Metropolitan Paving Co. v. Brown-Crummer Investment Co.

274 S.W. 815, 309 Mo. 638, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 18, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 815 (Metropolitan Paving Co. v. Brown-Crummer Investment Co.) 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
Metropolitan Paving Co. v. Brown-Crummer Investment Co., 274 S.W. 815, 309 Mo. 638, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 522 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*646 WHITE, J.

The Metropolitan Paving Company, hereinafter called the Paving Company, brought this action against the defendants, the Brown-Crummer Investment Company, hereinafter called the Brown-Crummer Company, and the Fidelity National Bank & Trust *647 Company of Kansas City, hereinafter called the Fidelity Company, for damages, alleging’ that the defendants fraudulently conspired to obtain and fraudulently obtained from the plaintiff the assignment of a contract which plaintiff had with the defendant the Brown-Crummer Company.

In July, 1919, the plaintiff Paving' Company, entered into contract with the city of Marysville, Kansas, to perform certain public work f.or that city, to be paid for in bonds to be issued by the city of Marysville when the work should be completed.

One Charles E. McCrae of Kansas City was employed by the city of Marysville, as consulting engineer in the construction of the improvement. He was also engaged in the bond-brokerage business in Kansas City. After the contract was awarded to plaintiff, Mr. McCrae undertook to assist in the disposition of the bonds to be issued in payment' for the work. Finally a contract was concluded whereby the Brown-Crummer Company was to buy at par the bonds which the city of Marysville was to deliver to the plaintiff. The Brown-Crummer Company was to advance money to the plaintiff to pay expenses of the work while in progress before issuance of bonds. This contract between the plaintiff and the Brown-Crummer Company entered into July 29, 1919, forms the basis of this suit. The plaintiff claims it was breached by the Brown-Crummer Company, thereby furnishing plaintiff a cause of action; that the Brown-Crummer Company and the Fidelity Company conspired to defraud the plaintiff, and by fraudulent representations procured from it the assignment to the Fidelity Company of that contract, and the Fidelity Company, in consummation of the fraud, delivered the contract to the Brown-Crummer Company.

The plaintiff entered upon the work, and the BrownCrummer Company advanced the first ten thousand dollars, in payment for the work, as it advanced. Another ten thousand dollars was advanced to the plaintiff by McCrae.

*648 Evidence showed that the work dragged, and early in February, 1920, the Brown-Crummer Company complained that the bonds could not be delivered in the time provided in its contract with plaintiff.

Correspondence ensued between the Brown-Crummer Company and McCrae, and February 11, the BrownCrummer Company wrote to McCrae:

“ While we can appreciate the fact that the causes of the delays which have defeated the fulfillment of the contract covering the issuance and delivery of the three hundred-odd thousand City of Marysville Kansas Street Improvement Bonds were beyond the control of the contractor, still we cannot assume responsibility therefor, and shall consider ourselves released from all obligations under the contract which specifically provided for the delivery of said bonds within six months and in ample time to have enabled us to have marketed them prior to the taxing period of March 1st.”

Thereafter several conferences occurred between Mr. McCrae, Mr. Davis, president of the-plaintiff, and Mir. Dolman, attorney for the plaintiff, on the one side, and Mr. Crummer and Mr. Brown, representing’ the BrownCrummer Company, on the other side.

Mr. Crummer and Mk. Brown refused to recognize the binding force of the contract; claimed that the plaintiff, by not being able to deliver the bonds in approximately six months, had violated the contract, and the Brown-Crummer Company was thereby relieved from purchasing the bonds. The representatives of the plaintiff insisted that the contract did not require delivery of the bonds at any specified time.; that they were to- be delivered when the work should be completed, which depended upon many things. During these conferences the Brown-Crummer people complained that the bonds were not as salable after the first of March as they were prior to that date, and they could not afford to carry on the contract and purchase the bonds at the rate at which they had agreed to take them, but proposed that, if the plaintiff would give them a bonus of ten or fifteen thousand dollars, they would enter into another contract by *649 which they would continue to furnish money and huy the bonds when the work was completed.

This situation it seems caused the work to be suspended. Mr. McCrae, and. others representing the Paving’ Company, began negotiations with other parties to secure a sale of the bonds. It was necessary not only to have someone buy the bonds, but to furnish money to keep the work in progress until the bonds should be issued. Negotiations were conducted with the defendant, the Fidelity Company, and Miarch 20th that company entered into contract with the plaintiff whereby it agreed to buy the bonds at ninety-six cents on the dollar and accrued interest, and to furnish money to pay for the work as it progressed.

In negotiating this contract the Fidelity Company made it a condition that the Paving Company should assign to it, the Fidelity Company, the original contract which the Paving Company had with the Brown-Crummer Company. The assignment was accordingly made in these words:

“Kansas City, Mo., Meh. 20, 1920.
“For value received we hereby assign, transfer, and set over to Fidelity National Bank & Trust Company all our interests and rights of action arising under the foregoing contract.”

The plaintiff introduced evidence to show that the Fidelity Company had no real beneficial interest in the contract which it had just made with the plaintiff; that on the same day the Fidelity Company made a contract with the Brown-Crummer Company by which the Browu - Crummer Company was to buy the bonds, to furnish the money, and to perform all the contract which the Fidelity Company made on that day with the plaintiff. The evidence showed that the Brown-Crummer Company did in fact furnish all the money and pay for the bonds according to the terms of that contract; that the Fidelity Company furnished no money except for the length of time checks and drafts should be cashed by 'the BrownCrummer .Company. It was further shown that Mr. *650 Crummier, representing the Brown-Crummer Company, was in Kansas City, March 20th, when the contract was entered into, in the same building where negotiations were being conducted between Mir. Martin, representing the Fidelity Company, and Messrs. Dolman and Davis and others, representing the plaintiff; that Martin would confer with representatives of the plaintiff and go out from time to time and return to continue the negotiations. The evidence tended to show that each time he went out he consulted with Mr. Crummer. Before closing the arrangement he agreed with Mr. Crummer that as part of the arrangement he would procure from the plaintiff the assignment of the original contract which the plaintiff had with the Brown-Crummer Company. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 815, 309 Mo. 638, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-paving-co-v-brown-crummer-investment-co-mo-1925.