Schultz v. Tatum

35 Mo. App. 136, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 151
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 35 Mo. App. 136 (Schultz v. Tatum) 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
Schultz v. Tatum, 35 Mo. App. 136, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 151 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Rombaueu, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

As the questions presented by this appeal are in •great part dependent for their solution on the fact, what relief, if any, the plaintiffs are entitled to under their" petition, we set out in full the substantial parts of the pleadings.

[139]*139The suit is of an equitable nature, seeking an injunction restraining the negotiation of certain notes executed by the plaintiffs, and praying for their surrender and cancellation, and the plaintiffs’ petition states in substance the following facts:

In May, 1877, the defendant entered into a contract with plaintiffs whereby he agreed to sell certain real estate in the city of St. Louis to them for the sum of eighty-five hundred dollars. Of this sum the plaintiffs paid defendant fifteen hundred dollars in cash, and agreed to pay fifteen hundred dollars in three installments of five hundred dollars each, payable in six, twelve and eighteen months after date, and the balance to the Lafayette Mutual Savings Association, according to the terms of a loan made of said association by the defendant, which loan was a lien upon the property conveyed.

The defendant guaranteed at the time that the loan would be fully paid off and discharged in four years from date of contract, in which event he was to have three hundred and fifty dollars in addition to the fifteen hundred dollars deferred payment, provided the amount paid by plaintiffs to the building association, in extinguishment of said loan, should be, including the three thousand dollars paid and to be paid as above, at least three hundred and fifty dollars less than the aggregate purchase price of eighty-five hundred dollars.

For the deferred 'payments of fifteen hundred dollars the plaintiffs executed three notes, one for $520.40, payable in six months, one for $540.40, payable in one year, and one for $560.40 payable in eighteen months, and also one note for three hundred and fifty dollars, payable four years after date, all payable to the order of the defendant, such notes being secured by a deed of trust on the property conveyed. It was part of said contract, that eight shares in the building association, held by defendant, were to be transferred to the ¡plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs should pay on such shares [140]*140the monthly installments amounting to $106.66, the defendant agreeing that such monthly installments would pay off the defendant’s loan from said association in less than four years after date of contract, and executing a bond with security that this would be done.

The defendant failed to execute this bond, and in lieu thereof the two notes last above mentioned were deposited with one Fisher to secure the plaintiffs against loss or damage by reason of having to pay more for said property than the sum of eighty-five hundred dollars.

The petition then recites that the plaintiffs have already paid more than the sum of eighty-five hundred dollars in this, to-wit: That they paid to defendant in cash, and by paying the first two deferred payments, twenty-five hundred dollars, and to the building association $6,932.90, making a total of $9,432.90, and will still be required to pay further sums to said building association, amounting to several hundred dollars more; that the defendant is insolvent, and that plaintiffs in equity and good conscience are entitled to have the two notes still in the hands of Fisher to be delivered up to them and cancelled, and their property conveyed to them by the defendant as above, released from the lien of the deed of trust which they executed to secure the deferred payments, and are also entitled to a judgment over against Tatum for the excess over eighty-five hundred dollars already paid by them. The petition asks for relief accordingly.

The defendant’s answer denies the contract as stated. It states the bargain made as follows: The plaintiffs were to pay one thousand dollars cash and fifteen hundred dollars in deferred payments and assume the incumbrance of the building association. If the stock in said association, which was transferred by the defendant, should not work out until after the lapse of four years, then the defendant should repay to plaintiffs such sum as should be due on such loan after the [141]*141lapse of four years, not exceeding five hundred dollars, for which sum the defendant was to give a bond with security, and, until he gave such bond, Fisher was to remain the custodian of the note for $560.40. The defendant tendered to plaintiffs such bond, and they refused to accept it. The note for three hundred and fifty dollars was left with Fisher to secure the plaintiffs against a small judgment lien on the property conveyed, which judgment has since been satisfied. The answer further states that neither the agreement upon which this action is brought nor any memorandum or note thereof are in writing, signed by the defendant, or any person by him thereto authorized.

The court upon hearing made a decree, against the defendant and Fisher, ordering the surrender of the two notes for cancellation, and decreeing the satisfaction of the deed of trust executed by the plaintiffs to defendant to secure said notes. The defendant’s appeal is prosecuted from this decree.

The exceptions preserved in the defendant’s motion for new trial, and assigned for error here, are, that the court admitted illegal evidence, and that its finding is against the evidence and the law.

The record before us consists of what purports to be a bill of exceptions, eked out by subsequent stipulations of counsel, to the effect that certain original letters called for but not set out in full in the bill of exceptions as well as the stenographer’s report of the evidence may be used in this court as part of the record. The stipulation concludes as follows:

“It is therefore hereby stipulated and agreed, by and between the counsel for the appellants and respondents, that said stenographer’s transcript of the testimony taken in said cause, and said original letters may be filed in this cause in this court as an amendment to and correction of the bill of exceptions in said cause, in this court, and shall have the same force and effect, and [142]*142may be used in like manner, and in all respects as if said testimony, and said letters had been made a part of the bill of exceptions in said cause, in said circuit court, before the same was signed and sealed, and made a part of the record by the judge of said court, and as though the same had been fully copied into the transcript of the record of said cause, which was filed in this court on the twentieth day of September, 1884, without prejudice to the appellant because of the prolixity of this form of stating testimony.”

As this stipulation is not in contravention of anything contained in the bill of exceptions proper, qnd the testimony referred to therein is a m ere amplified recital of the testimony actually offered, and made a part of the bill of exceptions, we see no reason why such testimony should not be used and considered by us if necessary in the determination of any questions involved herein. There is nothing in the stipulation in contradiction of the bill of exceptions.

The defendant’s answer sets up the statute of frauds. The bill of exceptions begins with the following recital: “The plaintiff by counsel admitted that the agreement or contract set out in the petition was not in writing but verbal.

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35 Mo. App. 136, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schultz-v-tatum-moctapp-1889.