Witmer v. Nichols

8 S.W.2d 63, 320 Mo. 665, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 790
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 63 (Witmer v. Nichols) 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
Witmer v. Nichols, 8 S.W.2d 63, 320 Mo. 665, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 790 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*667 RAGLAND, J.

The appeal in this cause is Horn a judgment rendered on a general demurrer to the petition. The question for determination is whether the petition states a cause of action entitling the plaintiffs to the relief prayed for, or any equitable relief.

According to the petition the plaintiffs are resident taxpayers of the School District of Kansas City; the individual defendants, other than C. AV. Armour, are the members of the School Board of said district; Armour, at the times of the transactions involved, was merely the o\Arner of a large body of farm or grazing land in the soutlnvest portion of Kansas City; and the. J. C. Nichols Investment Company, a corporation in which defendant J. C. Nichols Avas a large stockholder and of AA’hich he Avas president, Avas at said times commercially engaged in developing vacant lands for residential purposes in Kansas City, and particularly-in the southwest portion thereof. Respondent, C. W. Armour, has died pending the appeal, *668 but the cause has not been revived as against him in the name of his heirs.

The facts pleaded as constituting’ a cause of action may be summarized as follows:

On or about January 1, 1922, Nichols and the Investment Company purchased from Armour for residential development 230 acres of vacant land, located south of 65th Street and east of Wornall Road in the southwest portion of Kansas City, paying therefor an average price of $1625 per acre. Coincident with that transaction, or shortly thereafter, the members of the School Board sought to purchase from Armour a high school site at or near the southwest corner of 65th Street and Wornall Road, but Armour refused to sell any of his land for a school site. During the time the members of the school board were endeavoring to buy a school site from Armour, he entered into negotiations with Nichols and the Investment Company looking to a sale to them of a tract of. seventy-four acres of vacant land, located south of 65th Street and west of AVornall Road and which included the fifteen acre high school site in controversy in this proceeding. Armour asked $4000 per acre for the seventy-four acre tract, but Nichols and the Investment Company offered him only $2500 per acre, , Finally Armour offered to sell the entire tract at $3500 per acre," but Nichols and the Investment Company refused io purchase even at that price. At this juncture Armour on the one side and Nichols and the Investment Company on the other devised the following scheme or plan: “Armour was to dispose of his entire seventy-four acre tract at the price and sum of $3500 per acre, payable $75,000 cash and balance on terms; Nichols and the Investment Company were to obtain .title to at least fifty-nine acres of said seventy-four acre tract at the price and sum of $3118 per acre with no cash payment down, but on three equal deferred payments maturing' in five, seven and ten years respectively; and the title to fifteen acres of said seventy-four acre tract should pass to the School District of Kansas City for a consideration of $5000 per acre, payable all cash.”

Pursuant to the scheme just referred to a written contract was prepared, purporting to be between Armour and one Josephine Kelly, “a straw person,” and wherein and whereby Armour agreed to sell and Kelly agreed to buy the seventy-four acre tract on the following terms: Consideration $3500 per acre, purchaser to pay seller $10,000 in cash upon the signing of the instrument, $65,000 upon the consummation of the sale and the remainder in three equal installments, one at the end of five years, one at the end of seven years and one at the end of ten years thereafter respectively. Kelly signed the instrument on the 17th day of May, 1922, and on the same, day indorsed thereon an assignment in blank of her purported in *669 terest under the contract. On the 18th day of May, 1922, Nichols -and the Investment Company “attached their signatures to said contract: by the indorsement thereou that they approved of the terms of said contract; that they would carry out its provisions in all details; that they would pay the $10,000 cash payment required in and under .said contract and would execute, or cause to be executed, three equal notes for $61,667, due in five, seven and ten years respectively.” At the same time “they . . . deposited their own check for $10,000 on account of the purchase price of said seventy-four acre tract.” The contract was signed by Armour on the 21st day of May, 1922. On May 26, 1922, the School District by its president, defendant Pinkerton, entered into a purported contract with said Kelly for the purchase of fifteen acres at the southwest corner of the intersection of Wornall Road with 65th Street, being a part of the seventy-four acre tract. By the terms of such contract the School District was to pay $75,000 in cash upon the delivery to it of a warranty deed conveying- the title. Subsequently, on .May 29, 1922, Nichols, as a member of the School Board introduced at a meeting of the board a resolution providing for the purchase of the said fifteen acre tract for a high school site and authorizing the issuance of a voucher in the sum of $75,000 to he used in paying for it. The resolution was unanimously adopted, Nichols himself voting therefor. On June 16, 1922, Armour executed and delivered to the School District a warranty deed conveying to it the fifteen acre tract, and the district issued to him a voucher in the sum of $75,000, which ivas “drawn on and paid out of the funds . . . belonging to the taxpayers of the said School District,” thereby and to that extent depleting such funds. At the same time that Armour made the conveyance to the School District he conveyed the remainder of the seventy-four aei’e Iract, fifty-nine acres, to Kelly, and she in turn executed and delivered to him three uotes, each for $61,667, and maturing five, seven and ten years after date, respectively, together with a deed of trust against the land to secure their payment. Kelly then conveyed the fifty-nine acres, subject to the deed of trust, to Nichols and the Investment. Company. Immediately after the execution of the deeds just mentioned Armour redelivered to Nichols and the Investment Company the cash deposit theretofore made by them of $10,000. The three deeds, however, were not filed for record until April 12, 1923; the delay in recording them was for the purpose, it is alleged, of “withholding from the public any knowledge of the transaction hereinbefore mentioned.”

All of the details of the “scheme” were known to every member of the School Boaixl, except that the members other than Nichols, did not know that he and the Investment Company personally deposited *670 with Armour $10,000 in cash as a first payment on the purchase price of the seventy-four acre tract, that the $10,000 ivas subsequently returned to them and that they were given a period of ten years in which to finally pay for the fifty-nine acres.

Immediately after the purported sale of the school site to the School District, Nichols and the Investment Company put on an intensive selling campaign for the purpose of disposing of their 230 acre tract, and by reason of the location of the high school site the value of their land was not only greatly enhanced, but sales were greatly facilitated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 63, 320 Mo. 665, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witmer-v-nichols-mo-1928.