Winn v. Lippincott Investment Co.

28 S.W. 998, 125 Mo. 528, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 18, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 998 (Winn v. Lippincott Investment 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
Winn v. Lippincott Investment Co., 28 S.W. 998, 125 Mo. 528, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 416 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

On February 26, 1887, the Winner Investment Company of Kansas City, Missouri, represented by its president, W. E. Winner, made the following proposition to W. Y. Lippineott, Jr., of the same place, in a letter of that date addressed to him, as follows:

“W. V. Lippineott, JEsq., City:
“Deab Sib: — I will sell you the lands known as South Evanston, containing 131 1-2 acres, more or less, for $131,000, upon the following terms: $16,000 cash and $115,000 in bonds, drawing 8 per cent., running 1, 2 and 3 years, and secured upon the lands as follows: $48,000, secured upon the south 55 acres of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 4, township 49, range 32, payable as follows.- $16,000 on or before one year, $16,000 on or before two years, and $16,000 on or before three years.
“Thirty-six and one half acres, being the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of same section, township and range, on which we will secure $32,000 of said bonds as follows: $11,000 payable in one year, $11,000 payable in two years, and $10,000 payable in three years, all on or before.
“$35,000 secured upon the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter, as follows: $12,000 payable in one year, $12,000 payable in two years, and $11,000 payable in three years, all on or before.
“All of said notes to be in denominations of ‡1,000 each; upon the payment of any ‡1,000 wetvill release any [536]*536one acre yon select; we will also take in payment on said notes, first mortgage bonds, upon said lands taken by you, not to exceed one third of the actual selling price of said lots.
“The right of way, one hundred feet wide from the Kansas City, Independence and Park Railroad, is hereby reserved, with the understanding that such part of said land as is not used for tracks shall be opened to the public as a highway.
“This proposition to be accepted immediately, and the deal to be closed on or before April 1, 1887.
“[Signed] Willard E. Winner,
“President.”

This proposition was accepted on the same sheet, as follows:

“I accept the above proposition.
“[Signed] W. Y. Lippincott, Jr.”
Pursuant to this contract, accepted as above, on the first day of April, 1887, the Winner Investment Company conveyed the several parcels of property named to W..Y- Lippincott, Jr., by three warranty deeds in the usual form; and on the same day W. Y. Lippincott, Jr., gave to Gardiner Lathrop, as trustee, for the use of the WinnerInvestment Company, three several deeds of trust to secure the deferred payments named in the contract, on each of the several parcels of land described therein. These deferred payments were all represented by one hundred and fifteen notes or bonds of $1,000 each. These bonds, secured by the several deeds of trust, were not otherwise designated in the three deeds of trust referred to, than as so many bonds of ‡1,000 each, due as described in the contract. Each deed of trust contained, among others the following provisions: uIt is understood and agreed, that the party of the first part (Lippincott), or his assigns, may subdivide the said land into lots, and that [537]*537they shall have the privilege of paying at any time, one or more of the bonds secured by this deed of trust, together tvith all interest thereon (no interest being in arrears), and for each and every bond so paid the party of the third part, or his assigns or endorsees, shall release from the lien of this deed of trust, any one acre of land that may be selected by the party of the first part, or his assigns; said acre to include its share of roads and alleys adjacent thereto.” * * * “These bonds, or any of them, may be paid by depositing the amount of such bond or bonds, with accrued interest thereon, in the Armour Bros.’ Banking Company’s bank at Kansas City, Missouri, to the credit of said company or its assigns, and thereupon all interest on said bonds for which said money is deposited shall cease, and it shall be the duty of the holder thereof to make the release herein provided, or in case of his or their failure to do so for ten days after such deposit is made, then it shall be the duty of said trustee, or his successor, to make such release on demand, which he is hereby empowered to do.”

On the second day of April, 1887, W. Y. Lippincott, Jr., and wife, for the expressed consideration of $136,000, conveyed the land named in the contract and deed of trust to the Lippincott Investment Company, by warranty deed, in the usual form, which deed, among other things, contained the following clause, referring to the bonds or notes given by himself for the benefit of the Winner Investment Company: “The grantee herein agrees to assume and pay off certain notes amounting to ‡115,000 secured on the above described property, recorded at Independence, Missouri.”

The bonds referred to contained amo'ng them the bonds now in question. The lands conveyed were all platted in the year 1887 into lots and blocks, and a large portion of the lots sold . to innocent purchasers. [538]*538Out. of the $115,000 in bonds; $81,000, or eighty-one bonds and interest, were páid out of the proceeds of the sale of these lots.

It was understood by all the parties to the deeds of trust, and it was by them contemplated, that the lands conveyed were to be subdivided into lots and blocks, and the lots sold and released from the deeds of trust as sold. Mr. Winner, plaintiff’s witness, the president of the Winner Investment Company, the representative of the syndicate owning the land and the seller of the property, stated: “The land was bought (by Lippincott) to be platted into lots, and retailed out. It was conveyed by three deeds of trust given back, and this was all one and the same transaction. We relied upon the deeds of trust; nothing was said about the vendor’s lien till this suit was brought. The original contract provided how deeds of release should be made, and we undertook to copy it into the deeds of trust. We made no release that we did not get a $1,000 bond to each acre, as provided by the terms of the deeds of trust. It was certainly the object in dividing the $115,000 into payments of $1,000 each for the purpose of enabling Mr. Lippincott to give clear title to any acre of ground as he sold it. The three deeds of trust, and the bonds, were delivered at the same time and as one transaction.”

The eighty-one bonds of $1,000, referred to as paid, were all released by one Freeman, who owned two of the bonds, and the remainder by the Winner Investment Company. These releases released all the property originally sold, except that upon which the court below gave plaintiffs a first lien. Mr. Lippincott brought up the bonds in the latter ease, and, taking them to the Winner Investment Company, the company canceled the bond, and then released the acre indicated by Mr. Lippincott, who refused to take up [539]*539any bond, except through the Winner Investment Company, to the end that a general release might be had from the Winner company after the bonds were all paid.

In the year 1888 the real estate boom in Kansas City ceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 998, 125 Mo. 528, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winn-v-lippincott-investment-co-mo-1894.