Webb v. Salisbury

39 S.W.2d 1045, 327 Mo. 1123, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 597
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 1045 (Webb v. Salisbury) 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
Webb v. Salisbury, 39 S.W.2d 1045, 327 Mo. 1123, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 597 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This action was brought in the Circuit Court of Jackson County to cancel certain notes and a deed of trust securing same, and to set aside a sale and trustee's deed pursuant thereto made in foreclosure of the deed of trust, and for other equitable relief. From a judgment in favor of plaintiffs decreeing part of the relief prayed, defendants appealed.

Plaintiffs' second amended petition, upon which the case was tried, is long and none too clear, covering seventeen printed pages. We shall attempt to summarize its prolix averments. In substance it sets forth: That plaintiffs, husband and wife, owned certain lands, 120 acres, in Jackson County, Missouri, upon which they borrowed *Page 1129 $6500 from the Kansas City Joint Stock Land Bank, securing the loan by first mortgage or deed of trust on the land; that on July 3, 1923, there was filed and recorded in the Recorder's office of Jackson County "an alleged second deed of trust" (the one in controversy), dated July 2, 1923, purporting to be a conveyance by plaintiffs of said lands to Rufus Burrus, trustee, to secure two notes of even date, one for $500 due six months after date and one for $2500 due one year after date, payable to Joe Birnbaumer; that on said July 3rd, there was also filed and recorded a deed of trust given by plaintiffs to secure their note of $800 to one Prewitt, which deed of trust recited that it was subject only to the Land Bank's deed of trust, and was so intended and understood by all parties interested in it and in the $3000 deed of trust; that said $2500 and $500 notes were not in fact made to Joe Birnbaumer, for there was no such person, but were made to George W. Clinton, from whom plaintiffs borrowed $2000 and who used the name Birnbaumer "as and for a straw person in said deal and for himself or for convenience," but that Clinton represented that he was and in fact he was loaning his own money; that plaintiffs executed to Clinton their note for that amount, due in one year, and "for the making of said loan of $2000 agreed to pay Clinton a commission of $500, which was evidenced by their note for said sum then executed to him and payable six months after date" (italics ours); that of the sum so borrowed they received only $1625, Clinton retaining the balance thereof; that plaintiffs had since repaid $300 of the sum borrowed and have at all times been ready, able and willing and have offered to pay "the actual amount due upon said loan," which offers had been refused, and that they were still willing to pay the actual amount due; that George W. Clinton had died since the loan transaction and that defendant Rose M. Clinton, his widow, was appointed administratrix and as such inventoried and took possession of said two notes as assets of his estate, they having belonged to Clinton at his death, and that said administratrix had demanded payment of the notes in full (less admitted credits) which payments plaintiffs refused to make. (Note: The evidence showed two credits on the $500 note, one of $300 and one of $78.75. Plaintiff Webb testified that the payments should have been credited on the larger note.)

The petition then charges that the notes referred to in the deed of trust "are not the notes executed by the plaintiffs as evidencing the actual amount borrowed from said Clinton by them; that the notes "are fraudulent" and do not bear plaintiffs' signatures "or if they do the amounts thereof and the names of the payee were changed subsequent to their (plaintiffs') signatures being placed thereon, if so signed, which is denied; that plaintiffs were . . . ignorant and uneducated folk and unable to read very well and had *Page 1130 great confidence in and trusted said George W. Clinton as their friend and counselor in said matter of the borrowing of said money from him," and if they signed the notes they did so because said notes were represented as being for the actual amount of the loan "made to these plaintiffs by the said George W. Clinton and not by the said Joe Birnbaumer;" that they were unable to and did not read the deed of trust, but that it was represented to them by Clinton's son and by Clinton, in whom they had confidence, as securing the payment of "notes for $2000 and $500 only, as aforesaid;" that so believing they signed "a deed of trust" purporting to secure and which they were assured did secure only "their said notes for $2000 and $500 and interest at 8% per annum, which had theretofore been executed or were then or subsequently executed to and made payable to said George W. Clinton."

Then follow allegations to the effect that it was understood between plaintiffs and Clinton and Prewitt that the Prewitt deed of trust was to be a lien prior to that of Clinton (or Birnbaumer) and that it was left by Prewitt with Clinton to be filed for record, the latter agreeing to file it first so that it would appear of record as subject only to the Land Bank mortgage, which Clinton failed to do, and that the deed of trust here involved appears of record as a lien prior to Prewitt's, which conduct of Clinton in attempting to gain priority of lien "defrauded plaintiffs of their property" (but how it so operated is not alleged).

It is further alleged that defendants herein formed a conspiracy to defraud plaintiffs of their property and obtain it for themselves, and that pursuant to such conspiracy Spencer Salisbury falsely told plaintiffs that he had purchased the $2500 and $500 notes from the Clinton estate and demanded payment thereof, threatening foreclosure if they were not paid, and upon plaintiffs' failure to pay ordered the trustee to foreclose, which the latter did, the sale occurring on October 4, 1927, and that Spencer Salisbury bid in the property for $3800, and on October 11, 1927, the trustee made his deed conveying the property to defendants Spencer Salisbury and Mary Salisbury, though in fact the notes still belonged to the Clinton estate when foreclosure was so ordered.

It is next alleged that at the sale Prewitt announced in the presence of bidders that his deed of trust was prior to that under which the sale was being made and that defendants and the trustee knew that plaintiffs claimed they had not executed the two notes secured by the deed of trust being foreclosed and knew that the foreclosure had not been ordered by the real owner of said notes, but nevertheless proceeded with the sale; that prospective bidders, not knowing "what constituted liens against the property, or which, if any, were prior to others or whether said sale was lawful or not," *Page 1131 were thereby deterred from bidding, by reason whereof the property sold for an inadequate price, by reason whereof "plaintiffs were defrauded" and the sale and trustee's deed were invalid; that at and prior to the foreclosure sale defendants knew all the facts and knew that plaintiffs did not owe the amounts claimed to be due on the notes; that if Spencer Salisbury had any title to the notes and deed of trust it was acquired on October 10, 1927 (after the foreclosure sale), by a contract of purchase that day made with Rose M. Clinton, administratrix of the George Clinton estate, but that Salisbury paid nothing therefor, nor on the purchase of the land at the foreclosure, and that the alleged purchase of the notes by Salisbury was "but a part of the aforesaid scheme and plan to defraud plaintiffs" and to acquire title to the property.

It is then alleged that "if the aforesaid notes . . . and deed of trust . . . were executed and delivered by these plaintiffs (which is denied), the said George W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 1045, 327 Mo. 1123, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-salisbury-mo-1931.