State Ex Rel. Kansas City Title & Trust Co. v. Otto

276 S.W. 96, 220 Mo. App. 429, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 156
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 96 (State Ex Rel. Kansas City Title & Trust Co. v. Otto) 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
State Ex Rel. Kansas City Title & Trust Co. v. Otto, 276 S.W. 96, 220 Mo. App. 429, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 156 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

— This is a suit against the principal and sureties on a notary’s bond in the sum of $5000. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the amount of the bond and defendants have appealed.

The suit is based upon a false acknowledgment taken by defendant, Otto, a notary public of Kansas City, Mo., to a certain deed purporting to be executed by Ada M. Marshall and Charles Marshall, her husband. Plaintiff having guaranteed the title to the property covered by the deed to one J. M. Clark for the purpose of his making a loan upon the property, the title having failed and (jlark having lost his money by reason of the forgery of the name of the Marshalls to said deed, plaintiff brought this suit against Otto and his bondsman. The suit is based in the first count on plaintiff’s damages suffered by reason of having paid Clark the amount of his loss under the terms of its guarantee of title, and in the second count as the assignee of Clark’s cause of action against the defendants.

The facts show that prior to October 12, 1922, one Jerome P. James had been negotiating with the real Marshalls in reference to first trading for and then buying from them the property described in the warranty deed in question. James finally agreed to buy their property for $85,000, and the property adjoining their belonging to Mrs. Marshall’s sister for $35,000. On said day the defendants de *432 livered their abstracts to said property to James who took them to the plaintiff, Kansas City Title and Trust Company, and made an application for a guaranty policy of the title to said property. He stated to plaintiff that the title was then vested in Ada Marshall and that he was buying the property.

On October 13, 1922, plaintiff sent its inspector to view the property who ascertained from Mr. Marshall that the Marshalls were the owners of the property, were residing there and in possession thereof and were negotiating with James in reference to selling it. The inspector made his report to plaintiff o£ these facts. James- applied to Clark, a real estate broker in Kansas City, Missouri, for a loan of $40,000 on the property, representing that he was trading some land in Tennessee to the Marshalls for their property in Kansas City and by the terms of the trade it was necessary for him to pay the Marshalls a difference of approximately $33,000 in cash. The title company-issued its preliminary opinion showing that the title to the Kansas City property was fully vested in Ada Marshall, subject to the payment of some taxes which the real Marshalls paid before the deal was closed. James took this opinion to Clark to examine. Clark made at least four different inspections of the property and on one occasion attempted to interview the Marshalls, but they were not at home. The Marshall property consisted of two large flats- and a detached house at the corner of 11th and Campbell Streets, in Kansas City, Mo. The Marshalls lived in the house and rented out the flats to various tenants. Plaintiff indicated that it would issue its guaranty policies to Clark covering the loans to be made by him.

On or about October 23, 1922, Clark notified James that he would make the loan, which was to be a first of $25,000 and the second of $15,000, Clark to receive a cash commission of $5,000 for making the loan. It was agreed that James’s brother, Fred James, should ex-cute the notes and mortgages desired by Clark. These papers were signed in Clark’s office on October 23, 1922, and acknowledged in his office by a notary public therein. On the same day they were taken to the plaintiff and delivered into the possession of its escrow department in charge of one Armstrong. On October 24, 1922, Armstrong had a telephone conversation with the real Mrs. Marshall. At that time Jerome James had exhibited a contract to Armstrong which provided for the exchange of lands in Tennessee for the Kansas City property, and purporting to be between James and the Marshalls, the latter to receive a difference of approximately $33,000 in cash in the trade.

Armstrong testified that Mrs. Marshall called him up concerning the transaction that she had pending with James and that in the course of this conversation he told her that he would have the $33,000 for *433 her the next morning and that she should be at plaintiff’s office at that time with the deed and get her money. - Armstrong told her that James had a contract at his office in which she was trading her property and getting something like $33,000 in cash. Mrs. Marshall did not tell Armstrong that she was not trading for the property but said she had not signed any contract and was not to- get $33,000 but some eighty odd thousand dollars in cash. He told her.he didn’t know much about it because he didn’t look, at the contract very carefully but that “we will work it out tomorrow morning when, you come in to close the deal. ’ ’ She did not say whether she would be in the next morning... She .told Armstrong that she was “on a deal with James;” that was the way he understood it; she did not say that she would not trade the property but that she was to get eighty and some odd thousand, dollars in cash. Armstrong testified that he understood from what the Marshalls said that the “deal -was still pending and had not been settled.” The evidence shows that one Lobb, a representative of Clark, was in plaintiff’s office at the time Armstrong had the telephone conversation with Mrs. Marshall and Armstrong told Lobb of it at. the time. The impression that the telephone conversation had upon Armstrong was that he thought Mrs. Marshall was a difficult person to deal with. Later in the afternoon Mir. Marshall called up Armstrong and had a .similar conversation with him-in which the former said emphatically that the Marshalls' did not sign any contract but -that they were to get some $80,000 in cash and not $33,000, but he did not say. that they would not be down the next morning.

The Marshalls’ version of this conversation was -somewhat,different from that of Armstrong. They testified that they told him not only that they had not signed any. contract but that if he had any contract in his office, it was a forgery. Armstrong denied that Mrs. Marshall mentioned anything about a forgery and stated that he did not remember whether Marshall had mentioned it. Mr. Marshall testified that they said they would not be down the next morning; that they told Armstrong that they were not trading for any property, but that they were selling their property and also the property of Mrs. Marshall’s sister, adjoining theirs,- for $35,000 cash, and that they were to have $85,000 cash and the sister to have $35,000 cash. Mrs. Marshall testified-that Armstrong called her instead of her calling. Armstrong. ’

The point is made that defendants’ demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. In view of this point we are required to take the testimony in its most favorable light to plaintiff and therefore must accept Armstrong’s version of the conversation. He further testified that the Marshalls did not come in the next morning and that he *434 turned the whole matter over to- one Eisenman, an employee of plaintiff, about noon of Thursday, October 26th, and then left on his vacation; that when he turned the papers over to Eisenman he explained the matter to him and told him of his conversation with the Marshalls.

On October 25, 1922, James took a Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 96, 220 Mo. App. 429, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kansas-city-title-trust-co-v-otto-moctapp-1925.