Meierhoffer v. Kennedy

223 S.W. 624, 204 Mo. App. 351, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 44
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 624 (Meierhoffer v. Kennedy) 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
Meierhoffer v. Kennedy, 223 S.W. 624, 204 Mo. App. 351, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 44 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action for money due plaintiff from defendant growing; out of a contract for the sale of a' sand business owned by plaintiff, defendant and one Swenson. The petition is as follows:

“Plaintiff for Ms amended cause of action against the defendant states:
(1) That, heretofore, plaintiff, and one W. H. Caffery were copartners engaged in the sand business in Kansas City, Missouri; that thereafter, the interest of said Caffery was acquired, and plaintiff and the defendant and one Godfrey Swenson became copartners engaged in the same business at the same place; that thereafter; said business was incorporated under the name of Kansas City Sand Company with a capital stock of sixty thousand dollars ($60,000), fully paid; that for convemence and as a matter of bookkeeping, each of said parties, was charged or credited on the books of said company according’; to. his investment in said business with reference.to Ms interest in or holdings of the capital stock of said company, whereby the mutual obligations and relations of said parties -with respect to said business and each other were expressed; that in the months of November and December, 1917, plaintiff was charged on the books of said company with three thousand eight hundred forty and 12/100 dollars ($3,840.12), and defendant with twenty-three thousand two hundred eighty-three and 81/100 dollars ($23,283.81), and said Godfrey Swenson with twently-three thousand two hundred eighty-three and 81/100 dollars ($23,283.81); that said sums, however, were not in truth and fact assets of said Kansas City Sand Company, but, as stated, evidenced facts hereinbefore alleged.
*353 (2) That on or about November or December, 1917, one Clifford Histed, acting for and. on behalf of the Stewart Sand Company, offered said Kansas City-Sand Company and said parties, who were the only! stockholders of said Kansas City Sand Company, the sum of seventy-filve thousand dollars ($75,000) for the major part of the assets of said company, in which the charges aforesaid on the books of said company against the plaintiff, the defendant and said Swenson were not considered and have not been and are not so claimed by said Histed, or any one for whom he acted, whereupon plaintiff and defendant and said Godfrey Swenson, who were the all and only directors and stockholders of said sand company, as a condition to accepting said offer, agreed among themselves as follows:
(a) That siaid offer of said Clifford Histed be accepted,
(b) That there be paid out of said sum of seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000), the sum of forty-two thousand dollars ($42,000), due from said sand company to the Commerce Trust Company of Kansas .City, Missouri.
(c) That each of said parties collect of and from said Clifford Histed the sum of eleven thousand dollars ($11,000.),
(d) That the defendant and said Swenson each pay plaintiff such sum as would equalize his investment in said sand business to and with plaintiff and as though each of said parties had in fact paid into said company the amount, including interest thereon to December 31, 1917, with which he was charged on the books of said company and distribution had then been made equally between them, so that the net profits realized by each based on the books as aforesaid would be equal.
(3) That in pursuance of the agreement so made, and under the terms thereof, said assets of said Kansas 'City Sand Company were sold as aforesaid for the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000), and said *354 note due said Commerce Trust Company, in the sum of forty-two thousand dollars ($42,000) was paid and that each of said parties collected of and from said Histed the sum of $11,000, or an equivalent thereof satisfactory to him; that which was actually received by defendant being unknown, to plaintiff, and the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of six thousand eight hundred and 46/100 dollars ($6,800'.46.).
(4) That plaintiff has demanded said sum of the defendant, but the defendant has failed, neglected and refused to pay the same or any part thereof.
Wherefore, by reason of the premises, plaintiff prays judgment against the defendant for the sum of six thousand eight hundred thirty-six and 70/100 dollars ($6,8136.70), together with interest thereon, and for his costs in this behalf expended.”

The answer consisted of (1) a general denial, and (2) a plea of estoppel, as follows: That there was a contract entered into by the Kansas City Sand Company, plaintiff, defendant and Swenson, these persons being the only stockholders in said company, and one Histed wherein the sand company sold to Histed for $75,000 its property except certain ledger accounts receivable; that the property sold to Histed consisted in. part of the indebtedness shown on the books of the Kansas City Sand Company, which included $3,840.12, which the books showed to be due from plaintiff, and $23,283'.81 due from defendant and Swenson each, all of which items are the same as those mentioned in plaintiff’s petition; that by said contract said amounts due were assets sold and delivered to said Histed and that plaintiff, defendant and Swenson warranted to defend the title to such assets to Histed; that as a part of said contract a separate contract was entered into by the defendant with Histed, with plaintiff’s consent, that defendant would not for a term of ten years enter into the sand business. Defendant says in his answer that by reason of the foregoing “plaintiff is estopped, after having induced defendant” and Swenson “to make a *355 contract and deed of conveyance by which they warranted the title to said assets to said Histed,” and to “now assert that” said charges on said books are “not in truth or in fact assets of the Kansas City Sand Company” and did not pass to Histed under the contract, and that to permit him to assert that said charges on said books were not SO' sold “would be to permit him to use this court for the purpose of-perpetrating a fraud.” The trial, which was had before a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for1 plaintiff in the sum of $6836.70.

The facts leading up to the contract executed between the Kansas City Sand Company, plaintiff, defendant and Swenson, on'the one hand, and Histed on the other, as described in plaintiff’s petition, are about as follows: Plaintiff and one W. H. Caffery were engaged in the sand.,. business in Kansas City, Missouri, under the name of the Kansas City Sand Company. Plaintiff had in the business about $16,000 and Caffery about $14,000. Neither drew any salary for two years and all the profits were kept in the bulsiness. The business was profitable. The concern owed the Southwest National Bank' of Commerce $25,000 and plaintiff I bad given his individual collateral- as security therefor in the sum of $17',000. However, some dissatisfaction or disagreement arose between plaintiff and Caffery and plaintiff agreed, to buy Caffery out on the basis of paying his $20,000 and assuming all the debts and the collection of all- accounts.

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Related

Meierhoffer v. Kennedy
263 S.W. 416 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1924)
Maier v. Wallace and Cook
244 S.W. 945 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 624, 204 Mo. App. 351, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meierhoffer-v-kennedy-moctapp-1920.