State Ex Rel. Hurst Automatic Switch & Signal Co. v. Wurdeman

274 S.W. 410, 309 Mo. 120, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 792
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 274 S.W. 410 (State Ex Rel. Hurst Automatic Switch & Signal Co. v. Wurdeman) 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
State Ex Rel. Hurst Automatic Switch & Signal Co. v. Wurdeman, 274 S.W. 410, 309 Mo. 120, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 792 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

On August 25, 1924, relator filed in this court an application for a writ of prohibition against respondent, Gustave Wurdeman, as judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri, to prohibit him from enforcing an order he had made on August 9, 1924, authorizing John Willman, sheriff of said county, as successor or substitute trustee, to conduct a sale of relator's land under foreclosure of the Sarah A. Massey deed of trust in accordance with a decree entered on May 21, 1922, by respondent on an accounting, pursuant to directions and decree of the Supreme Court, in the cases formerly pending herein as follows:

Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Co. et al. v. Trust Company of St. Louis County, decided in Division One on October 10, 1919, and reported in 216 S.W. 954. The above was a suit in equity, the general nature and object of which was to secure the cancellation of a trustee's sale, and deed made thereunder by the defendant Bode, purporting to convey 131 acres of land in said county to the defendant Walton, by virtue of a power of sale contained in a deed of trust executed on February 4, 1911, by Sarah A. Massey, to the defendant trust company, as trustee, to secure the payment of her promissory note *Page 123 of the same date for $16,850, etc. The petition alleged that Mrs. Massey, soon after the execution of the deed of trust, conveyed said land to Christian J. Steffan, who, on March 4, 1911, conveyed the same to defendant Trust Company to secure a promissory note of the same date for $2,768.67, etc. The case was reversed and remanded with directions to the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, to set aside said trustee's sale, and the deed of trust to secure $13,000 executed by defendant Walton and wife on the same day. The decree also directed that an accounting should be had between the parties, and authorized the circuit court to grant reasonable time for the redemption of the property upon the payment, by the plaintiff aforesaid, of the sum found to be justly due for that purpose, etc.

Thereafter there appeared in Division One of this court, a case entitled Hurst Automatic Swift Signal Company and Fred Hurst, as appellants, against the Trust Company of St. Louis County et al., as respondents, which will be found reported in 291 Mo. 54 and 236 S.W. 58, which was reversed and remanded with directions, etc., by Commissioner SMALL, in an opinion filed on December 19, 1921. This was likewise a proceeding in equity to cancel and set aside a trustee's sale and deed of certain lands made February 28, 1914, and to redeem the property from the deed of trust, executed by Mrs. Massey, a prior owner, under which the same was made. Judge SMALL recites that plaintiff owned said property subject to the deed of trust, and that Fred Hurst was its tenant; that the defendant Trust Company of St. Louis County was the trustee named in said deed of trust and was the owner of the Massey note secured thereby; that defendant Bode was the Sheriff of St. Louis County, who was designated in the deed of trust to act as trustee in the absence or refusal to act of the Trust Company; that Stonewall J. Walton was the purchaser, for $17,605, at the foreclosure sale made by defendant Bode, the sheriff, as substitute trustee. This court in the above case (291 Mo. 71 and fol.) reversed the judgment *Page 124 of the lower court with directions to enter its decree, first setting aside and cancelling the said trustee's sale and deed to Walton made under the Massey deed of trust and said $13,000 deed of trust made by Walton to said Trust Company and to sustain plaintiff's motion for the possession of said property, and then at such reasonable time as the court might fix proceed to hear and determine the respective claims of the parties to an accounting, according to the views expressed by the court in said opinion; and upon such determination, including the amount due defendant Trust Company on the Massey notes and deed of trust, to allow plaintiffs a reasonable time thereafter to pay such sum and redeem from such deed of trust, who would not be considered as being in default until after the expiration of the time for payment and redemption so fixed and plaintiff's failure to pay the same within such time; and if not so paid that said trust company might then proceed to foreclose its said deed of trust in such manner as it might be advised.

The next proceedings in this court between the parties aforesaid, relating to the land in controversy, appears as State ex rel. Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Co. v. Gustave Wurdeman, Judge, reported in 250 S.W. 46, decided by Judge SMALL on April 6, 1923. It was an original proceeding in this court for a writ of mandamus against Judge Wurdeman, to compel him to approve an appeal bond in the case of Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Co. v. Trust Company of St. Louis County, pending in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, and which had been twice appealed to this court, and each time reversed and remanded with directions, to take an accounting between the parties, as appears by reference to 216 S.W. 954 and 236 S.W. 58. Judge SMALL., at page 46, recites that:

"On a trial of such accounting, after the last reversal, there was a finding in favor of the plaintiffs, and against defendants Walton and Scheer, for $403.69, and a finding that there was due the defendant Trust Company on the Massey notes, secured by deed of trust, a *Page 125 sale under which had been set aside by the decree in said cause, from the plaintiff Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Company, the sum of $28,917.96."

The relator in the above case failed to comply with the requirements of our rules, and the case was disposed of by this court, as follows (250 S.W. l.c. 47):

"In the matter before us the relators or applicants wholly failed to comply with our rules in this regard. The motion of the respondent to dismiss the cause or application is therefore well taken, and must be sustained."

The above litigation again appeared in Division One, under the title of Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Co. v. Trust Company of St. Louis County, reported in 264 S.W. 406. The opinion affirming the judgment below in favor of defendants was filed June 10, 1924. It recites the following:

"This case is a second trial on accounting under the directions of this court before Division No. 2 of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County. That court entered a finding of facts, and found the amount due the Trust Company on the Massey deed of trust from plaintiff Hurst Automatic Switch Company to be $28,917.96.

"The defendants Walton and Scheer in their answer prayed judgment for the value of improvements alleged to have been made on the plaintiff's real estate while in their possession, and for taxes paid, and the court entered judgment in favor of Walton and Scheer for improvements and taxes for the sum of $8,248.09. It also found for the plaintiffs on their petition for an accounting against Walton and Scheer the sum of $8,552.72, and subtracted the one from the other, and thereby found that there was due the plaintiff Hurst Automatic Switch Signal Company the sum of $304.63. Thereupon judgment was entered in favor of said company for said sum, and costs against the defendants Walton and Scheer.

"From this judgment the records show that the affidavit for an appeal was filed only on behalf of the Hurst *Page 126 Automatic Switch Signal Company. Consequently it is the only appeal in the case."

The judgment below was thus affirmed by Division One in a unanimous opinion.

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Related

Hurst Automatic Switch & Signal Co. v. Trust Company
236 S.W. 58 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)
Milligan v. Kansas City Light & Power Co.
264 S.W. 406 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1924)
State ex rel. Hadley v. People's United States Bank
94 S.W. 953 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)
State ex rel. Knisely v. Jones
202 S.W. 1117 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 410, 309 Mo. 120, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hurst-automatic-switch-signal-co-v-wurdeman-mo-1925.