Missouri Finance Corp. v. Roos

47 S.W.2d 142, 226 Mo. App. 869, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 37
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 142 (Missouri Finance Corp. v. Roos) 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
Missouri Finance Corp. v. Roos, 47 S.W.2d 142, 226 Mo. App. 869, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 37 (Mo. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

*873 BECKER, J.

'This is an action upon a contract of guaranty. The suit was originally instituted against three defendants, two of whom remained in default throughout the ease. The third defendant, Morris Friedman, died during the pendency of the suit and the cause was revived against Mrs. Emma Friedman, administratrix of his estate. The trial of the cause to the court and jury resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the administratrix, and she in due course appeals.

The amended petition upon which the case was tried alleged in substance that on April 9, 1927, the plaintiff entered into a written agreement with the Bird Manufacturing Company, a Missouri corporation, whereby plaintiff agreed to purchase accounts receivable of the Bird Manufacturing Company under the terms stipulated in said agreement; that contemporaneously the defendants did jointly and severally guarantee the full, prompt and faithful performance by the Bird Manufacturing Company of the said contract and did guarantee the payments by the Bird Manufacturing Company of the accounts purchased by the plaintiff under the said contract; that in accordance with the terms of said contract the plaintiff purchased many accounts from the Bird Manufacturing Company; that in October, 1928, the Bird Manufacturing Company went out of business by making an assignment for the benefit of its creditors; that at said time plaintiff had purchased accounts totalling $7,524.88, all then unpaid; that there has been credited upon the said amount by way of guarantee reserve and payment a total of $2,442.98, leaving a balance of $5,081.90; that the Bird Manufacturing Company did not fully, promptly and faithfully perform its obligations under the agreement of April 9, 1927, in that said company did not transmit, pay or turn over immediately or at any time thereafter any collections made on the accounts purchased which were unpaid and outstanding at the time of the assignment aforesaid, nor at any time paid to plaintiff the amount of said accounts; and that plaintiff demanded payment of the said balance of $5,081.90; that defendants have failed to pay the same, and the prayer is for judgment for $5,081.90.

The answer of defendant Emma Friedman, administratrix, to the said amended petition, after admitting the execution on or about April 9, 1927, of the contract between the plaintiff and the Bird Manufacturing Company and admitting that Morris Friedman did at the same time execute his guaranty of the performance of said contract by the Bird Manufacturing Company and the payment by the Bird Manufacturing Company of the accounts mentioned in said contract and purchased by plaintiff, in substance denies that the Bird Manufacturing Company failed to carry out the contract *874 and the agreements set forth therein, as alleged by plaintiff., and denies that there is an unpaid balance. For further answer it is alleged that Morris Friedman is not liable on his agreement of guaranty of April 9, 1927, and has been released therefrom by reason of the fact that, without his consent or knowledge, said agreement was not performed by the parties according to the terms thereof, and that the defaults on the part of the Bird Manufacturing Company for which plaintiff seeks to hold Morris Friedman responsible as guarantor arose, not under that contract, but under a new and substituted agreement made without his consent, which altered and varied the terms of said contract in various respects; that although the original agreement provided that the remittances to the Bird Manufacturing Company from its customers on the accounts theretofore sold to plaintiff would not be mingled with the funds of the Bird Manufacturing Company and would be kept separate and apart therefrom, and would be transmitted immediately upon receipt to the plaintiff, and the manufacturing company should have no title or interest in and to the same and should act only as the agent of plaintiff, the plaintiff permitted and consented to the Bird Manufacturing Company mingling remittances on the accounts theretofore purchased with its own bank account and using the same and treating the same as its own property; and that the plaintiff and the Bird Manufacturing Company completely altered the relationship established by the said contract from the purchase by plaintiff of accounts receivable of the Bird Manufacturing Company to the lending by plaintiff to the Bird Manufacturing Company of an amount equal to 78 per cent of the face amount of the accounts assigned to plaintiff, with a requirement that the Bird Manufacturing Company repay said loans five weeks from the time the accounts receivable assigned were payable and with a charge of two per cent of the face amount of the assigned accounts for the use of said monejr; that although the original contract contained no provisions for compensation to plaintiff if the assigned accounts were not paid when due, plaintiff demanded and exacted additional compensation on assigned accounts in the amount of two per cent per month if said accounts were not paid five weeks from the date of assignment; that although the original contract provided that the plaintiff should retain an amount equal to one and one-third per cent of the amount of every account purchased, as compensation for the making of an audit of the books of the Bird Manufacturing Company, the plaintiff made no such audit but nevertheless exacted said one and one-third per cent of the amount of accounts purchased from the Bird Manufacturing Company; and that although the contract contained a warranty by the Bird Manufacturing Company that plaintiff would be promptly paid on the maturity date of the accounts *875 sold or within not more than ten days thereafter, plaintiff extended the time of performance of said obligations beyond the time of maturity and ten days thereafter. For final answer it is alleged that, although the contract of April 9, 1927, purports to be an agreement for the sale and purchase of accounts receivable, it was, in fact, a device and scheme to enable the plaintiff to lend money to the Bird Manufacturing Company to the extent of 78 per cent of the amount of accounts receivable assigned, said accounts being security for the loan, and to collect for the use of said money so loaned interest at the rate of 18 per cent per annum, contrary to the statutes; and that the Bird Manufacturing Company paid to plaintiff, between April 9, Í927, and October, 1928, usurious interest in the amount of $1,521.96; and that plaintiff has failed to credit said amount of usurious interest to the account of the Bird Manufacturing Company as required by law.

In its reply plaintiff, in substance, denied any modification of the guaranty of April 9, 1927, and denied that there was consideration for any new contract, and alleges that if there was any new contract the same was made with the knowledge of Morris Friedman.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 142, 226 Mo. App. 869, 1932 Mo. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-finance-corp-v-roos-moctapp-1932.