National Refining Co. v. Continental Development Corp.

189 S.W.2d 551, 354 Mo. 402, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 526
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 4, 1945
DocketNo. 39476.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 551 (National Refining Co. v. Continental Development Corp.) 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
National Refining Co. v. Continental Development Corp., 189 S.W.2d 551, 354 Mo. 402, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 526 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

By this action the National Refining Company seeks to set aside a conveyance of real estate from Charlotte Zuckerman to Continental Development Corporation and to subject the property to the payment of a deficiency judgment against Miss Zuckerman.[552] The theory of the action is that the conveyance was in fraud of creditors. Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 3507.

The National Refining Company, desiring to sell its filling station at Southwest and Sulphur Streets in St. Louis, placed it in the hands of a real estate agent, Edward M. Thornhill. Mr. Thornhill had previously represented the company in its real estate transactions. Originally the sale of this property was to have been for cash. Accordingly, *Page 406 after some negotiations with Mr. Glick of the Glick Real Estate Company, an earnest money contract for the sale of the property was entered into for $9000.00 cash. The contract of purchase was executed in the name of Charlotte Zuckerman and $300.00 earnest money was paid to Mr. Thornhill by the Glick Real Estate Company. The agreement for a cash sale of the property was not carried out. After Mr. Glick had determined to forfeit the $300.00 earnest money there were further negotiations with a view to selling the property on some other basis. Finally it was suggested that the property might be sold on the basis of a cash payment of $1000.00 with a note and deed of trust for the balance of the purchase price in the sum of $8000.00. Mr. Thornhill said that he would submit such a sale to the refining company's Kansas City office. Mr. Glick says that Thornhill suggested that he was already out $300.00 and that he might as well gamble another $700.00. In any event, a note and deed of trust were prepared and submitted to the company and after some charges in the terms of the deed of trust, suggested by the refining company, the transaction was consummated on that basis.

The Glick Real Estate Company paid Mr. Thornhill an additional $700.00 and on April 23, 1941 the National Refining Company executed a warranty deed to the property to Charlotte Zuckerman. She in turn gave the National Refining Company a note for $8000.00 secured by a deed of trust on the property. The note was for one year. One installment of $162.90 was paid by the Glick Real Estate Company directly to the National Refining Company's office in Kansas City. No other or further payments were made and on March 24, 1943 the deed of trust was foreclosed and the filling station was purchased at the foreclosure sale by the National Refining Company for $6000.00. In February 1944 a deficiency judgment was entered in favor of the refining company against Miss Zuckerman. National Refining Co. v. Zuckerman (Mo. App.), 183 S.W.2d 390.

Miss Zuckerman is a stenographer in the Glick Real Estate Company's office. Admittedly, in this transaction she was a "straw" party, as is the respondent Continental Development Corporation. For the purposes of this case she is and was insolvent and had no interest whatever in this or any other real estate. After she had attained her majority many pieces of real estate were held in her name and she had executed several notes and deeds of trust. On March 23, 1943, the day before the foreclosure sale was held Miss Zuckerman executed a quitclaim deed conveying twenty-five or twenty-six properties which then appeared in her name to the Continental Development Corporation. In the beginning this suit sought to set aside the transfer as to all of these pieces of property. Subsequently there was a release of all the property from the suit except the six parcels now in question. *Page 407

Four of these tracts of real estate were conveyed to Miss Zuckerman in 1940 and 1941 prior to the sale of the filling station and the execution of the note and deed of trust by her. One tract was conveyed to her on the same day, October 27, 1941, the transaction was consummated and one tract was conveyed to her in 1942, after the transaction but before its foreclosure. The six lots, in fact, were jointly owned by Sam Schiffer, Hyman Gett, the Glick Real Estate Company, Phil Schiffer, Gus Gaines and Steinbaum Brothers. Except for Gett and Steinbaum Brothers, who were interested in but two of the lots, all these people were salesmen for or officers in the Glick Real Estate Company.

As we have said, neither Miss Zuckerman nor Continental Development Corporation have any financial interest in any of this property and there was no consideration for any of the conveyances to or from either of them. Under these circumstances and since the transfer from Miss Zuckerman was after the notice of foreclosure (Mo. R.S.A. Sec. 3484) and the day before the foreclosure sale, the National Refining Company contends that the transfer was in fraud of creditors and the land may therefore be subjected to the payment of its deficiency judgment (Conrad v. Diehl, 344 Mo. 811, 129 S.W.2d 870; Godchaux Sugars, Inc., v. Quinn (Mo.), 95 S.W.2d 82) [553] even though it be assumed that the beneficial owners of the six lots, except the Glick Real Estate Company, had nothing to do with the principal transaction and even though there is no judgment against the Glick Real Estate Company or its representatives for the deficiency.

The trial court found, as the respondents admit, that the Glick Real Estate Company was the real purchaser of the filling station and that Miss Zuckerman had no interest in it but merely held the title for the real estate company. The court also found that she had no interest in the six tracts of land involved in this action but merely held the title to them for the real owners and conveyed the lots to their nominee, the respondent Continental Development Corporation. The court found that the National Refining Company was fully aware of the fact that Miss Zuckerman was a "straw" party, had no beneficial interest in either the filling station or the six tracts of land and that credit was not extended to her in reliance upon her ownership of any property. Accordingly the court found that the transfer was not fraudulent as to the refining company's judgment.

[1] There are many motives, some good and some bad, for transferring real estate to "straw" parties and executing purchase money notes and deeds of trusts in their names. Gill, Strawmen In Missouri, 14 Mo. Bar J., pp. 98-102. In the absence of fraud or deceit by the real owners or in the absence of other misconduct to those dealing with the straw party or the property, the mere fact of a conveyance to one who has no interest in the property merely for the purpose of *Page 408 holding the title or for the purpose of executing a purchase money note and deed of trust and thus limiting the liability of the actual owner or purchaser to the security of the real estate sold (25 Wn. U.I.Q., pp. 232, 237) is not in and of itself fraudulent. Benton v. Alcazar Hotel Co., 352 Mo. 836, 845, 846,180 S.W.2d 33, 38; Citizens Bank v. Burrus, 178 Mo. 716, 77 S.W. 748; Siess v. Anderson, 159 Mo. App. 656, 660, 139 S.W. 1178. Of course, if the actual owner knows that credit is being innocently extended to his "straw" grantee in reliance on his apparent solvency and his apparent ownership of real estate, and actual beneficial ownership is concealed, the circumstances are altered. Singer Mfg. Co. v. Stephens, 169 Mo. 1, 68 S.W. 903.

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 551, 354 Mo. 402, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-refining-co-v-continental-development-corp-mo-1945.