Paxon v. Kregel Casket Co.

9 S.W.2d 856, 223 Mo. App. 151, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 209
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 856 (Paxon v. Kregel Casket Co.) 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
Paxon v. Kregel Casket Co., 9 S.W.2d 856, 223 Mo. App. 151, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 209 (Mo. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

*153 BRADLEY, J.

This is an action to enjoin the negotiation of and to cancel a promissory note. Decree went for plaintiff as prayed, and defendants appealed. Kregel Casket Company is in fact the only defendant concerned and hereinafter where we use the term defendant we have reference to the casket company.

The note in question was payable to defendant and dated January 4, 1927, is in the principal sum of $46^5.29, due on demand and draws interest at six per cent from date, and purports to be signed by plaintiff and R. E. Snow. The substance of plaintiff’s petition is that she did not sign the note, but that if she did sign it, she did not know it and she did not intend to sign it, and that her signature was procured by false and fraudulent representations. Also an alleged material alteration is pleaded. The answer of defendant Rhodes is to the effect that he has no interest in the note and no authority to negotiate it or to do anything concerning it.

The answer of defendant casket company denies that the signature of plaintiff was procured by false or fraudulent representation; that the note was duly executed by plaintiff and Snow on the date it bears and was on said date delivered to it; that the consideration was: That at the time of the execution of the note plaintiff held the majority of the stock in the Paxon Undertaking Company, a corporation, and was an officer of said undertaking company; that, at the time, Snow was a stockholder and manager of said under-taking company; that the undertaking company was at the time, indebted to defendant for merchandise in the sum of $4625.29; that a large amount of this indebtedness was long past due and immediate payment was being demanded; that plaintiff was president of the undertaking company and drew a large salai-y as such and desired to maintain the credit and financial standing of the undertaking company; that in consideration of an agreement that defendant would extend further time on the account and extend further credit to the undertaking company, plaintiff and Snow executed the note as security to the account of the undertaking company.

Error is assigned on the sufficiency of the evidence to support the decree rendered and on the exclusion of certain evidence.

The Paxon Undertaking Company for many years prior to the execution of the note had been operating in Springfield, Missouri, and continued for a short time thereafter, when it went into receivership and ceased to operate. Prior to the death of Ely Paxon on March 3, 3926, the undertaking company was under his management. Plaintiff is the widow of Ely Paxon who owned at the time of his death the majority of the stock of the undertaking company which stock, on Paxon’s death, went to plaintiff. At the time of Paxon’s death the undertaking company was somewhat involved and on January 1, 1927, it owed about $9000 including the $4625.29, account of defendant, for which the note is alleged to have been *154 given to secure. At tlie time of the death of Ely Paxon he owed the undertaking company about $7000. Plaintiff received in insurance on the life of her husband about $12,000, and on agreement with the undertaking company she paid to it, out of her insurance, $5000 in full settlement of the $7000 owed the undertaking company by Ely Paxon, her husband. The $5000 was paid out by the undertaking company on its obligations, $30QP of which was paid defendant. Plaintiff also paid, out of her insurance, another item of $1200 for wages due an employee of the undertaking company, and paid off a mortgage on her home. After making these payments plaintiff had nothing of consequence except her home and her stock in the undertaking company which stock was, or turned out to be, worthless. Such w'as plaintiff’s financial situation at the time it is alleged she signed the note in question.

Plaintiff is seventy-six years old and is, and was at the time it is alleged that she signed the note, suffering from cataracts in both eyes and is practically blind. Her physician testified that she was unable, because of her blindness, to read t'o any extent of consequence.

After her husband’s death plaintiff was made president of the undertaking company and drew $200 per month salary as long as there were any funds to pay her. Although plaintiff was president the management of the undertaking company was left almost entirely to Snow. The note was shown to plaintiff at the trial and she admitted that as far as she could see the signature on the note resembled her signature. George D. McDaniel, a banker, and acquainted with plaintiff’s signature, testified that in his opinion the signature on the note was the genuine signature of plaintiff. But plaintiff testified that no one ever asked her to sign this note or any other note payable to defendant, and that if she signed the note she did so without knowing what she was signing. Plaintiff further testified that in January, 1927, she knew that the undertaking company was in bad financial condition, but did not know the extent; that she did not know “how much money we did owe or who all the creditors were. Didn’t begin to know; couldn’t find out.”

R. E. Snow, whose name was signed to the note, and who was a witness for defendant, testified that defendant was getting much concerned about its account, and agreed “to take a note and hold it against her (plaintiff’s) estate and not collect it during her lifetime and the company could go ahead and pay it off little by little;” that he talked with plaintiff two or three times about the note and the account: that the note was prepared by defendant Rhodes and handed to him; that he thereupon took the .note to plaintiff’s home and told her that defendant would hold it and “wouldn’t press us on that account and we would take care of it as we could, and at her death they would collect it; ” that defendant had agreed with him to do that. Snow further testified that he told plaintiff what defend *155 ant had agreed as to extending future credit and that “our credit would be all right;” and that plaintiff signed the note in his presence. Snow testified in effect that he explained the note to plaintiff, but did not read it all to her; that he told plaintiff that ¡if she signed the note " she would never have to pay it in her lifetime. ’ ’

Defendant Rhodes testified that he was the traveling salesman of defendant; that prior to the date of the note he had discussed the account with Snow; that on the afternoon of the day the note is dated he went into the undertaking company’s place of business and told Snow that he, witness, had to go to St. Louis and that he had to make some report as to the account and that Snow said for him to come down after supper and ‘ ‘ I will get the note signed; she is ready to sign it;” that he went down as suggested and that Snow “went over with it and came back in about forty-five minutes and handed me the note and says, ‘What are you going- to do with it?’ and I says, ‘Like what we said; we will hold it until her death.’ That is what I told him to tell her, and he handed me the note and I said, ‘Put your name- on it to make a couple of names,’ and he did and I took the note and sold them a bill of goods.”

Plaintiff was recalled and testified that she had no conversation with Snow about the note and that Snow was not at her house o.n January 4, 1927, the date of the note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 856, 223 Mo. App. 151, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paxon-v-kregel-casket-co-moctapp-1928.