Ohnsorg v. Turner

13 Mo. App. 533, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 151
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 13 Mo. App. 533 (Ohnsorg v. Turner) 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
Ohnsorg v. Turner, 13 Mo. App. 533, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 151 (Mo. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

Lewis, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petition states that Albert Ohnsorg is administrator, Catherine Rohn the widow, and Augusta the only child, of August Rohn, deceased; that on the 22d of February, 1876, August Rohn was the owner of a lot on Christy Avenue, in block 166 of the city of St. Louis, having forty feet front on the north side of Christy Avenue, and one hundred and forty-five feet deep ; that on said 2-2d of February, 1876, Rohn and wife executed a deed of trust to Arthur and John. F. Lee, recorded in book 538, page 442, to secure to Thomas T. Turner, trustee of Rebekah Briggs, the payment of seven promissory notes of even date, six of them for $450 each, payable in six, twelve, eighteen, twenty-four,' thirty, and thirty-six months after date, and one note for $9,000, payable three years after date, all bearing ten per cent interest after maturity; that the three interest notes payable in six, twelve, and eighteen months from date, were promptly paid by said Rohn ; that Rohn died in May, 1878 ; that in March, 1879, A. and J. F. Lee, trustees, advertised the said property for sale for the alleged reason that default had been made in the payment of the other notes, and attempted to sell, and did sell, the said property to said Turner, for the inadequate price of $6,000, and executed to him a trustee’s deed therefor; that at said sale only one bid was made for said property, namely, that made by said Turner; that no money passed by said Turner or said Briggs, or anyone else, to said trustees, or either of them, but that said Lees cancelled said notes for $450, due respectively in [535]*535twenty-four, thirty, and thirty-six months after date, and placed a credit of about $4,800 on the said $9,000 note; that by the terms of said deed of trust, advertisement for thirty days was required, but that said trustees caused the property to be advertised for only twenty-one days, in clear contravention of the terms of said deed and of their duties as trustees; that at said sale the property was worth at least $18,000, and should have brought at least $15,000 had it been properly advertised; that immediately after said sale and the making to him of a deed, Turner took forcible possession of the property, and has remained in possession ever since, collecting large rents and deriving great profits ; that the property is highly improved, having a four-story building containing thirty-eight rooms, the monthly rent of which is worth $125 ; that after said sale Turner assigned said $9,000 note, on which was a credit of $4,800, to Brai-nard Million; that Million presented said note for allowance against the estate of Bohn, and procured an allowance, which was affirmed by the circuit court and court of appeals, and an appeal therefrom is pending in the supreme court; that the estate of Bohn is insolvent, and that Million is prosecuting a suit in equity to subject certain real estate held by Albert Ohnsorg to the payment of said judgment and set aside certain deeds made by Bohn in his lifetime ; that said A. and John F. Lee are interested in said suits, and the proceeds thereof, should they be realized; that they are acting as attorneys in said suits for said Million and for Turner as trustee, who is also interested; that a short time ago defendants discovered the mistake'they had made in not advertising the said property for thirty days ; and instead of communicating said discovery to plaintiffs, and having an accounting to ascertain the amount due, they, the said A. and J. F. Lee, advertised the property for sale anew in the Post-Dispatch, and in order to conceal this from the plaintiffs, they omitted to mention that it was the property of Bohn, or that it was to be sold under his deed of trust; [536]*536that said advertisement was not made at the request of the holder of any of the notes, the payment of which was secured by the deed of trust; that the three interest notes had been fully paid by the rents and profits ; that the first sale has never been set aside by any court; that the power of making sale under said deed has been exhausted by said A. and J. F. Lee, in making the first sale; that they are not impartial, but are acting entirely in the interest of Turner; that they are not proper parties to remain trustees ; that if the property should be sold under existing facts and without the first sale being set aside, “ it would not bring nearly so much as otherwise that tbe amount due on the notes remains unascertained ; that plaintiff's believe and charge that only a small amount remains due thereon after full credit for all income derived from said property while in possession of defendants; that if the same be ascertained and fixed, they may be willing to pay off the same without a sale ; wherefore, they pray an injunction to prevent the sale advertised to take place on September 3, 1881, and that the court will cause to be ascertained the indebtedness, if any, remaining due from Rohn on the said notes, and for that purpose take an account of the rents and profits of the property since it came into the hands of defendants; that it will set aside the first sale, “ and in case plaintiffs refuse or neglect to pay off the remaining indebtedness, if any, to order a resale of the property, and for that purpose to remove said A. and John F. Lee, as trustees, as being interested and improper parties, and appoint a proper party therefor, and to cause the proceeds to be distributed according to the rights of the parties.”

The defendants, Thomas T. Turner, for himself and as trustee of Rebekah Briggs, John F. Lee, Jr., and Arthur Lee, answered this petition, saying: First, that they admitted the making, on the 22d of February, 1876, of the deed of trust referred to in the petition, but not made an exhibit thereof, by which A. Rohn secured the payment of a note [537]*537for $9,000 and notes for interest, payable semi-annually, all the notes bearing ten per cent after maturity ; that A. and John F.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Mo. App. 533, 1883 Mo. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohnsorg-v-turner-moctapp-1883.