Rosenfeld v. Glick Real Estate Co.

291 S.W.2d 863, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1956
DocketNo. 44940
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 291 S.W.2d 863 (Rosenfeld v. Glick Real Estate 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
Rosenfeld v. Glick Real Estate Co., 291 S.W.2d 863, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 738 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge. , , , ,

This is an action to rescind, the s'ale of certain real estate in the City of St. Louis, to cancel deeds conveying title thereto, to adjudicate title in plaintiffs, and for an accounting. The trial court found the. issues in favor of defendants and dismissed the action, from which judgment plaintiffs have appealed.

The petition alleged that in June, 1950, plaintiffs employed defendants Glick Real Estate Company and Paul Crosney as their agents to endeavor to sell for the best price obtainable certain real estate owned by plaintiffs, situate at 5966 Easton Avenue in the City of St. Louis, for which services plaintiffs agreed to pay said .defendants a commission upon sale to an acceptable purchaser for an acceptable price; that thereafter said defendants, through fraudulent transactions, false representations, willful failure to make full disclosure of material facts, and use of the name of defendant Jeanette Leach as their straw, secretly obtained title to said property; that iii'the process of obtaining title by the means aforesaid defendants Glick Real Estate Company and Crosney secretly procured a loan for the principal sum of $150,000 from defendant Prudential Life Insurance Company, secured by deed of trust on said property, which plaintiffs prayed be cancelled or, if it be found to be a valid lien, that just and equitable orders be made with respect thereto; and that defendants Glick- Real Estate Company and Crosney had collected rents and profits from said r.eal 'estate, for which ail accounting was prayed,

The joint answer of all defendants admitted that Glick Real Estate Company and Paul Crosney acquired ownership of said real estate and procured the loan from the Prudential Life Insurance Company in the name of Jeanette Leach, who acted as a straw for, Glick and Crosney, and denied all allegations of fraud or other misconduct on the part of each and all defendants. The joint answer further affirmatively alleged that, throughout all of the transactions plaintiffs were represented by their attorneys and. agents, Ben L. Shifrin and Louis Shifrin; that said attorneys had full knowledge of all of the facts; that prior to and at the time of the sale of the real estate by plaintiffs to defendants said attorneys knew that Glick Real Estate Company and Cros-ney were acquiring ownership thereof for their own account and not as agents, which knowledge was the knowledge of plaintiffs; that the Shifrins communicated their aforesaid knowledge to plaintiffs prior to the sale to Glick and Crosney; and that plaintiffs, with full knowledge, accepted the purchase price and approved the sale, by virtue of which they were now estopped to assert the claim herein made.

The judgment of dismissal; rendered after a lengthy trial and consideration of .briefs, recited that the trial court was “of the opinion, that in order for plaintiffs to prevail, the testimony of witnesses, Ben Shifrin and Louis Shifrin, would have to be disbelieved”, and that the plaintiffs had failed to prove their case by the greater weight of the credible evidence and were not entitled to the relief prayed.

Plaintiffs Milton and Irving Rosenfeld are brothers, residing in the City of St. Louis. Their wives are made parties plaintiff solely because of their marital interest in the property here in question. Glick Real Estate Company is a corporation engaged in the real estate business in St. Louis and Eugene Glick is president thereof. Jeanette Leach “was at the times herein mentioned an. employee of Glick Real Estate Company. Paul Crosney is a lawyer and [865]*865real estate agent residing in. New York. Prior to the times herein mentioned he had jointly engaged with Glick Real Estate Company in activities relating to real estate. Unless otherwise indicated, we will refer to Milton Rosenfeld and Irving Rosenfeld as though they were the only plaintiffs and to Glick Real Estate Company and Paul Cros-ney as though they were the only defendants.

Plaintiffs are experienced business men. In January, 1949, they organized Miltanirv Investment Company (hereinafter referred to as “Miltanirv”), the entire stock of which they owned in equal shares. Mil-tanirv took title to the property at 5966 Easton Avenue at the time of or soon after its organization. The property has "a frontage of 45 feet on the south side of Easton Avenue and extends southward a distance of approximately 223 feet to an alley. The building on the property, formerly occupied as a funeral parlor, was then vacant. There is a garage to the rear of the building that opens onto the alley. Miltanirv leased the property to Werner-Hilton, Inc., a men’s furnishing store, for a base annual rental of $17,500, under an agreement that Miltanirv would ‘remodel the building according to lessee’s specifications, and the lease would extend for a term of ten years after completion of the remodeling. The remodeling was completed in September, 1950. The garage was not included in the lease, but the lease gave lessee a five-year option to include the garage for an additional annual rental of $1,800 per year. That option becomes a factor in this controversy.

In May or June of 1950, Eugene Glick sought to interest plaintiffs in permitting Glick Real Estate Company to try to sell the property, suggesting that a buyer might more readily be found in New York than in St. Louis. Plaintiffs acquiesced in his proposal. On or about June 24, 1950, Miltanirv granted Glick Real Estate Company a fifteen-day option to purchase the property for the sum of $200,000 net. (Plaintiffs say the option was procured by Eugene Glick for the purpose of assuring his co-defendant Crosney that if a deal for the sale of the property was negotiated, plaintiffs would go through with- it. Ben Shifrin; who drew the option as plaintiffs’ attorney, said its purpose was only what it purported on its face to be. That option-, however, was not exercised.)

About this time, Crosney found a prospective buyer in New York in the person of Henry Bermant. On June 28, 1950, plaintiffs -and defendants met in the law offices of, plaintiffs’ attorneys, S’hifrin & Shifrin. Crosney submitted a form of contract for the sale of the property by Miltanirv to Bermant >(for the price of $210,000. Plaintiffs were advised by Ben Shifrin that liquidation of Miltanirv and reinvestment of title to the property in plaintiffs prior to any sale thereof would be to their advantage from a tax standpoint. Pursuant to that advice, Ben Shifrin, at plaintiffs’ direction, redrew the contract to recite that the plaintiffs, as the owners of the stock of Miltanirv, had succeeded to the title and were the sellers. (Such liquidation was completed and title was vested in plaintiffs prior to the sale of which plaintiffs complain.) That proposed contract provided for the sale of the property, subject to the Werner-Hilton lease;' for $210,000, $10,-000 of which amount was to be deposited as earnest money with Ben Shifrin upon execution of the contract by the buyer. The contract further provided that defendants were to be paid a commission of $10,-000 as brokers and agents for’ plaintiffs; that “this contract may be assigned”; and that the contract should be void unless executed by all parties not later than July 10, 1950. As thus prepared, it was delivered to Crosney for submission to Bermant. Bermant refused to sign-. Crosney began a search for another buyer and obtained from Ben Shifron, as attorney for plaintiffs, an extension of the time for acceptance from July 10 to July 20.

Crosney -solicited one Charles Benenson as a prospective buyer. Benenson desired changes in the contract. He was represented by the New York law firm of Goldfarb & Fleece.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W.2d 863, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenfeld-v-glick-real-estate-co-mo-1956.