Stewart v. Boone County Trust Co.

87 S.W.2d 223, 230 Mo. App. 120, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 98
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 223 (Stewart v. Boone County Trust Co.) 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
Stewart v. Boone County Trust Co., 87 S.W.2d 223, 230 Mo. App. 120, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 98 (Mo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

HOSTETTER, P. J.

This action was begun in the Circuit Court of Boone County on the 30th day of June, 1933, and the venue was subsequently changed to the Circuit Court of Monroe County where it was tried before the judge and a jury on April 16, 1934.

The action is one in replevin to recover a certain promissory note and two tax bills, described in the petition, which had been assigned to the defendant trust company, as collateral security on a loan.

*122 The petition is in conventional form and the answer is.a general denial.

The collateral was held by defendant trust company as security for a loan made to the plaintiff, and the issue involved is a charge that usurious interest was exacted by the bank on the loan and the recovery of the collateral is sought under the provisions of section 2844, Revised Statutes Missouri 1929 (Mo. Stat., Ann., sec. 2844, p. 4633).

The plaintiff for a number of years had been engaged in the contracting business and had paved or otherwise improved a number of streets in the City of Columbia, Missouri. In the latter part of 1927, he was awarded the contract to improve Stewart Road in said city, running through a residential district in a subdivision laid out by J. A. Stewart. The street had been previously paved. After plaintiff had secured the contract for improving Stewart Road, he solicited a loan from defendant, Boone County Trust Company for the necessary funds to make such improvement, with the understanding that he would assign the special tax bills against the abutting property issued for such improvement as collateral security for such loan. The Trust Company agreed to furnish the money, but required him to enter into a written contract in which it agreed to loan him the necessary funds up to $20,000 for the construction of such improvement. The loan was to be evidenced by promissory notes bearing eight per cent interest per annum. A written contract was prepared by the defendant and signed by both parties, covering the transaction between them. The pertinent portions of such, contract, insofar as it affects the issues in this cause, are as follows:

“Sec. 6. Party of the first part agrees to allow the said second party five per cent for all money collected on said tax bills, and second party agrees to apply the balance as collected on said notes in payment thereof, and that if there be a balance over the amount of said notes after paying principal and interest, to pay same to the party of the first part.

“Sec. 9. Should any of said tax bills remain due and unpaid and it should become necessary to file suit or to incur other expenses in the collection of same, or in reducing the lien thereof to judgment, the party of the first part will pay all expenses so incurred. It is further understood that the party of the second part is in no way obligated for the collection of all or any one of said tax bills. ’ ’

The evidence disclosed that on the completion of the work and the issuance of the special tax bills for same, the plaintiff assigned them, together with a promissory note of J. A. Stewart, which the defendant required as additional security, and delivered the tax bills and such note to the defendant; that when defendant became possessed of said tax bills, which was in October, 1927, it notified the various property *123 owners by postal card where the special tax bills were and that payment could be made to the defendant Boone County Trust Company at its banting house in said City; that the taxpayers or property owners, upon receipt of the notice appeared promptly, for the most part, and paid their respective tax bills; except that in some- few cases the property owners delayed and, accordingly were required to pay some interest in addition to the face of the special tax bill, which constituted a lien against their respective properties.

It was also shown in evidence that the Trust Company failed in many instances to promptly credit the payments received on the tax bills on the plaintiff’s notes, but carried a deposit account, on its books, of these collections and delayed crediting the payments in many instances as long as three weeks or more.

It was testified to by J. A. Stewart, the father of plaintiff, that he remonstrated with the officers of the Trust Company about this practice of delaying the credit entries on the notes, but did not obtain satisfaction.

The evidence further disclosed that the actual amount deducted from the payments made by the various property owners on the tax bills to cover the five per cent allowance, provided for by said section 6 of the written contract hereinbefore set out, was $800.55.

It further appeared that defendant notified plaintiff, shortly prior to the institution of this suit, that it intended to foreclose on the promissory note and the two tax bills involved in this suit and that it bid in the collateral in question and that it is still in the possession of defendant; that all the tax bills, with the exception of the two involved in this action, were collected between the first day of November, 1927, and the 9th day of January, 1931, and that the defendant bank did not charge any commission upon the collection made on the tax bills issued against the property of J. A. Stewart, the endorser of plaintiff’s contract.

The money collected from the tax bills proved to be insufficient to cover plaintiff’s notes and the interest thereon arid J. A. Stewart, his father, advanced some $1800 to supply the deficiency.

It was also in evidence that the property in the tax district was valuable residential property and the owners thereof financially responsible.

J. A. Stewart’s testimony, which was confirmed by the bank books, further showed that the collections made by the Trust Company on these tax bills from October 31, 1927, for the remaining two months of that year, amounted to $9067.50 and for the whole of 1928, the collections on the tax bills amounted to $6248.93, the most of which was paid in during the first three or four months of that year; that the collections for 1929 amounted to $3293.97 and that the collections *124 were very small in 1930, the last collection being made on October 10, 1930, and that the total collections on the tax bills were $19,160.49.

The testimony further showed that all of the tax bills were collected by the Trust Company except the two involved in this suit and that only a few of them delayed payment beyond the time they should have paid, but when they did pay, they, of course, paid interest which had accrued on their original tax bills.

The two tax bills which are involved in this suit were against the City of Columbia, both dated October 5, 1927, both bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent from November 5, 1927, one being for $1361.25 and the other being for $1387.55. The other item involved in this suit was a note for $2,000 given by plaintiff and wife to J. A. Stewart, secured by deed of trust on real estate, which had been assigned to the Trust Company as further security for plaintiff’s loan.

Plaintiff testified that the contract between him and the Trust Company was drawn up by the company and was brought to him and that he signed the contract in the presence of Mr. Hunt, the vice-president and manager of the Trust Company. Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 223, 230 Mo. App. 120, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-boone-county-trust-co-moctapp-1935.