Tucker v. Hibernia Bank & Trust Co.

251 S.W. 406, 212 Mo. App. 88, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 87
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 406 (Tucker v. Hibernia Bank & 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
Tucker v. Hibernia Bank & Trust Co., 251 S.W. 406, 212 Mo. App. 88, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 87 (Mo. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

*93 DAUBS, J.

This is a suit by plaintiff, a citizen of the State of Michigan, against the defendant, a Louisiana corporation doing business in the city of New Orleans. An attachment was issued, defendant entered its appearance to the action and dissolved the attachment.

The petition is in four counts; as to the third and fourth counts plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit after the court gave instructions as to those counts in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. Defendant filed a general demurrer to each count of the petition, same being overruled, there was an answer which is, first, a general denial and then pleads that under defendant’s charter and the law of the State of Louisiana, even if it had made the alleged contract, same would be ultra vires and void as to defendant. The cause was tried before the court and jury resulting in a verdict for defendant on the first count, and in favor of plaintiff for $5362.50 on the second count. Judgment duly followed and defendant appeals.

*94 We must examine count 1 of the petition in order to pass upon count 2, upon which there was a verdict in favor of plaintiff, since the pleader has incorporated' all of count 1 into count 2.

It is agreed that the first count of the petition is a contract count. (A.s to the second count, plaintiff maintains that same is based upon fraud and deceit and therefore is ex delicto; defendant insists that count 2 is clearly ex contractu. These divergent views give rise to much of this controversy.

We will summarize the petition within expedient bounds. Count 1 recites that certain persons undertook to reclaim a tract of 7700’ acres of marsh land lying* within the limits of the city of New Orleans; that in February, 1906, the New Orleans & Ponchartrain Realty Company was incorporated with a capital stock of $1,500,000, paid up mostly by deeds to said lands, and that said realty company thereafter became financially involved, its chief creditor being’ the defendant, the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company. It is alleged that there was a mortgage on said property at that time of about $132,000; and that one Frank B. Hayne, a director of the defendant Bank & Trust Company, and Edgar H. Farrar, one of the attorneys of said hank, became interested and agreed to assume the payment of the mortgage and put up additional cash in order to secure title to said land; that the mortgage being foreclosed, said attorney bought in the property “for account of said Trust Company,” same being an execution creditor, as trustee; that said attorney for defendant held the property for the benefit of the mortgagees, including Haynes ahd Farrar.; that thereafter, in February, 0.908, the New Orleans Lake Shore Land Company was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $2,000,000; that $3000 of said capital stock was paid for in cash, and the remainder, $1,997,000, was issued to Haynes and his associates for the tract of lancl, same being held for them by the Trust Company as trustee. The Land Company, *95 it is alleged, thereafter, on March 20, 1908, issued bonds to the extent of $1,500,000, securing same by a mortgage upon the land, and afterwards pledged $500,000 of said bonds to the defendant to secure certain loans the Trust Company made to the Land Company. The Land Company purported to have employed the proceeds of such loans in clearing the land and in making improvements upon same by building roads, canals, ditches, etc.

It is then alleged that the defendant, as creditor of the Land Company, became interested in the same to the extent of $500,000, and that thereupon defendant devised a plan and scheme whereby the Land Company was to sell the property in ten-acre lots, and that with the approval and assistance of the defendant, the Land Company made efforts to sell such land “chiefly for the purpose of paying said loan to the said Trust Company;” that the Land Company was unable to sell the property. Thereupon the Land Company in December, 1913, entered into a contract with the Louisiana Company, a corporation organized by one C. W. Marsh, whereby the property was to be put on the market in small tracts, the Louisiana Company acting as selling agent for the Land Company.

The petition then sets out a resolution adopted by the Land Company, authorizing the consummation of said transaction, which resolution provided, among other things, that the loans advanced to the Land Company by the defendant Trust Company should be paid as the tracts of land were sold; that the defendant was made trustee and was required to execute deeds to the property as the purchases were completed, and that the defendant was to be indemnified against all liability in connection with said transactions.

It is then alleged that the defendant, pursuant to said scheme and resolution, entered into a written contract with the Land Company in which it guaranteed that all the terms and conditions of the said contracts of sales made with the purchasers of said groves or *96 tracts should be fully carried out, alleging that, said contract of guaranty is not in the possession of plaintiff and for that reason is not made an exhibit. It is then alleged that the defendant, together with its directors and the Land Company and the Louisiana Company, in order to profit thereby, put on an extensive selling campaign to sell these tracts, designated as •£ £ orange groves, ’ ’ and that the Louisiana Company and the Land Company, at the instance of the defendant, falsely represented, among other things, that said property was suitable for orange raising, and that the plaintiff, relying upon such representations, entered into a contract for the purchase of one of said lots, and that pursuant to such contract plaintiff made a first payment in cash and executed notes for certain further payments to cover the purchase price.

It is then charged that some of the directors of the bank were also directors in the Land Company, and that the connection between same was close and official, and that all actively co-operated with each other; and then avers “that the said defendant Trust Company, despite the fact that it had guaranteed the performance of said alleged contract of sale, as hereinabove set out, and was a party thereto, has now advised said plaintiff that the said alleged contract is impossible of performance and that it cannot be carried out; . . . that plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $9,100' by reason of de-. fendant’s failure to carry out the terms and provisions of its said contract. . . . Wherefore, plaintiff prays for a judgment against said defendant in the sum of $9100, together with interest from the dates of the respective payments and .for his costs in this behalf expended.”

The second count, after adopting all the averments of the first count, alleges that plaintiff entered into an alleged contract of purchase of an orange grove lot, as described in the first count, relying upon the representations as set out in the first count, and that the de *97

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 406, 212 Mo. App. 88, 1923 Mo. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-hibernia-bank-trust-co-moctapp-1923.