Ralph v. Annuity Realty Co.

28 S.W.2d 662, 325 Mo. 410, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 662 (Ralph v. Annuity Realty Co.) 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
Ralph v. Annuity Realty Co., 28 S.W.2d 662, 325 Mo. 410, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 459 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*414 RAGLAND, J.

On the 18th day of December, 1915, there was filed in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, a suit in equity styled Christian J. Zeitinger et al., plaintiffs, v. Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Company et al., defendants. The plaintiffs were said Christian J. Zeitinger, George E. Zeitinger and Gus Ralph: the defendants were the Hargadine-McKittriek Dry Goods Company, a corporation, its officers and directors and other persons and corporations alleged in the petition to have benefited through a diversion and misappropriation of the corporation’s assets. The suit was brought by the plaintiffs as stockholders of the Dry Goods Company for the benefit of said corporation and other stockholders similarly situated: the petition charged that certain officers of the Dry Goods Company, defendants in the suit, had misappropriated a large part of its assets; the prayer was for an accounting, the appointment of a receiver and other equitable relief.

A trial of the cause just mentioned was had in the said circuit court, resulting in an interlocutory decree, on the 8th day of January, 1917, in which the principal issues tendered by the petition were adjudged in favor of the plaintiffs, and a receiver was appointed to carry the decree into effect. Thereafter the defendant, Hargadine-McKittriek Dry Goods Company, was allowed an appeal to the Supreme Court from the order of the circuit court refusing to revoke the order appointing a receiver: the appeal was lodged in Division Two. On February 5, 1919, pursuant to stipulations presented to it, and which purported to be signed by all the parties to the suit, Division Two reversed the interlocutory decree and remanded the cause with directions to the circuit court: to tax against appellant certain costs and order them paid out of the corpus of the estate in the hands of the receiver, “and to make such further orders and entries as may be necessary to dispose of the litigation and estate in the said circuit court in accordance with said stipulations of the parties filed in this court and those heretofore executed and to be filed in said circuit court, *415 and thereupon to dismiss the plaintiffs’ (respondents’) petition herein in accordance with the said stipulations.”

"When the cause again reached the circuit court, that court proceeded to carry out the provisions of the stipulations of the parties as directed by the mandate of the Supreme Court. As to some of the parties to the suit the stipulations had been signed by their attorneys and not by themselves in person. The stipulations provided': “That if said stipulations are signed by any attorney, or agents, such attorney or agent shall deliver his or their written authority to act aim bind his or their principals.” When the stipulations had been complied with except as to the final acts they provided for, namely, the return of the assets, remaining after disbursements of costs, to the Dry Goods Company and the dismissal of the suit, a question was raised as to whether plaintiffs’ counsel had been authorized by their respective principals to sign the stipulations. Théreupon the defendant Dry Goods Company filed a motion in the circuit court for an order on the plaintiffs “to show cause, if any they have, by a day certain, why an order should not be entered herein finding as a fact that said plaintiffs and intervening plaintiffs and each of them did in fact authorize the said attorneys to enter into said stipulations or did in fact ratify or become estopped by their conduct to deny the authority and act of the said attorneys in entering into the said stipulations and finding, and directing that the stipulations and each of them became and are valid,' effective and binding upon all the plaintiffs and intervening plaintiffs and each of them.”

‘ The order was made as asked. In their return to the order, plaintiffs, Christian J. and George E. Zeiting’er, among other things alleged:

(á) “That-if such stipulations as these upon which the mandate of the Supreme Court filed in this cause on February 5, 1919, purports to have been based were signed in behalf of plaintiffs and filed in said Supreme Court, they were so signed and filed without authority, express or implied, from and without the knowledge or consent of these plaintiffs, or either of them, or of any one for them;

(b) “That in truth and fact one of said original plaintiffs, Gus Ralph,, was dead long before the said stipulations were said to have been filed or purported to have been executed;

(e) “That said judgment and decree of said Missouri Supreme Court was without and in excess of the jurisdiction of that court in said cause in this, that it attempted thereby to dispose of and compromise the entire suit and its merits, whereas the appeal then pending in said Supreme Court was only from the interlocutory order appointing a receiver; and

(d) “That said judgment of said Missouri Supreme Court rendered on February 5, 1919, on said appeal was procured by a *416 fraud practiced upon the said Missouri Supreme Court in this, that it was obtained upon the representation that all of the parties to said suit had agreed to same, and that the attorneys for plaintiffs had lawful authority to sign and execute the said alleged stipulations on behalf of plaintiffs in said suit and to make such compromise contained in said stipulations, whereas, in truth and fact plaintiffs and interveners had not agreed to such judgment and had no knowledge of the provisions of the stipulation presented to said Supreme Court, and attorney for plaintiffs and interveners had no such authority.”

On all the matters put in issue by the motion for an order to show cause and the return to said order the circuit court found against the plaintiffs and in favor of the movent, the defendant Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Company. From the court’s finding and judgment therein the plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court and on such appeal the judgment of the circuit court was in all tilings affirmed. [Zeitinger v. Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Company, 309 Mo. 433.]

The present suit was instituted by the two Zeitingers, the administrator of the estate of Gus Ralph, deceased, and other stockholders of the Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Company, as plaintiffs, against the- same persons and corporations who were made defendants in the original proceeding, commenced in December, 1915. It is, however, an independent suit in equity to set aside the judgment of Division Two of the Supreme Court, rendered February 5, 1919, setting up as grounds for the relief sought the same grounds alleged by plaintiffs in their return to the order to show cause above set forth. The entire record in the original cause, including the two appeals, are incorporated in the petition by reference, and the opinion in Zeitinger v. Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Co., supra, is hereby referred to for a full statement of the facts.

The defendants demurred to the petition, on the ground, among others:

“That it appears on the face of the amended petition that the cause of action attempted to be alleged therein has been fully adjudicated, settled and extinguished in said cause entitled, as aforesaid, Christian J. Zeitinger et al., plaintiff, v. Hargadine-McKittrick Dry Goods Company et al., defendants, No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 662, 325 Mo. 410, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ralph-v-annuity-realty-co-mo-1930.