Powell v. Most Worshipful Grand Lodge Ancient Free & Accepted Masons

163 S.W.2d 1038, 349 Mo. 955, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 163 S.W.2d 1038 (Powell v. Most Worshipful Grand Lodge Ancient Free & Accepted Masons) 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
Powell v. Most Worshipful Grand Lodge Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, 163 S.W.2d 1038, 349 Mo. 955, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 452 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

This is an action in equity to set aside a deed of trust on the ground that it was obtained by duress; also claiming that defendants charged usurious interest and that plaintiffs were entitled to certain credits on claims made against defendants. The court found for plaintiffs on the issue of duress, adjudged that the deed be cancelled, and entered judgment for plaintiffs for $156.60. Defendants have appealed.

The trust deed was given in completion of a transaction between the parties which resulted from the following situation. Plaintiff, Dr. Powell, and Rev. John L. Cohron, were directors of the Midwest Life Insurance Company which had financial difficulties in 1929. They then made separate trust deeds upon real estate, owned individually *Page 959 by each of them, to provide first mortgage notes for use as collateral security for a $17,000.00 loan made by defendant Grand Lodge. (We will refer to Dr. Powell as plaintiff and the Grand Lodge [1039] as defendant, since they are the actual interested parties.) Default was made in payment and these trust deeds were foreclosed August 21, 1930, after unsuccessful suits to prevent foreclosure by injunction. Both properties were bought in at the foreclosure by defendant. However, plaintiff and Rev. Cohron each gave redemption bonds and remained in possession. In the meantime, plaintiff's property was taken in condemnation proceedings by the City of St. Louis in the widening of Market Street. The redemption period expired August 21, 1931, and prior thereto (August 10, 1931) all the parties made a contract of settlement.

This contract stated that plaintiff and Rev. Cohron had defaulted in the payment of the notes and trust deeds and that the defendant had sold the real estate under them; that plaintiff and Rev. Cohron could not "make redemption according to law" and would not attempt further redemption proceedings; "and that the trustee may upon the expiration of said redemption period issue deeds thereby deeding over the right, title and interest of the said J.L. Cohron and Charles M. Powell in said real estate to said Grand Lodge." It was further agreed that the condemnation award for plaintiff's property was to be paid to defendant; and that defendant would sell to plaintiff the property of Rev. Cohron which it had acquired by the foreclosure.

This part of the contract was as follows:

"It is further agreed by the parties hereto that upon taking over by the said Grand Lodge of the real estate of J.L. Cohron, located at 3944 Finney Avenue and 3943-45 Fairfax Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., that it will in turn execute to Charles M. Powell and his wife a Warranty Deed to said property deeding to them all rights, title and interest owned by the said Grand Lodge that the said Charles M. Powell and his wife will concurrently with the giving of said Warranty Deed execute to the said Grand Lodge the first party herein, their deed of trust and note against said property in the sum of Three Thousand one hundred twenty-five Dollars and fourteen cents ($3,125.14), more or less dependent upon the award of the City of St. Louis on the condemnation of the property of Charles M. Powell, owned at 2611 Market Street, St. Louis, Missouri, which was foreclosed in August, 1930."

The total award for plaintiff's property was $18,500.00, but it was not then known what net award would actually be paid, because taxes assessed against this property were to be deducted. There was considerable delay in closing the transaction partly due to the refusal of Rev. Cohron to give possession. When the deal was finally completed by defendant's conveyance of Rev. Cohron's property to plaintiff, it was immediately conveyed by plaintiff to Everette Woodward. *Page 960 Rev. Cohron's claims then caused another lawsuit to be brought by plaintiff's grantee after the transaction was completed. [Woodward v. Cohron, 345 Mo. 967, 137 S.W.2d 497.] The deed of defendant to plaintiff and plaintiff's trust deed (on the Cohron) property were both dated October 5, 1931, but the trust deed was not executed until November 10, 1931, and both deeds were thereafter delivered.

Plaintiff's claim is that the account for which the trust deed was given could not have been for more than $1464.00, and claims that attorney's fees and taxes should have been deducted from that amount. Plaintiff's claim is based on figures, which he said were given to him when the August 10, 1931, contract of settlement was executed, as follows:

Principal of loan to be paid .............................. $17,000.00 Total accrued interest at 6% .............................. 1,765.00 Foreclosure cost on Cohron property ....................... 183.30 Foreclosure cost on plaintiff's property .................. 227.70 Attorneys fees ............................................ 438.00 __________ 19,614.00 Amount of condemnation net award as alleged in plaintiff's petition ............................................... 18,150.00 __________ 1,464.00 Deduct delinquent taxes and special assessment on plaintiff's property .................................... 882.76 __________ 581.24 Deduct charge for attorneys fees .......................... 438.00 __________ 143.24

Plaintiff claimed credit for rents which was found by the court in its decree to be $340.00. There was some difference between[1040] the court's finding as to interest but the court's decree sustained plaintiff's claim that he owed defendant nothing when he signed the $2600.00 deed of trust.

Plaintiff's claim, therefore, is that the condemnation award for his property, and subsequent rents, were sufficient to pay defendant's loan in full and that he was entitled to conveyance of the Cohron property under the settlement contract without any other payment or mortgage debt whatever. Plaintiff further contends that he was compelled by duress to sign the trust deed and that it is void ab inititio for that reason. Plaintiff did, however, in the nature of an offer to do equity, offer to pay defendant whatever amount, if any, which the court should find to be due. Defendant's answer was a general denial and the claim of ratification by the sale to Woodward. Plaintiff's *Page 961 claim of duress was a threat by defendant to refuse to convey the property at all unless plaintiff and his wife signed the $2600.00 trust deed, so that plaintiff would have lost all the value he was salvaging out of the transaction under the settlement contract. Plaintiff had the Cohron property sold to Woodward for $9000.00, and got $3500.00 in cash in addition to cancellation of a $2000.00 debt he owed to Woodward. It took the rest of this purchase price to pay the delinquent taxes on the Cohron property.

[1] Plaintiff cites State ex rel. Order of United Commercial Travelers v. Shain, 339 Mo. 903, 98 S.W.2d 597, and authorities therein discussed; also White v. McCoy Land Co. (Mo. App.), 87 S.W.2d 672; see also White v. Scarritt (Mo. App.), 101 S.W.2d 763, affirmed 341 Mo. 1004, 111 S.W.2d 18. The White cases, however, involved a very different state of facts.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Order of United Commercial Travelers of America v. Shain
98 S.W.2d 597 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1936)
White v. McCoy Land Co.
87 S.W.2d 672 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1935)
Field v. Natl. City Bank of St. Louis
121 S.W.2d 769 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)
White v. Scarritt
111 S.W.2d 18 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1937)
Woodard v. Cohron
137 S.W.2d 497 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1940)
Wood v. Kansas City Home Telephone Co.
123 S.W. 6 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 1038, 349 Mo. 955, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-most-worshipful-grand-lodge-ancient-free-accepted-masons-mo-1942.