Townsend v. Maplewood Investment & Loan Co.

173 S.W.2d 911, 351 Mo. 738, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 455
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 6, 1943
DocketNo. 38460.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 911 (Townsend v. Maplewood Investment & Loan Co.) 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
Townsend v. Maplewood Investment & Loan Co., 173 S.W.2d 911, 351 Mo. 738, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 455 (Mo. 1943).

Opinions

*741 WESTHUES, C.

Plaintiff, Townsend, filed this a suit in equity to cancel a note of $10,000,00, and also asked for an accounting. The defendant, Maplewood Investment and Loan Company, filed an answer and a counterclaim alleging that the sum of $4,443.87 was still due oh said note for which amount judgment was asked. The trial court denied plaintiff’s petition and entered judgment against plaintiff and in favor of the defendant on its counterclaim in the sum of $31.85 and costs. Both parties appealed.

The appeal was lodged in the St. Louis Court of Appeals and by it transferred to this court because the amount involved exceeded $7500. Since plaintiff asked that the note be canceled upon which there was a balance due of $4,443.87, and in his accounting asked for judgment against the defendant for sums realized on securities pledged with the note, vdiich sums had been collected by the defendant and credited on the note in excess of $5,000.00, the amount in dispute being in excess of $7500.00 vests this court with appellate jurisdiction.

Plaintiff’s contention at the trial was that the defendant company was in need of financial aid and the officers of said company came to him about December 31, 1930, and requested that he loan the company certain deeds of trust and notes of the face value of $9,853.00; that he did this and thereafter was induced to execute a promissory note involved in this suit, in the sum of $10,000.00; that he signed the same in blank, the purpose thereof being unknown to him at the time, but that later the company carried the note and securities on its books as an asset of $10,000.00; that the' apparent consideration for said note was a pretended sale by the defendant company to plaintiff of eight hundred shares of its own capital stock.

Plaintiff asked cancellation of the note on the theory that it was given without consideration; that a fraud was practised on him by the officers of the company in that they represented to him the company was in a sound financial condition; that the note was antedated without plaintiff’s knowledge and the words “800 shares of common stock” were inserted in said note without his knowledge or 'consent.

In the body of the note it was recited that the securities above referred to and eight hundred shares of stock of defendant company were pledged by plaintiff as security for the payment of the note. The *742 defendant by its answer denied the charges made in plaintiff’s petition and also affirmatively pleaded laches and estoppel. This latter plea must be sustained. Taking plaintiff’s evidence as true, that the officers mislead him as to the financial condition of the company and that the note and records of the company made it appear as though he had bought eight hundred shares of stock when in fact he did not, that the note was actually signed on January 6, 1931, but was dated December 31, 1930, yet plaintiff is in no position to invoke the arm of the court of equity to grant him redress. Plaintiff admitted that -he signed the note and also that he delivered the securities to the defendant company. The circumstances of the signing of these papers were related by plaintiff as follows:

“Q. Will you state to the Court the circumstances under which you signed this note? A. Well, on the night of January 6, 1931, I received a phone call from Ralph Townsend about 8:45 in the evening. I was busy at the office, and he asked me if I could not come over to' the Loan Company right away. I told him I was very busy at the office; but he said, ‘It will only take ten or fifteen minute's,’ and wanted to know if I couldn’t come right over. ... I did go over. . . . Well, Dr. Marshall was present, and Merrill Yincent, and Mr. Townsend, Mr. Hardensty, and I believe the auditor, Mr. Muren, was present. ’ ’
“Ralph Townsend got up before these directors and made a speech, and asked me if I would loan them ten-thousand dollars worth of seeui’ities. He had these — he had a number of securities of mine that were being collected at the Citizens Bank in Maplewood. He said he and Merrill Yincent would see that I received the six per cent interest I had been receiving on them over át the bank.
“Q. Now, did you tell him you would let him have them? A. I told him I would let them have them as long as — I told them I would let them have the deeds of trust providing I got my six per cent interest, just the same as I was getting it over at the bank, and also if the Loan Company was in good condition.
“Q. What did they say to that? A. Merrill Yincent said he would help — he would see that we received the six per cent interest; and he assured me the Loan Company was in good condition.
“Q. How did you happen — did you sign a number of papers in blank? A. Merrill Yincent took me over to a table and I signed a good many papers.
“Q. You particularly noticed this one, did you? A. Which one?
“Q. I mean you saw it was in blank, this paper? A. All these papers were in blank that I signed.
“Q. Oh, they were all in blank? How long did this meeting last? A. I wasn’t there — I wasn’t there at the most fifteen minutes.
‘ ‘ Q. About fifteen minutes ? A. I listened to' the speech, and Merrill had me to' sign these papers, and I was in a hurry to get back to the *743 office where I had patients waiting when I left, and I was in a hurry to get away, and it looked to me like he was in a hurry to get my-signature on these papers and get me out. ’ ’

.There was evidence introduced from which we could conclude that even if plaintiff did not know the details of the transaction at the time he signed the papers he did learn thereof within a few days thereafter and learned that the company claimed he had purchased eight hundred shares of its stock. However, we need not base our conclusion upon that evidence. Plaintiff testified that he did learn prior to June, 1934, that the books of the company showed he had purchased eight hundred shares of stock and that the stock had been issued in his name; that he had signed the note in question and had pledged the securities and the stock as collateral for the payment of the note. The defendant company from time to time converted the collateral into cash and credited the note with the sums collected. The total of the sums thus credited on the note was $5,585.63. Plaintiff, after learning of that situation in 1934, accepted membership on the board of directors of the company and signed a number of proxies authorizing the parties he later charged had defrauded him to vote the eight hundred shares of stock at the stockholders’ meetings. Plaintiff’s explanation of his conduct was as follows:

“When you found out you had given this note, and you found out you were a stockholder in the company, did you try to' get a receipt from these boys for your securities? *A. To get a receipt for the securities? Let’s see. Well, after it had gone on that long, and I wasn’t doing any good by fussing with them, why I kind of did an about-face. I started in to kind of working with them then and see— because I had heard — Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.2d 911, 351 Mo. 738, 1943 Mo. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-maplewood-investment-loan-co-mo-1943.