Petring v. Kuhs

171 S.W.2d 635, 350 Mo. 1197, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 566
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 4, 1943
DocketNo. 38128.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 635 (Petring v. Kuhs) 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
Petring v. Kuhs, 171 S.W.2d 635, 350 Mo. 1197, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 566 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

*1201 DOUGLAS, P. J.

— This is a suit to set aside a trustee’s deed under foreclosure; to reinstate the deed of trust foreclosed; and to declare a present deed of trust to be inferior to the one reinstated.-

Plaintiff is the owner of the deed of trust which he seeks to reinstate on the ground it had been fraudulently foreclosed. Plesse :and the Mississippi Valley Trust Company, Trustees, the principal appellants, are the holders of the present deed of trust which plaintiff seeks to subordinate to his deed of trust.

Plaintiff, a retired butcher 67 years of age, and A. Jay Kuhs, a real estate man, had known each other for 28 years. Plaintiff had done business with Kuhs for years and had bought a number of deeds of trust from him and had traded various deeds of trust with him. In the course of these dealings, plaintiff, by a trade, acquired from Kuhs a deed of trust for $30,000 dated June 15, 1927, executed by the Opportunity Realty & Investment Company, of which Kuhs was president, and secured by property in one of Kuhs’ subdivisions described as 1005 Hi-Pointe Place in St. Louis.

The principal note of $30,000 secured by the deed of trust was payable to plaintiff and was due five years after date. There were ten semi-annual interest notes of $900 each. Kuhs woiild usually deliver or mail to plaintiff his check for the interest as it fell, due and obtain the interest note.

The trustee named in the deed of trust was Arthur Hines who was for thirty years a close friend of Kuhs, and acted at Kuhs’ request as trustee in deeds of trust which Kuhs negotiated.

The condition of the deed of trust is as follows: “But if - either one of said notes, or any part thereof, be not so paid at maturity, according to the tenor of the same, or if said taxes, general and special, be not promptly paid when due, or if default be made in due fulfillment of said covenants and agreements, or either of them, then this conveyance shall remaip in force, and said party of the Second Part, whether acting in person or by attorney in fact appointed by instrument in writing, or, in ease of death or absence from the city, or any other disability, or refusal to act, his successor in trust may proceed to sell the property hereinbefore conveyed, or any part thereof; at public vendue, or outcry, on'the Floor of the St. Louis Real Estate Exchange, in the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri, provided that in the event of there being no such St. Louis Real Estate Exchange at and on the date of advertisement herein provided for, then at the East Front Door of the Court House in Said City of St. Louis and State of Missouri, to the highest bidder for cash, first giving twenty days ’ notice of the time, terms and place of said sale, and of the prop *1202 erty to be sold by advertisement published in some newspaper printed in the City of St. Louis, State of Missouri . . . ”

On June 15, 1932, the maturity of the note, an instrument extending the note for two years, signed by Kuhs as President of the Opportunity Realty & Investment Company as the owner of the property and by “A. Jay Kuhs Co., Present Holder of Note or Holder’s Agent” was delivered to plaintiff. This instrument was not recorded.

Thereafter, according to the petition, Kuhs, who was the dominating person in the .various one-man corporations he used for his practices, fraudulently advertised a sale foreclosing the deed of trust and had the property sold without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff. The trustee’s deed under foreclosure was dated May 12, 1933 and recorded the same day. The deed conveyed the property to the A. Jay Kuhs Realty & Investment Company.

In August, 1933, the latter company conveyed the property to Elmer E. and Martha Kuhs who placed a deed of trust of $25,000 on the property and immediately conveyed the property back to the company.

In March, 1939, that deed of trust was foreclosed and the property sold to Anton Huelsmann. The regularity of that foreclosure is not contested. The foreclosure in issue is the prior one of 1933. Huelsmann- placed a deed of trust on the property for $10,000 dated March 28, 1939, in which Oreon E. Scott was named as trustee. This latter deed of trust was offered for sale to defendant trustee by the Oreon E. & R. S. Scott, a real estate firm, and was purchased by them as an investment for their trust estate. It is this deed of trust which plaintiff seeks to have subordinated to his deed of trust.

During all this time Kuhs was lulling plaintiff by paying the inter- • est as it accrued and by giving him from time to time six additional successive extension instruments, each for one year, the last one expiring Juiie 14, 1940. None of these instruments were recorded. None bore the signature of plaintiff who held the deed of trust and who would be the party to grant the extension. The space intended for the signature of the holder of the note was blank. No indorsement extending the maturity appears on the note.

It was not until July, 1940, that plaintiff learned his deed of trust had long since been foreclosed. He received this news in a letter from Kuhs sent from the Mexican border in which Kuhs said he was fleeing to South America because he was broke and was “compelled to quit the business and leave town. ’ ’ The letter advised plaintiff of the appellant’s $10,000 deed of trust. With the letter was a deed of the equity to plaintiff and information about the building on the property and its tenants. Shortly after the receipt of the letter plaintiff instituted this suit.

Appellants defended below on the ground they purchased their deed of trust in good faith for value and before maturity. The court *1203 found the issues for plaintiff and reinstated his deed of trust as a superior lien over appellants’ deed of trust. An appeal was taken to this court.

The question for decision is which of said deeds of trust under these circumstances is entitled to priority, both parties having acquired their respective deeds of trust in good faith. This is not a suit where one of the parties has defrauded the other.

Arthur Hines, the trustee, testified for plaintiff. He stated that he was a man of education and an .auditor by profession. He participated in a number of transactions for Kuhs, signing papers at his request and buying in and selling property for him. He had given Kuhs permission to use his name. Kuhs would give him small amounts of money for his services. He admitted his signature to the deed under the foreclosure. The deed was properly acknowledged. The notary public testified that Hines acknowledged the deed before him. The deed recited that Hines, the trustee, made the foreclosure sale at the Real Estate Exchange, the place provided in the deed of trust and in the advertisement of the sale. Hines, on the stand, denied he made the sale. But his testimony is evasive and unsatisfactory. He further stated: “I may have been down to the Real Estate Exchange on that day, but I did not make that sale. ’ ’ Plaintiff understands this to mean that the trustee was not present at the sale. If this is the case the sale would be void.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 635, 350 Mo. 1197, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petring-v-kuhs-mo-1943.