Patterson v. Fitzgibbon Discount Corp.

339 S.W.2d 301, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 487
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 20, 1960
DocketNo. 30423
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 339 S.W.2d 301 (Patterson v. Fitzgibbon Discount Corp.) 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
Patterson v. Fitzgibbon Discount Corp., 339 S.W.2d 301, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 487 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

On September 22, 1958, the FitzGibbon Discount Corporation, hereinafter called appellant, obtained a default judgment against the respondent, Howard Patterson, in the magistrate court of the City of St. Louis, in the amount of $1,355.02. This action was brought in the circuit court on November 20, 1958, to set aside that default judgment. Originally, the action was against the appellant; one Ralph Jacobson, d/b/a Shamrock Motor Sales; and the Easton-Taylor Trust Company. Appellant’s motion to dismiss was overruled, as was that of Easton-Taylor Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as Easton-Taylor. Answers were filed and trial was held as to them. During trial, the respondents dismissed their cause of action as to Jacobson.

The petition filed by the respondents recited the magistrate court proceedings and judgment, stating that “* * * service of summons was served upon Alice Dorris Patterson, wife of Howard Patterson, * * * ”; that Howard Patterson had no knowledge of the judgment until the garnishment of his bank account, which took place after expiration of time for appeal; that “ * * * due to mistake, accident and inadvertance (sic), his wife, upon whom the summons was served, placed said summons about the home and failed to tell him about it or show him the same, so that he did not know of its importance and content, and that as a result said default judgment was rendered against him as a result of said mistake, accident and inadvertance (sic)”; that appellant knew there was no consideration for the note and chattel mortgage, and thus was not a “bona fide purchaser for value or holder in due course”; that Jacobson had paid all or part of the amount due on the note and chattel mortgage; that respondent Howard Patterson has a meritorious defense to the magistrate court action, and that his default was not due to any lack of diligence or fault on his part in failing to defend; that the magistrate court judgment was unjust, inequitable, and unconscionable and the result of mistake, misfortune, accident and inadvertence; that Jacobson was a party to this action when he could not have been a party in the magistrate court because respondent Howard Patterson’s defense was in the nature of an equitable defense or such a defense as he could not avail himself of in a magistrate court; that respondent did not have an adequate remedy at law; that respondent will suffer irreparable injury by the enforcement of the magistrate court judgment because of an execution and writ of garnishment issued against both of his bank accounts at Easton-Taylor, whereas all of said money in those accounts is the money of respondent Alice Dorris Patterson. A decree was prayed setting aside the magistrate court judgment, enjoining any further action under the present execution and garnishment, quashing the present execution and garnishment, for damages, and for any other and further relief as deemed just and proper.

The evidence by the respondents and Jacobson was that Mrs. Patterson testified that she was a teacher; that she was asked if Mr. Patterson was home and handed the “paper” and told it was a court summons; that she did not read it, being threatened at the time with a miscarriage, but .put it on the dresser under a scarf; that at that time they lived upstairs in a 4-family flat; that this took place in the daytime and her husband came home later that evening; that some letters came to the house one day and she knew through them that her husband was having some type of controversy with appellant; that she had asked him about it and that he told her it was taken care of and not to worry about it; that letters came several times but that after the first time she never discussed it with her husband but merely “put them aside”; that she never gave the summons to her husband nor discussed it with him, and that the first she knew the appellant had a judgment [304]*304against her was when the hank account, containing her money received for teaching, was garnisheed. On cross-examination, Mrs. Patterson testified again that the man at the door told her the paper was a court summons; that she knew the significance of that but due to her condition — she had been having dizzy spells and sick fainting spells — she had overlooked these papers; that these papers were served on August 29th and she was ill until January of the following year, when she had a miscarriage with resulting necessary surgery. The evidence as to the manner in which the money was deposited in the Easton-Taylor Trust Company and how respondent carried on the business is not pertinent at this point.

Howard Patterson testified that the first he knew of the judgment in the magistrate court was when he got a letter concerning the garnishment; that his wife never gave him any paper that was left with her; that he did not owe appellant any money, nor had he received any property from it; that he never received any money or property from Jacobson; that he did sign the note and chattel mortgage; that he did so because he had planned to buy an automobile from Jacobson, but Jacobson never had it ready; and that he tried to get the note and chattel mortgage back but could not; that he has never paid anything on the note; that it was entirely due to the fact that his wife never gave him the papers served on her that he did not defend the magistrate court action; that he never appeared in the magistrate court, the judgment being by default. On cross-examination, he testified that he signed this note along with some other papers with the understanding that if his “credit doesn’t go through”, then the note was no good; that the amount was filled in on the note when he signed it.

Jacobson testified that he was engaged in the automobile used car business; that he wrote a deal on an automobile to Mr. Patterson, but did not actually sell him one; that Patterson gave him a note and chattel mortgage and a $50 deposit on a 1955 Plymouth Sedan, and that when the deal was not completed he returned the $50 deposit; that he negotiated the paper to appellant; that he did not recall what amount the note was originally for; that when Patterson signed the note it was not filled out, and neither was the chattel mortgage; that he never filled either in and did not know who did; that all his books and records were lost in the tornado which hit St. Louis shortly before; that he had been dealing with appellant four or five years and during that time averaged 300 deals a year, totalling between $200,000 and $300,000; that Patterson never paid him anything on the note, and what money was paid to appellant came from him without any reimbursement from Patterson; that following Patterson’s signing the note and Jacobson taking it to appellant for discount, Jacobson went to appellant and told “him” that he didn’t sell the car to Patterson and “to pull the car off”; that FitzGibbon told him: “I will tell you what to do: for the time being, we will set it aside. You make a payment on it now, to keep it up to date. I will put .it over on your floor plan and, when you resell the car, you give me another deal on it to overcome the note Mr. Patterson signed here”; that this is the way it was worked out, and appellant knew Patterson did not get an automobile; that appellant’s auditing department sent notices to every account and knew exactly who had a car and who didn’t, there being some ten different people involved in similar transactions; that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
339 S.W.2d 301, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-fitzgibbon-discount-corp-moctapp-1960.