McNealey v. Baldridge

78 S.W. 1031, 106 Mo. App. 11, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 314
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 1031 (McNealey v. Baldridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNealey v. Baldridge, 78 S.W. 1031, 106 Mo. App. 11, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 314 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

The defendant executed to the Sullivan County Bank his promissory note for $1,250 on which the plaintiff became surety. ' The defendant also executed to said bank his further note for $900 on which one Ed Calhoun became surety. He (defendant) owned a farm of 208 acres which he mortgaged to Sullivan county to secure the payment of $3,500 payable to the school fund. About the time the notes first referred to were about to mature the defendant discovered that his debts were much in excess of his assets; that his indebtedness aggregated about $12,624.75. Included in his indebtedness was a further note to the Sullivan County Bank for $2,000 on which H.C. Stuart — a brother-in-law —was surety, and also two notes to L. M. Baldridge— a brother — amounting to two thousand dollars. The defendant’s rights and equities in the farm already re[14]*14ferred to were of the value of about $2,500. The defendant on December 19, 1900, executed to said Stuart a second mortgage on said farm to indemnify the latter against any loss he might sustain by reason of his suretyship on said $2,000 note to said Sullivan County Bank. And about the same time defendant sold to his said brother, L. M. Baldridge, his cattle, hogs, hay and corn for the lump sum of $4,000, the said brother paying therefor $2,000 in cash and agreeing to surrender his two notes for $2,000. With the $2,Q00 so received from his brother, the defendant paid overdrafts held by the First National Bank and the Sullivan County Bank aggregating $1,000 and also paid on his $1,250 note to the Sullivan County Bank, on which plaintiff was security, $524; and on his $900 note to the last named bank, on which Ed Calhoun was surety, $376.

The defendant’s creditors other than said Stuart and L. M. Baldridge on learning of the preference received by the latter expressed to them their dissatisfaction thereat, and thereupon such latter signified a willingness to have the status quo restored to the end that all of the defendant’s creditors might pari passu share in the security so given. Accordingly, after a number of parleys between the creditors and defendant, a meeting resulted at which it was agreed that if the defendant would secure a release of said mortgage so given to the said Stuart and a rescission of the sale of said property to L. M. Baldridge, and a release of any preference they might have received by reason of said mortgage and sale that they — the defendant’s creditors — would release and have cancelled the payments on said notes on which plaintiff and Calhoun were sureties, and that they would accept the said personal property and defendant’s interest in said farm land in full satisfaction and discharge of all debts due from defendant to each of them or for which they or any of them were liable as sureties. In pursuance of this agreement the defendant secured the release of said mortgage and the rescission of said [15]*15sale of personal property and of any preference the said Stuart and L. M. Baldridge had, or claimed, and turned over to said creditors the said personal property and executed a further mortgage at their request to said Stuart, whereby he conveyed his homestead rights and equities in said farm, which personal and real property said creditors accepted and received in consideration of which the said creditors released and discharged the defendant from all of his said indebtedness.

It appears that after the transfer by the defendant of the said real and personal property it was agreed by the creditors among themselves that two of said creditors, L. M. Baldridge and A. B. Watson, should take the personal property in payment of their claims and that the said Stuart should take the real estate security, and out of it pay the other creditors sixty cents on the dollar. This was accordingly done, the said Stuart paying the plaintiff sixty per cent on the amount due on the Sullivan County Bank note of defendant on which he was surety, and also a like per cent to Ed Calhoun on the note of defendant to said bank on which the latter was surety and of which claim plaintiff afterwards became the owner by assignment. The plaintiff at the time of this payment to him executed the following instrument, to-wit:

“Milan, Mo., January 9, 1901.
“Received of J. H. C. Stuart for R. B. Baldridge, the sum of $258 in consideration whereof with other agreements I agree to pay the balance due on a certain note given the Sullivan County Bank of Milan, Missouri, dated February 22, 1900, for the sum of $1,250 upon which note my name together with that of R. B. Bald-ridge appears. And I further agree to release R. B. Baldridge, I. H. Stuart, L. M. Baldridge and A. B. Watson, and all the personal and real property now belonging to or heretofore owned by R. B. Baldridge, from any and all liability for any sum of money that I may pay out on account of the indebtedness of R. B. Bald-[16]*16ridge as per agreement heretofore entered into on the eighth day of January, 1901, at the residence of James A. Baldridge in Milan, Missouri.
“R. A. McNealey.”

A similar instrument was at the same time executed by Ed Calhoun, plaintiff’s assignor.

This suit is by plaintiff against defendant to recover the amount which he was compelled to pay as surety, on said note of the defendant to the Sullivan County Bank and also to recover the amount said Calhoun, plaintiff’s assignor, had been compelled to pay as surety on the note of defendant to the said bank. The defendant pleaded the said agreement and release in bar of the plaintiff’s action. The plaintiff in his replication admitted the agreement and the execution of the said release, but alleged that, “at the time said Stuart, presented said releases to plaintiff and his assignor for their signatures, he, the said Stuart, falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiff and his assignor, that they were only releasing the property heretofore mentioned from any and all claims and that plaintiff and his assignor would still have an action against defendant for the balance due on the notes on which they were security. That plaintiff and his assignor did not read the releases so presented for their execution, but relied on the representations so made by the said Stuart and did not know for a long time thereafter that they had released the defendant from any and all liability on the notes which plaintiff and his assignor had paid as security for defendant. "Wherefore, plaintiff says that the releases so obtained should be of no binding force or effect on him and his assignor, but should be cancelled, set aside and for naught held in this suit.”

There was a trial to a jury. The defendant at the conclusion of the evidence requested an instruction in the nature of a demurrer thereto, which was by the court denied. The jury brought in a verdict for plaintiff to set aside which the defendant filed his motion, [17]*17making the ground thereof the action of the court in denying his demurrer to the evidence, which was by the court sustained; and from the order of the court setting aside the verdict and directing a new trial the plaintiff appealed.

An examination of the pleadings and evidence has' convinced us that the trial court did not err in directing the new trial on the ground set forth in defendant’s motion and in the order made, thereon. It stands admitted by the pleadings that the plaintiff and all the other creditors of the defendant entered into the agreement hereinbefore set out and also that he (plaintiff) executed the release.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 1031, 106 Mo. App. 11, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnealey-v-baldridge-moctapp-1904.