Reynolds v. Union Station Bank

200 S.W. 711, 198 Mo. App. 323, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 13
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 711 (Reynolds v. Union Station Bank) 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
Reynolds v. Union Station Bank, 200 S.W. 711, 198 Mo. App. 323, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 13 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

This is a suit by the receiver of the Continental Assurance Company of America to recover a payment of $1000. alleged to have been made to the [328]*328defendant from the funds of the company. The petition is in the regular form, for money had and received. The answer is a general denial, and second, further, that the plaintiff is estopped from prosecuting his action against this defendant by having, with full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances attendant upon the transaction referred to in the petition of plaintiff, instituted suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis for the recovery of the moneys referred to in the. petition of plaintiff (together with other moneys) against one Harry B. Gardner, secretary of the Continental Assurance Company of America, and in said action having recovered judgment against said Gardner.

The case was tried before a judge and a jury and from a judgment in favor of the defendant, plaintiff in due course brings this appeal.

The record in this case is unsatisfactory and meager with respect to certain facts which, perhaps, while not absolutely essential to the case, should have been introduced for a comprehensive understanding thereof by the court and jury. Certain statements of facts are made as a basis for argument in the briefs as though such facts were duly established by the testimony in the record, when in point of fact the record before us is silent thereon.

As to the facts, one Harry B. Gardner, in the early part of the year 1909, interested Messrs. Gillespie, Douglas and Caneer in the organizing of the Continental Assurauce Company of America, Gardner agreeing with them that upon their putting up a certain sum to be used for “preliminary expenses,” “they were to have so much of the initial stock issued if they would interest themselves in this proposition and help finance it from the start.” It appears that on the 24th of February, 1909, the said Douglas, Gillespie and Caneer, together with one Biggs, negotiated a loan at the Union Station Bank of St. Louis upon their joint promissory note, whereby they obtained the sum of $1500. This $1500 was turned over to said Gardner; whether or not Gardner at the time knew that the money had been borrowed [329]*329from the said hank in the manner above stated is in controversy. However, the money was paid to Gardner and was used for what has been termed “preliminary expenses incident to the organization of the proposed Continental Assurance Company of America,” the money being spent for incorporation fees, charter, printing, paper and other incidentals. At the time the money was turned over to Gardner, which was prior to the time the company received its charter, Douglas, Caneer and Gillespie received some kind of a receipt showing that they were to have some sort of stock in the company in an amount not definitely shown by the record. When matters had proceeded to the point where the company was going to apply for its charter, they were advised by counsel that the subscriptions of said Gillespie, Douglas . and Caneer were worthless and it would be necessary for them to “renew their subscriptions made under the first arrangement.” This each of said parties' refused to do with the exception of Caneer who did afterwards become a stockholder in the company. On June 17, 1909, said Gardner made a payment of $500 out of his own funds to the Union Station Bank, which sum was accepted and applied by the said bank as a payment to the extent thereof. on the said $1500 note of Douglas, Biggs, Gillespie and Caneer.

The Continental Assurance Company of America received its certificate of incorporation from the Secretary of State; it was dated April 4, 1909. Subsequently the board of directors met and Gardner was authorized to act as fiscal agent to sell the company’s stock and receive twenty-four per cent of stock sales. Gardner did proceed to sell the stock of the company which 'had a capital of $500,000 but never succeeded in selling all of the capital stock of the company and consequently the company at no time received the necessary license to do an insurance business.

It appears that the note held by the Union Station Bank which was originally for $1500, upon which there remained a balance due of $1000, was placed by the bank in the hands of John H. Boogher, its attorney,. [330]*330for collection. Boogher went to the office of the Continental Assurance Company of America to make demand for payment of the balance due on said note from Caneer, one of the makers thereof; Caneer being at that time connected in some capacity with the said Continental Assurance Company. After some colloquy Caneer went into another office in the same suite and returned shortly and handed Boogher a check in the sum of $1000 dated July 7, 1909, made payable to the order of the Union Station Bank, drawn on the Third National Bank of St. Louis, upon the funds of the Continental Assurance Company of America, and signed Harry B. Gardner, Secretary.’ Boogher accepted this check and cashed it and paid the bank the proceeds thereof less his attorney’s fee.

Boogher testified that there was some discussion at the time'he received the check from Caneer as to what he should do with' the note. Boogher, as attorney for the Union Station Bank, did deliver the note, to Gardner with the following endorsement: “Pay Harry B. Gardner, without recourse on us, Union Station Bank, by John H. Boogher, counsel.” Gardner in turn, after receiving the note, turned the note over to A. R. Russell with' the endorsement: “Pay A. R. Russell • without recourse, II. B. Gardner,” and it appears Russell thereafter brought suit on the note against Caneer. It also appears that Gardner had “borrowed $300 of Mr. Femmer on that note.”

With reference to how Gardner had come to issue the company’s check for $1000 to pay off the said $1000 note, Gardner stated that the makers of the note would not renew their subscriptions for stock in the company, and, “they were threatening to put the company into the hands of a receiver, and I kept insisting that they renew their subscriptions made under the first arrangement, because their old subscriptions were worthless unless ratified under the new charter and I wanted to save the company, and they insisted that I give them their money back, and to avoid trouble I did refund it as I stated.”

[331]*331At the close of all the evidence in the case counsel for plaintiff requested a peremptory instruction that the jury, under the law and the evidence, return a verdict in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant in the sum of $1000, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum from the 18th day of May, 1912, which the court refused. The court submitted the case to jury after giving instructions, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant and judgment was entered in accordance therewith. Such of the instructions as are necessary will be found set out below in the opinion.

As to the assignment of error that the learned trial court committed error in overruling plaintiff’s instruction requested at the close of all the testimony that under the law and the evidence plaintiff was entitled to recover, it is sufficient to say that an examination of this record fails to convince us that the case falls within the limits of the rule of law laid down in the case of Knisely v. Leathe, 178 S. W. (Mo.) 453, l. c. 460. [See, also, Stevens v. Barber Supply Co., 67 Mo. App. 587, l. c. 589-590; Murdock v. Ganahl, 47 Mo. l. c. 137; Bank v. Railroad, 172 Mo. App. 678, 155 S. W. 1111.]

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 711, 198 Mo. App. 323, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-union-station-bank-moctapp-1918.