Paramore v. Campbell

149 S.W. 6, 245 Mo. 287, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 6 (Paramore v. Campbell) 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
Paramore v. Campbell, 149 S.W. 6, 245 Mo. 287, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 232 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

GRAVES, P. J.

— Plaintiffs, executors of the last will of N. Helen Paramore, deceased, sued the Mercantile Trust Company, of St. Louis, for the conversion of eighty Cass county bonds of the par value of $1000 each. They asked for damages in the sum of $80,000, and accrued interest.

The said Trust Company filed answer by which it was made to appear that as to the bonds in controversy it was a mere stakeholder, and that the real contestants as to the ownership of the said bonds were plaintiffs and one James Campbell, and thereupon said company was discharged of liability in said action upon conditions named, not material here, and the said plaintiff and the said Campbell were ordered to file their respective interpleas for the said bonds, as well as the interest which had accrued and been paid thereon. Plaintiffs thereafter filed their said interplea thus:

“Now come plaintiffs, Fred W. Paramore and Edward E. Paramore, executors under the last will and testament of N. Helen Paramore, deceased, and [294]*294in accordance with the order of court heretofore entered in the above entitled cause, file this their inter-plea herein, 'and for said interplea say that as executors of the estate of N. Helen Paramore, deceased, they owned a judgment against Cass county, Missouri, upon'which, on the first day. of June, 1908, the amount due and owing to plaintiffs by Cass county was, with accrued interest, $88,905.75, and at the same time there was another unpaid judgment against Cass county, Missouri, which was rendered on the 5th day of June, 1899, for $170,629.16, and which drew interest from the date thereof at the rate of ten per cent and in which plaintiff had no interest. ’ ’
“Plaintiffs say that the said county of Cass offered to settle and adjust the two said judgments by delivering, in satisfaction therefor, three hundred and ninety of its four per cent funding bonds, in the sum of one thousand dollars each, dated June 1, 1908, one-third thereof being payable at the option of the county any time after five years from the date thereof, one-third thereof being payable at the option of the county at any time after ten years from the date thereof, and one-third thereof being payable at the option of the county at any time after fifteen years from the date thereof, and all of said bonds falling due, if such option was- not exercised, twenty years from the date thereof.
“Plaintiffs aver that they authorized and empowered the- Mercantile Trust Company, the original defendant herein, to carry out for them the proposed compromise and to settle and satisfy their said judgment and to receive payment therefor in the aforesaid-issue of bonds, and that the holder of the other judgment aforesaid against Cass county conferred upon the Mercantile Trust Company like power and authorization with reference to that- judgment; and thereupon the Mercantile Trust Company settled and satisfied- said two judgments and received from Cass [295]*295county in payment thereof said three hundred and ninety bonds; that in accordance with this settlement, these plaintiffs were entitled to receive of said issue of bonds, in satisfaction of their judgment,, 94.4 per cent of the total amount due upon said judgment, with interest on the first day of June, 1908, but that the holder of the other judgment aforesaid claimed to have incurred certain expenses in connection with said compromise, and because thereof these plaintiffs authorized the Mercantile Trust Company to deliver to the plaintiffs only eighty thousand dollars of the bonds to which they were entitled under said settlement, and to deliver the excess thereof over eighty thousand dollars to the holder of the other judgment, and thereupon, on receipt of said bonds, said Mercantile Trust Company settled with the holder of the other judgment aforesaid in accordance with the authorization aforesaid from these plaintiffs, retaining the eighty thousand dollars of bonds here in controversy as,applicable to the settlement of the plaintiff’s judgment aforesaid, and delivering all of the three hundred ninety bonds, except the eighty here in controversy, to the holder of said other judgment.
“Plaintiffs say that on December 1, 1908', sixteen hundred dollars, being the amount of the interest coupons then falling due on said eighty bonds here in controversy, was collected by the said Mercantile Trust Company, and that said eighty bonds and the said sixteen hundred dollars interest accruing thereon are the eighty bonds and the sixteen hundred dollars in cash which have been paid over by the Mercantile Trnst Company to the St. Louis Union Trust Company as depository of this court under the order of inter-pleader heretofore entered in this cause.
“Wherefore the plaintiffs pray that they be awarded judgment for the delivery of said eighty bonds and said sixteen hundred dollars and all interest accruing thereon, and all interest that may here[296]*296after accrue on said bonds, for cost herein and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and proper in the premises.”

The interplea of Campbell, upon which the cause was tried, thus runs:

“I. Now comes James Campbell, who has been ordered to interplead in this case, and file this his amended answer and interplea in said case, in accordance with the order of the court heretofore entered of record herein, and, for answer to the interplea of the plaintiffs, Frederick W. Paramore and Edward E. Paramore, as executors under the last will and testament of N. Helen Paramore, deceased, denies each and every allegation contained in said interplea.
“And, having fully answered said interplea, this interpleader prays for judgment with costs.
“II. And this interpleader, in accordance with the order of the court heretofore made and entered of record in this cause, requiring him to interplead herein, now files this his amended interplea and claim for the eighty Cass county funding bonds of the par value of eighty thousand dollars and for the sixteen hundred dollars in cash, being the interest represented by the coupons due upon said bonds. on the first day of December, 1908, which bonds and money are now in the custody of the St. Louis Union Trust Company as a depository of this court; and as and for his interplea and claim for said bonds and said money, this interpleader says:
‘£ 1. That at the time of her death, N. Helen Paramore was the owner of a certain judgment recovered by her against the county of Cass, State of Missouri, on the 20th day of May, 1903, in the circuit court of the United States for the Western Division of the Western District of Missouri, which judgment was for the aggregate sum of $61,072.19', of which amount [297]*297the sum of $14,358.76 bore interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, and the sum of $46',713.43 bore interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the date of said judgment. That said: judgment was recovered upon two former judgments which had been theretofore recovered by the said N.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 6, 245 Mo. 287, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paramore-v-campbell-mo-1912.