Wells v. Wells

288 S.W. 950, 221 Mo. App. 936, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 197
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 950 (Wells v. Wells) 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
Wells v. Wells, 288 S.W. 950, 221 Mo. App. 936, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 197 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is a suit on a promissory note. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $979.76 and the defendant, Klepper, has appealed.

The facts show that for sometime prior to August 25, 1922, plaintiff, Mary E. Wells, and defendant, Ed. L. Wells, who were husband and wife, were in partnership in the retail drug business in St. Joseph, Missouri, each owning a one-half interest in the business. Mrs. Wells was a silent partner, the entire business being transacted by her husband in his own name, there being no evidence of any kind from which the public would be led to believe otherwise than that the business ivas the sole property of the defendant Wells. The defendant Klepper, as well as the public, believed that Wells ivas the sole OAvner of the drug business. After Wells and his wife became such partners, the former and the defendant Klepper entered *938 into a partnership for the manufacture of a hog serum, at first under the name of E. L. Wells Serum Company and afterwards under the name of the Missouri Serum Company, Wells was in the active management of this business and signed for the serum company all of the notes that were executed by it.

Five years after the Wellses became partners in the drug business the drug store was sold by'Wells to one Burvenich. This sale was made as though Wells were the sole owner of the store. He received from Burvenich cash, liberty bonds, and a lot, in all amounting in value to $500 and a note in the sum of $1700 secured by a chattel mortgage made to Wells representing the balance of the unpaid purchase price. Wells appropriated the cash, liberty bonds and the proceeds of the sale of the lot to his own use, plaintiff receiving no benefit therefrom. $300 was paid upon the note, which money Wells also retained. Burvenich having failed to meet the payment on the drug store, it was repossessed by Wells and later, on August 25, 1922, sold by Wells, again in his own name, to one Kinder, the former receiving two promissory notes therefor, one in the sum of $1000 and another in the sum of $200, secured by chattel mortgage upon the drug store ’fixtures. The notes and mortgage were made payable to Wells personally. Plaintiff consented to this transaction and in -the way in which the papers were made out.

Sometime between August 25, 1922., and March 12, 1923, an agreement was had between the Wellses to the effect that plaintiff had an interest of $1000 in the Kinder notes and Wells an interest of $200 therein. This division was apparently made because Wells had received at the prior sale of the drug store the sum of $800 and this' together with a $200' interest in the Kinder* notes would give him $1000 out of the partnership assets, and as the Kinder notes aggregating $1200 constituted the sole assets of the partnership, plaintiff was given an interest of $1000 in them thus making an equal division. The partnership owed no debts and after the sale to Kinder it did not engage in any further business.

Wells owed the Farmers State Bank of Inza, of which Klepper was president, the sum of $360 and without the consent of his wife Wells turned the Kinder notes over to the bank to be held as security for his indebtedness to it. This was Wells’ testimony. Klepper testified that the notes were pledged with the bank not only to secure the personal indebtedness of Wells but also to secure the partnership indebtedness of the Missouri Serum Company to the bank which at that time amounted to $3350. On March 12, 1923, Klepper on behalf of the bank and without plaintiff’s knowledge, purchased the Kinder notes from Wells and in payment of the purchase price credited the sum of $360 upon Wells’s personal indebl *939 edness and tlie stun of $840 upon the indebtedness of the Missouri Serum Company to the bank.. At the same time Klepper paid to his father the sum of $840 upon the indebtedness that the serum company owed the latter. Neither the bank nor Klepper at this time knew that plaintiff had any interest in-the Kinder notes.

Wells testified that on the afternoon of the next day after the Kinder notes were sold to the bank, he told Klepper that he was going to give plaintiff the note of the Missouri Serum Company in the sum of $840 and explained to him why he was going to do this; that shortly thereafter he gave his wife the note in that sum, which is the note sued on in this case. Plaintiff’s note is dated May 25, 1923, and payable one year after date. Klepper denied having any knowledge of the execution of this note until the spring of 1925 when, according to Klepper’s testimony, plaintiff demanded of him the payment of the note. Klepper testified that relying upon his belief that Wells was the sole owner of the drug business, he entered into the partnership with him.

The petition is merely a suit upon a promissory note in the sum of $840 and is in the usual form. Defendant Wells filed no answer but in the answer of defendant Klepper it is pleaded that neither he nor his firm executed the note sued upon and that if the note was signed by Wells in the name of the partnership of which defendants were members, such act was wholly without authority; that it was not executed to evidence any debt of said partnership, and that it was wholly without consideration. Defendant Klepper then pleaded that plaintiff permitted her husband to hold himself out as the sole owner of the drug store and that he, Klepper, had entered into his partnership with Wells in reliance upon the latter’s apparent, ownership of the drug store and in reliance thereon invested money in the business of the serum company and became jointly obligated with Wells for money borrowed by that company; that on March 12, 1923, Wells, being the apparent owner of the Kinder notes, applied the sum of $840 to the indebtedness of the serum company and at the same time Klepper, relying upon the act of Wells, reduced other indebtedness of the partnership in a. like amount; that the Kinder notes were received by Wells as a part of the proceeds of the sale of the drug store; that plaintiff had permitted Wells to hold himself out to the world as the sole owner of that store and knew that he was conducting the store in that manner and that if she had any interest in the Kinder notes, she had become estopped and‘barred from claiming any interest in them as against this defendant. The reply was a general denial.

Appellant insists that his demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained. Preliminary to a discussion of the points raised by appellant, it is necessary to dispose of the controversy as to whether *940 there is any testimony tending to prove that there was a settlement had between the Wellses prior to the time the bank purchased the Kinder notes and Wells used $840 of the proceeds to pay the indebtedness of the serum company. Appellant contends that there is no such testimony. The record is not as clear as it might be upon this point. There is positive testimony on the part of Wells that there was an agreement had between himself and his wife that she should own a one thousand dollar interest in the Kinder notes and he a two hundred dollar interest therein, but there is no direct testimony as to when this agreement was had. He testified, however, that when Kinder gave the two notes they were owned by •his wife and himself.

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Related

Farmers Savings Bank v. Pugh
215 N.W. 652 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 950, 221 Mo. App. 936, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-wells-moctapp-1926.