Thudium v. Central States Savings & Loan Ass'n

31 S.W.2d 220, 224 Mo. App. 649, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 108
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 220 (Thudium v. Central States Savings & Loan Ass'n) 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
Thudium v. Central States Savings & Loan Ass'n, 31 S.W.2d 220, 224 Mo. App. 649, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 108 (Mo. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

COX, P. J.

Action for money had and received. A jury was waived and the ease tried by the court. Plaintiff recovered $1124.60, the full amount asked and six per cent interest from the date of the suit which made a total of $1138.56. Defendant appealed.

Defendant was a savings and loan association and sold stock to, be paid upon monthly until it should mature and also made real estate loans. Plaintiff claimed to have bought certain stock in defendant company known as Class D stock that wns two years old when she purchased it from one H. L. Williams, who was the agent of defendant at Joplin, Missouri, and that she made monthly payments thereon to said Williams until she had paid $1124.60, the amount sued for, but that she had never received the stock on which these payments were made, though often demanded, and she had also demanded same from defendant or the return of her money which had been refused.

The defendant admitted that during the time plaintiff claimed to have bought the stock from Williams.and made payments thereon to him, Williams was their agent at Joplin but denied that the company was at that time selling Class D stock and denied that Williams *652 had authority as their agent to sell to plaintiff: the stock she claimed to have purchased.

The transactions between plaintiff and Williams were testified to by plaintiff and were not controverted but the testimony of defendant was for the purpose of showing that Williams, as agent for defendant, was not authorized to sell to plaintiff the stock she claimed to have bought from him. This practically confined the issue of fact at the trial to the question of the authority of Williams as agent to bind defendant by his transactions with plaintiff. Plaintiff testified that she borrowed $2750 from Williams in July, 1927, that would be due in three years at six per cent interest. This was a private loan by Williams to her and not a loan by the company. At that time she owned Class D stock of defendant tliat she had purchased through a former agent of defendant at Joplin. She made her monthly payments on this stock to Williams. When she went to his office in October, 1927, to make a monthly payment she told Williams that she intended to deposit in the Conqueror Trust Company of Joplin. $125 per month and that company would, pay her four per cent on it and in that way she would save enough to pay off her loan from him when it became due. Williams then suggested to her that she could do better than that by buying two years old D stock in defendant company. He said he had such stock that had been turned back to the company by people who wanted their money out of it and said “I can arrange it so that on this D stock if you pay one-hundred-twenty-seven dollars and forty cents a month and keep up the current payments, monthly payments in addition, you can pay this out in three years instead of ten.” She agreed to do that. She then began her monthly payments, to him under that agreement and continued them until Mr. Williams was discharged by defendant as its agent. She had asked Williams for the stock she had purchased and he told her that. when the payments caught up the back interest on the stock, she would get the stock but she did not get it nor the pass book that went with it. The agency contract between defendant and Williams was in evidence. It was a contract entered into between defendant and a Mr. Gorman and then by consent assigned to Williams. This contract provided that the agent was appointed to act for defendant “for the purpose of selling the several forms of stock, certificates apd other, forms of investments that the association now issues or. that it máy from time to time issue for saving? and investment purposes. . . . Subject to the following agreements, conditions and limitation.”. It is then provided that the territory in which the agent could act for defendant covered the counties of Barton, Jasper, McDonald and Newton. The agent should bear his own expenses, provide and maintain an "office, for the transaction, of his agency business. All *653 salesmen or other persons employed, by him should be his agents and not the agents of the company and if their defaults or misrepresentations should cause loss to defendant, then the district agent (Williams) should be primarily responsible to the company therefor. He should use his best efforts to sell annually $500,000 of stock, certificates and other investments for defendant and if in any. month he sold less than $10,000 in any county, the company could, by their agents and representatives, enter said county and makes sales independent of said district agent. All funds received by the. district agent from sales, collection, or whatever sources, should be trust monies in his hands and not used for any purpose exeept deposit and remittance to the company except that he could retain from it his own compensation. He was to furnish bond against loss of funds collected by him. The company was to furnish to him free, such literature and advertising matter as they should issue for general distribution. This agency contract was executed: July 15, 1926, and assigned to H. L. Williams, September 15, 1926, and Williams acted as defendant’s agent until May 24, 1928, when defendant discharged him.

Defendant’s evidence tended to show that the company discontinued issuing Class D stock October 13, 1925, and Williams was, never authorized by defendant to sell Class D stock. That when any stock is surrendered and sent in for cancellation, the cash value thereof was paid the stockholder and the stock then had no further value and could not be resold by any agent. Any stockholder could transfer his stock to another and the company would recognize the transfer. The officers of the company had no knowledge of Williams’ transactions with plaintiff upon which this suit is based.

There are two assignments of error.

First: That a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence should have been sustained.

Second: That the judgment is excessive.

It is contended by appellant that Williams was not a general, agent of defendant and that it was the duty of plaintiff to ascertain the authority of Williams as agent of defendant before making the purchase she claimed to have made from him. Also that the, transaction was unusual and out of the ordinary course of such an agent’s business and that placed upon plaintiff the burclen to ascertain the actual authority of Williams and she could -not rely upon any claim of apparent or implied authority.

That Williams was the agent of defendant to sell its “stock, certificates and ether forms of investments” was specifically provided in his contract with defendant.He was assigned four counties in which he was a district agent and no other person could sell stock or take applications for real estate loans in those counties for *654 defendant except on the condition that he should fail to sell $10,000 in stock in any one county in a month, in which case the defendant could send another agent or representative to sell in that county. Payments upon stock sold in that territory were to be made to him. He was to furnish bond for its protection against loss of funds received by him. The sale of stock in the four counties in his district was placed solely in the hands of "Williams. In our judgment the agency contract between Williams and defendant made him a general agent of defendant for the sale of stock in his district. [Kissell v. E.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 220, 224 Mo. App. 649, 1930 Mo. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thudium-v-central-states-savings-loan-assn-moctapp-1930.