosure was commenced. In fact, the appellant does not dispute that under the terms of the deed of trust a right to foreclose existed. The commencement of a foreclosure of a deed of trust cannot be wrongful when there is a clear right to foreclose. [Hayward Farms Company v. Union Savings Bank & Trust Company, 194 Minn. 473, 260 N. W. 868.] The facts stated in the petition do not show a wrongful foreclosure, but only an improper execution of a rightful foreclosure. “When the mortgagee has the right to foreclose, the foreclosure sale passes the legal title. An improper execution of the power of sale may be sufficient ground for a court of equity to set the sale aside. But, until it is set aside, it stands as a valid legal transfer of the' title and the mortgagor ought to be barred from claiming damages at law because of the transaction as long as he permits’ it to stand as a legal conveyance of his title. For him to allow it to stand and bring' an action at law, because of it, is in the nature of a collateral attack upon its validity. Such a sale may be voidable in equity but it is not void in law. If he desires to challenge its validity (when it' is voidable but not void), he should attack it directly and he can only do that by a suit in equity.” [Peterson v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 339 Mo. 700, 98 S. W. (2d) 770, l. c. 775.]

The appellant borrowed the money from the Savings Trust Company of St. Louis, 'and as security for this money, appellánt executed notes secured by a deed of trust on the real estate. 'The trust company was made the trustee under this deed of trust. It was, also, the holder of the notes. Later, the trust company sold these notes to its customers. The appellant contends that it was fraudulent for the trust company to repurchase these notes. The trust company had a right to purchase these notes. “Where a party does only what he has a legal right to do, the doing thereof cannot be made the basis of fraud.” [Nations v. Pulse, 175 Mo. 86, l. c. 94, 74 S. W. 1012, l. c. 1014.] “One cannot be guilty of fraud by doing what he has a legal right to do. A court does not inquire into one’s motives for doing a lawful act.” [27 C. J., l. c. 632-633; Plattsburg First National Bank v. Fry, 216 Mo. 24, 115 S. W. 439; State ex rel. Orr v. Buder, 308 Mo. 237, 271 S. W. 508;] There was no fraud committed when respondent John J. Dowling, president of' the Savings Trust Company, repurchased these notes.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 875, 349 Mo. 674, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loeb-v-dowling-mo-1942.