Lustenberger v. Sarkesian

119 S.W.2d 921, 343 Mo. 51, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 519
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 17, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 119 S.W.2d 921 (Lustenberger v. Sarkesian) 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
Lustenberger v. Sarkesian, 119 S.W.2d 921, 343 Mo. 51, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 519 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at September Term, 1937, April 1, 1938; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at September Term, 1938, September 17, 1938. This cause was reassigned. It is in equity to set aside a sale under a deed of trust and to cancel the trustee's deed; to cancel and set aside a warranty deed, and to cancel and set aside a deed of trust, and to have the deed of trust upon which plaintiffs rely adjudged to be a first lien upon the real property involved, and that this lien be foreclosed. The court granted the relief sought by plaintiffs, and defendants Sarkesians appealed.

The cause was filed by Frank Lustenberger as the sole plaintiff, but during the trial it developed that his brother, W.F. Lustenberger, had a two-thirds interest in the note and deed of trust relied upon. When this situation developed, W.F. Lustenberger was made a party plaintiff. The petition was not changed in all places, after W.F. Lustenberger was made a party, to show the plural instead of the singular, but in stating the substance of the petition we use the plural.

Plaintiffs alleged that on May 23, 1927, defendant, Margaret G. Hutchinson, and her husband, Harry H. Hutchinson, were the owners of the described real property, a part of four lots in the city of St. Joseph; that on said date the Hutchinsons executed their 7 per cent note for $3000, to R.E. Gardner, due in three years, and payable at the office of the H.S. Smith Investment Company in St. Joseph; that on the same day, the Hutchinsons executed a deed of trust on the property to defendant Gow, trustee, to secure the $3000 note; that the deed of trust was recorded May 27, 1927; that thereafter and on the ____ day of May, 1927, Gardner, for value, endorsed the $3000 note to plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs became the owners and holders of the note and deed of trust. Plaintiffs further allege that on June 13, 1928, trustee, Gow, without order or direction from them pretended to sell the property under the deed of trust, and on June 22nd thereafter, pretended to execute to defendants Charles W. and Olive Edith Purdy, a trustee's deed, conveying the property to them; that the trustee's deed was recorded June 30, 1928; that thereafter and on June 22, 1928, the Purdys pretended to convey the property by warranty deed to the defendants Sarkesians, but that the Smith Investment Company retained the Purdy deed to the Sarkesians till January 2, 1931, before it was recorded.

Plaintiffs further alleged that on January 11, 1935, the Sarkesians executed a deed of trust on the property to defendant Wright, trustee for defendant Esther Godfrey, to secure their (Sarkesians') note for $1000 given to defendant Esther Godfrey, and that the Godfrey deed of trust was recorded April 15, 1935. And plaintiffs allege that since purchasing the Gardner note and deed of trust they have not received any payment on principal or interest.

The Purdys answered by general denial, and specifically denied that they purchased the property at the foreclosure sale, or conveyed it to the Sarkesians. And the Purdys denied that they, at any time, had any interest in the property. *Page 56

The Sarkesians answered by a general denial and alleged that on January 2, 1931, the Purdys for a valuable consideration conveyed to them the real property in question; that the deed recited that it was subject to a deed of trust for $3000 given to J.F. Healey to secure to him the payment of a $3000 note, held by Healey for the use and benefit of the Smith Investment Company; that they (Sarkesians) paid the Healey note "to the legal holder" on January 2, 1931, and that the deed of trust securing the note was satisfied of record. And the Sarkesians allege that at the time they purchased the property an abstract of title was furnished them, and, in effect, that the title from the abstract appeared to be good; that they purchased in good faith and without notice of any infirmity or irregularity in the title, and that they were innocent purchasers.

The Sarkesians further alleged that the Smith Investment Company, H.S. Smith and Joseph L. Hager (managers of the company) were the agents of plaintiffs in the servicing of securities purchased through the company; that this agency included the Gardner note and deed of trust, and that these agents had authority to collect principal and interest on plaintiffs' securities purchased through the company, and had authority "expressed or implicit, to order foreclosure" of the Gardner deed of trust; and that trustee, Gow, foreclosed the deed of trust at the request of plaintiffs or their agents; that at all times concerned plaintiffs maintained "a running account" on the books of the Smith Investment Company and permitted the collection of principal and interest, by the Smith Investment Company, on securities sold to plaintiffs by said company "that the amount due under the note and deed of trust" held by plaintiffs "was duly paid" to said general agents for plaintiffs and credited on their accounts with the Smith Investment Company; that these credits were accepted by plaintiffs and that plaintiffs "had full knowledge of the fact that the monies so credited were available" and could have been collected from these agents from and after July 19, 1928, and that plaintiffs ratified the foreclosure.

The Sarkesians further alleged that they had been in possession of the property involved since January 2, 1931, during which time they had made repairs, paid taxes, and had made improvements exceeding $2000 in value; that although the Hutchinsons (makers of the note and deed of trust held by plaintiffs) were in default prior to June 10, 1928, plaintiffs made no effort to protect their rights for a period of seven years, and not until the Smith Investment Company became bankrupt; that Harry H. Hutchinson and H.S. Smith both died before plaintiffs did anything to protect their rights, and that because of their unwarranted delay they were guilty of laches, and should be barred.

Defendant Esther Godfrey, in her answer, alleged that the real property involved, "according to the records" was conveyed by Gow, *Page 57 trustee, to the Purdys, and that the Purdys conveyed to the Sarkesians; that the Sarkesians gave her the $1000 note, secured by the deed of trust on the property; that she made the loan to the Sarkesians and depended upon and relied upon the records as shown in the abstract furnished her; that she acted in good faith and was innocent of any "fraudulent acts of any other person," and asked that her deed of trust be held to be a first lien.

The abstract of the record recites that Margaret Hutchinson "in her individual capacity" filed an answer "in the nature of a general denial. The answer is not set out. The record does not show that other defendants filed answer. However, the judgment recites that all defendants appeared. No reply appears to have been filed.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W.2d 921, 343 Mo. 51, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lustenberger-v-sarkesian-mo-1938.