Mid-Continent National Bank v. DeShong

538 S.W.2d 914, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2054
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1976
DocketNo. KCD 27417
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 538 S.W.2d 914 (Mid-Continent National Bank v. DeShong) 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
Mid-Continent National Bank v. DeShong, 538 S.W.2d 914, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2054 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

DIXON, Presiding Judge.

An appeal involving propriety of instructions in a suit on a note with a counterclaim by the maker that the holder of the note negligently failed to timely dispose of stocks held as collateral.

A jury verdict of $8,000 was returned in favor of the defendant on the counterclaim.

The following facts were stipulated, and the stipulation was read to the jury by the trial judge.

On January 20, 1969, defendant, Dorland DeShong, borrowed from plaintiff, Mid-Continent National Bank, the amount of $73,750.00 at 7¾% per annum. This loan was evidenced by a note and secured by 100 shares of stock in Rieke Corp. (Rieke), 100 shares of stock in Security Equity Fund, Inc., (SEF), and 40 shares of stock in Missouri Pacific Railroad (MoPac).

On March 3, 1969, three days before the note came due, defendant was placed in jail as a result of an incident which resulted in the death of his wife. Thereafter, defendant was confined in jail and two state hospitals. The date of his release does not appear in the record.

On March 6, 1969, the due date of said note, the principal and interest owing to plaintiff totaled $74,474.07. Thereafter, plaintiff liquidated the collateral and applied the proceeds to accrued interest and principal as follows:

3/14/69 and 3/25/69 — 100 shares Rieke and 100 shares SEF — net proceeds of $5,882.50.
5/15/69 — stock split SEF — net proceeds of $1,452.51.
10/14/70 — 40 shares MoPac — net proceeds of $33,117.50.
12/30/69 — a $200 dividend on the MoPac shares was received and applied.

Based upon these sales and receipts, the plaintiff bank stipulated principal and interest due at the time suit was filed totaled $42,811.08.

In March of 1969, the asking price for the MoPac shares was $2,000 per share and the bid price was $1,825 per share. In 1969, the high sales price was $1,950 per share and the low sales price was $1,220 per share. In 1970 the high sales price was $2,220 per share and the low sales price was $650 per share. These shares were sold in October of 1970 for $830 per share.

[916]*916Based upon the stipulated facts, if the bank had sold this collateral in March of 1969, it could have realized between $73,000 and $80,000.

Plaintiff’s pleaded theory of recovery was that the note balance plus accrued interest less credits for the sale of collateral was $42,811.08.

Defendant’s pleaded affirmative defense was that plaintiff was negligent in not selling the collateral and that if it had been sold in March, 1969, the deficiency would not have occurred.

Thus, it was claimed a sale of the MoPac stock of $76,000 (approximately the average bid and asked prices in March) and the actual sales price of the other stocks, $7,379.51, would have resulted in a setoff of $83,379.51 against the March 6th balance of $74,474.07.

Based on the same claim of negligence, the counterclaim pleaded damages for the difference of $8,905.44.

Defendant’s claim of negligence in both his affirmative defense and counterclaim are based upon evidence that plaintiff was directed to sell the MoPac shards in March, 1969, and at all times had the authority to do so under the loan agreement, and failed to do so without reasonable justification. A representative of defendant, his son-in-law, requested that plaintiff liquidate the MoPac shares in March of 1969. The testimony at trial is unclear as to a justification for failing to liquidate promptly.

Some effort was made to indicate that the plaintiff bank believed the defendant was “attached” to the MoPac shares and also it was in evidence that defendant had not communicated personally with the plaintiff bank. As plaintiff bank notes in its brief, the “live” evidence was very limited.

The plaintiff did not squarely controvert the claim of defendant that the son-in-law had notified the bank of defendant’s desire that the collateral be sold. It is conceded that the bank had the right and the power to sell the collateral in default. The flavor of the bank’s evidence on its failure to

make a timely disposition of the collateral in the face of a falling market is shown by a short verbatim excerpt from the transcript of evidence being a portion of the testimony of one of the officers of the bank.

“Q Was it common practice back in 1969 at the Mid-Continent National Bank to check the market every day on all securities pledged as collateral?
A No, sir.
Q How often would that have been done?
A Well, back in 1969, as I recall, as the market pressures that were on at that time, we were probably checking every week or two, because the market looked rather dismal at that time.
Q You are not suggesting to this jury, are you, Mr. Kuklenski, that you were unaware of the fact that the Mo-Pac stock was declining in value?
A Definitely not.
Q You knew that?
A Certainly.
Q In spite of that, you did hang on to the stock?
A That is correct.”
* * * * * *
“Q Isn’t it a fact that you refused to sell Mo-Pac simply because you wanted the interest to run on the note? Is that what the discount committee decided?
A No, sir.
Q What had they decided?
A They decided not to sell the stock at that time.
Q Why?
A There were a lot of factors that entered into it.
Q What factors?
A For one thing, we had no contact with Dr. DeShong. We knew the circumstances, how the loan originated originally, what his feeling was toward the Mo-Pac stock, what he felt it would do in the future, and we took all those things in consideration.
[917]*917Q That was your sole reason for refusing to sell Mo-Pac?
A That is right; it was the committee’s decision.
Q You were on the committee?
A Yes.”

One issue, raised in the argument needs resolution before dealing with the issue raised by plaintiff as to the instructions. During argument statements were made by counsel as to the verdict returned which indicated the verdict was returned upon the counterclaim alone. Upon questioning as to the judgment, the transcript was examined and found not to contain the judgment in violation of the mandatory provision of Rule 81.14(a). The judgment has been obtained, and it is a judgment against plaintiff on its suit and a judgment for defendant in the sum of $8,000. The jury verdict is as follows:

“We, the jury, find the issues in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff and we assess defendant’s damages at $8,000.00. Signed Thelma M. King, Foreman.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
538 S.W.2d 914, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-continent-national-bank-v-deshong-moctapp-1976.