Thompson v. Farmers Exchange Bank

62 S.W.2d 803, 333 Mo. 437, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 630
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 3, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 803 (Thompson v. Farmers Exchange Bank) 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
Thompson v. Farmers Exchange Bank, 62 S.W.2d 803, 333 Mo. 437, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 630 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This is an action for damages for alleged false imprisonment. The Circuit Court of Jackson County sustained the joint motion to dismiss the amended petition filed by all the defendants except the First National Bank and J.C. Barr and sustained the separate demurrers to the petition filed by defendants, The First National Bank and Barr. The plaintiff elected to stand upon his amended petition and from the judgment of the circuit court, thereupon entered, dismissing the petition plaintiff appeals. The amount of damages prayed gives us jurisdiction of the appeal.

As shown by the record before us the events out of which this action arises had their beginning in 1921. In September, 1921, this plaintiff, Thompson, pursuant to an arrangement with the defendants herein (other than defendants J.C. Barr and A.G. Knight) who were his unsecured creditors in large amounts, and in consideration of the advancement by them of further sums of money, conveyed by warranty deeds approximately 18,000 acres of land situate in Grundy, Harrison and Livingston Counties, Missouri, and some in the State of Colorado to defendant Knight. Contemporaneously therewith Thompson executed a written declaration of trust wherein *Page 445 Knight was named as trustee and given certain powers in relation to the management and sale of the lands conveyed by the warranty deeds for the purpose of paying Thompson's indebtedness to the creditors who are now made defendants herein. Subsequently a controversy arose as to the extent of the trustee's power to make sales and the right to possession of the land under the trust instrument. The interested creditors filed a bill in equity "praying the court to construe and enforce the trust" wherein Thompson and Knight, trustee, were named as defendants and without having filed any pleading they "appeared in court and consented that a decree be entered." Thereupon the court entered its decree that Knight as trustee had "full and complete power and authority to sell and convey all the real estate," defining the manner in which such sales should be made, fixing a date by which the possession of all such real estate should be delivered by Thompson to Knight or the purchasers of any part thereof and directing how the proceeds derived by the trustee from sales, rents and profits should be administered and distributed. Pursuant thereto the trustee Knight sold certain tracts of the land, stituate in Grundy County, to the Grundy Land Company, and made report thereof to the court to which report Thompson filed exceptions. On March 21, 1923, "the court approved and confirmed the sale as made" and "it appearing further that" Thompson "had never surrendered possession of any of the lands conveyed by him to the trustee" as theretofore ordered and decreed by the court and "was refusing to do so" it was again ordered that he deliver possession of the lands sold to the Grundy Land Company and possession of the lands not sold to Knight, trustee. From the judgment and the orders of the Circuit Court of Grundy County so made Thompson appealed, without supersedeas bond, and on July 30, 1925, at and during the April Term, 1925, of this court the judgment and orders of the circuit court were in all things affirmed. [Farmers Exchange Bank v. Thompson, 309 Mo. 669,274 S.W. 745.]

It appears that on April 12, 1924, Knight instituted a contempt proceeding in the Grundy County Circuit Court by filing therein an information or "representation" charging that Thompson had "wilfully failed and refused and contemptuously of the court had failed and refused as ordered by the court . . . to deliver and turn over to him (Knight) possession of said land." In this proceeding the court found and adjudged Thompson to be guilty of contempt as charged, ordered that he be imprisoned until be should purge himself of such contempt, issued its commitment directed to the sheriff. Barr, a defendant herein, who by authority thereof placed Thompson in the Grundy County jail where he was imprisoned from and including April 25 to May 2, 1924. On April 23, 1926. Thompson filed suit for damages, for false imprisonment in the Circuit Court of Grundy County against his creditors who had been beneficiaries in *Page 446 the trust agreement and plaintiffs in the case of Farmers Exchange Bank v. Thompson, supra, Knight and the sheriff, Barr, as defendants. The same parties are defendants and respondents in the instant case. The case thus begun in the Grundy County Circuit Court was removed on change of venue to the Circuit Court of Adair County where plaintiff filed an amended petition to which defendants filed a joint general demurrer. The record of the subsequent proceedings in the Circuit Court of Adair County is as follows:

"This day the defendants' demurrer to plaintiff's amended petition is by the court considered and sustained; whereupon plaintiff takes a nonsuit with leave to move to set the same aside;

"It is therefore considered and adjudged that the defendants recover of plaintiff the costs of this action and have execution."

The above order was entered December 2, 1926. On December 2, 1927, naming the same defendants, plaintiff filed substantially the same petition to which a general demurrer had been sustained in the Adair County Circuit Court in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. On the same date summons for defendants, First National Bank (of Kansas City) and Barr issued, directed to the Sheriff of Jackson County returnable to the January Term, 1928, of said court, and same were duly served. On January 11, 1928, defendants First National Bank and Barr, the only defendants upon whom service had been obtained, filed their joint demurrer averring that the petition did "not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action" and that it appeared upon the face of the petition "that if plaintiff ever had any cause against these defendants, or either of them, it is barred by the Statutes of Limitations." This demurrer was sustained on February 24, 1928. Thereafter on March 15, 1928, plaintiff, with leave of court, filed "his first amended petition" in the Circuit Court of Jackson County. All the defendants having been served, on March 22, 1928, the defendants, except the two defendants First National Bank and Barr, filed a joint motion, designated as a plea in abatement and motion to dismiss, and as ground therefor averred, that theretofore plaintiff had filed an amended petition in the Circuit Court of Adair County, against the same defendants named in the instant case, which petition "contained the same or substantially the same allegations as the petition in the instant case and that on general demurrer filed by all of the defendants in said cause, the Circuit Court of Adair County . . . sustained the general demurrer to said petition and adjudged that plaintiff pay the costs of the cause and that defendants have execution therefor. That plaintiff filed no motion in arrest, nor for new trial, nor did he prosecute an appeal, nor sue out a writ of error from said judgment which became and was a final judgment in favor of these defendants on December 2, 1926." To this motion plaintiff filed an answer denying "each and every allegation therein contained." The next move in *Page 447

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 803, 333 Mo. 437, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-farmers-exchange-bank-mo-1933.