State Ex Rel. Lunsford v. Landon

265 S.W. 529, 304 Mo. 654, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 9, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 529 (State Ex Rel. Lunsford v. Landon) 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. Lunsford v. Landon, 265 S.W. 529, 304 Mo. 654, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 460 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*657 WHITE, J.-

The relators by this proceeding seek to quash the record of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, in a case wherein W. H. Davis is plaintiff, and Nora L. S. Lunsford and William Gr. Lunsford are defendants, and the property of defendants attached.

The Fidelity Deposit Company, not a party to the action, is surety on the defendants’ bond to dissolve the attachment levied on defendants’ property. The facts appear in the petition of relators for the writ and respondent’s return to the same. The respondent, after filing his return, moved to quash the writ.

The plaintiff Davis, in his first petition, stated his case in five counts against the defendants named above, and William Gr. Lunsford, Jr. In the first count he alleged that October 1, 1918, he entered into a contract with the defendants whereby he was to convey to defendants certain lots in Kansas City, in consideration of which the defendants were to convey to him 7,000 acres of land in Hale County, Alabama, free and clear of encumbrances, of the value of $37.71 per acre; that the plaintiff, in accordance with the agreement, conveyed his Kansas City property, but defendants refused to convey the 7,000 acres; in fact, conveyed only 6,678 acres, which was 322 acres short of what they agreed to convey, whereby the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $11,497.62, for which he asked judgment.

*658 The second count alleged that the land conveyed by the defendants was encumbered by a mortgage for $980, due January 1, 1909, wherefore the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $980 and interest, for which he asks judgment.

The third count alleged that the land was encumbered by a mortgage for $1020, bearing interest from January 1, 1910; judgment was asked for that sum and interest.

The fourth count alleged an encumbrance of $1500, bearing interest from January 1, 1911. Judgment was asked for that sum and interest.

The fifth count alleged that the plaintiff purchased of the defendants a safe, price $600, the combination of which the defendants agreed to furnish to the plaintiff but failed to do so, thereby damaging the plaintiff to the extent of $600, for which he asks judgment.

The contract, mentioned in the petition as Exhibit' A,” is of great length, and states in detail the arrangement between the parties; attached to it are schedules “A” and “B.” Schedule “A” mentions the Alabama land of the defendants. Schedule “B” describes plaintiff’s Kansas City land and recites- that it consist? of the Coates House property and other property; that defendants were to borrow $100,000 on the property, of which $40,000 was to be paid, to the plaintiff, and the balance to be retained by the defendants-; that the defendants were to give a note of $90,000 to the plaintiff; other conditions are mentioned in the schedule.

A writ of attachment was asked and issued on the ground that the defendants were non-residents of the State of Missouri, and the Coates House attached. Defendants filed their joint answer to the petition, and moved the court to dissolve the attachment because the only ground for it alleged was the non-residence of the defendants. Thereupon the plaintiff filed an attachment bond in the sum of $34,537.50, and the motion to dissolve was overruled.

*659 In addition to the attachment of the real estate the lessee of the Coates Hotel Company and the bank in Kansas City in -which defendants had their funds, were garnished, and $6,000 of the money of defendants was ordered paid into court. Whereupon the, defendants furnished a bond in the sum of $19,000, with the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, as surety, conditioned that the defendants would pay any amount which might be adjudged against them in the case, and the attachment was dissolved.

Thereafter, an amended and a second amended petition were filed by the plaintiff, the proceedings in relation to which need not he noticed.

On March 9,1922, the plaintiff filed a third amended petition in four counts. On March 13, 1922, the defendants filed a motion to strike out the first, second and third counts of the third amended petition on the ground of departure, which motion, on July 7, 1922, was by the court overruled. The defendants moved for a re-h'earing upon the motion, and September 16, 1922, the motion for re-hearing was overruled. On October 2, 1922, the defendants Nora L. S. Lunsford and ■ William G-. Lunsford filed an answer to the third amended petition. On October 9, 1922, the plaintiff filed a reply to said answer.

On October 10, 1922, the defendants filed a motion to vacate the attachment dissolution bond, or materially reduce the penal sum thereof. On the same day the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland filed an application to vacate or reduce the defendants’ attachment dissolution bond. December 2, 1922, the two motions were overruled, and in January, 1923, the defendants applied to this court for writ of certiorari, and * March 3,' 1923, the writ was issued.

It is claimed by the relators that the circuit court exceeded its jurisdiction in overruling the motion of the defendants to strike out parts of the third amended petition, and in overruling the two motions to vacate or *660 reduce the attachment dissolution bond; that the relators have no remedy by appeal, and that certiorari is the proper remedy to correct such errors.

The first count of the third amended petition alleges the exchange of real estate as set out in the first amended petition by a contract dated October 1, 1918, relating more in detail the terms of the contract. It recites the execution and delivery of the deeds and alleges that November 8, 1918, defendant W. Gr. Lunsford tendered to plaintiff, in fulfillment of the contract, a certain deed which in several particulars did not conform to the requirements of the contract; that among other things the deed did not include 322 acres of the land the contract called for; that the plaintiff refused to accept the deed; that in addition to the tender of the deed the defendants also tendered an agreement in writing under date of November 1, 1918, which stipulated that the defendants would procure a title to the additional 322 acres and convey the land to the plaintiff by good and sufficient warranty deed; that defendants would discharge all the encumbrances against the said property, all of which is evidenced by two contracts marked exhibits “C” and “D;” that the plaintiff in consideration of the undertakings of the two contracts accepted the deed and the said contracts. It is then alleged that the defendants wholly failed to convey the land and to make up the shortage of 322 acres whereby the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $11,948.62, for which he asks judgment.

The second count refers to the .allegations in the first count, alleges the delivery of the deed and the contract of November 8, 1918, and alleges that two encumbrances on the land at the time, one for $980, and one for $1020, were not released as agreed, which damaged plaintiff in the sum of $2,000 and interest, for which he asks judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 529, 304 Mo. 654, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lunsford-v-landon-mo-1924.