Woodard v. Mastin

106 Mo. 324
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 106 Mo. 324 (Woodard v. Mastin) 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
Woodard v. Mastin, 106 Mo. 324 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Thomas, J.

This is a bill in equity to set aside sales under deed of trust and execution, as having been made in fraud of creditors.

[329]*329In 1877, John J. and Thomas H. Mastín organized a mining corporation known as the “North Center Creek Mining & Smelting Company.” John J. Mastín was made president of this company when it was first organized. Thomas H. Mastín was, however, after the first year, its president, and Wm. Toms was its superintendent. This company engaged in the business of mining and reducing zinc and lead ores, and for that purpose expended large sums of money in erecting buildings, furnaces and other necessary appliances on lands it owned near Webb City, Jasper County, Missouri. On the twenty-seventh day of January, 1879, the company being indebted to John Wahl & Co. in the sum of about $2,800 executed a deed of trust to H. W. Ocker, trustee of said Wahl & Co., on the undivided halfaof the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 17; the undivided seven-twelfths of lot 1, of the northwest quarter, and the north half of the northeast quarter of section 18, township 28, range 32, in Jasper county, and on all the personal property, machinery, tools and fixtures used in and upon said premises or in connection with the mining business of said company, and in part consisting of the following: One large engine, three large boilers, two detached boilers, nineteen steam jigs, one crusher, four steam pumps, two steam hoisters and all belts, pulleys, rollers and other appurtenances, as well as the blacksmith shop, office and all the tools and furniture therein, which deed of trust was made to secure to said Wahl & Co. the payment of the said sum of $2,800, and further advances to be made by said Wahl & Co. to said company, not exceeding, in all, the sum of $10,000, at any one time over and above manufactured products actually on hands, and it provided that, in case any sum of money remained unpaid after the expiration of ninety days, the trustee might, upon the usual terms, sell said land at the courthouse door in the city of Carthage, Jasper county, and the said personal property upon the premises, to satisfy such indebtedness.

[330]*330In pursuance of the power contained in this deed of trust, the trustee did, on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1879, sell all said land and personal property to D. C. Mastín, for $4,485. On the fifteenth day of December, 1880, plaintiff obtained judgment in the circuit court of said county, against said company for the sum of $1,564.68 with costs. In December, 1884, the interest of said company in the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 17, township 28, range 32r was sold by the sheriff of said county, by virtue of an execution issued on said judgment, and plaintiff became the purchaser thereof for the sum of $50 and received the sheriff’s deed therefor, dated December 11, 1884, and he brought this suit to cancel and set aside the sale, and, also, a deed made under said deed of trust to D. C. Mastín, averring that it was procured to be made by the president and the other officers of said company, for the purpose and with the intent to defraui the creditors of said company, among whom was' plaintiff, and averring further that D. C. Mastín, the purchaser at that sale, was cognizant of the purposes and designs of said officers, and that he did not furnish the money for the purchase, but that it was furnished by the president and officers of said company.

Plaintiff also alleged that in further pursuance of said fraudulent design and conspiracy to cheat and defraud and hinder and delay this plaintiff and various other creditors of said company out of their just claims and demands against said company, and to strengthen, if possible, the pretended and fraudulent claim of defenddant, David C. Mastín, to the undivided half of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 17, township 28, of range 32, in Jasper county, Missouri, said Thomas II. Mastín, John J. Mastín, William Toms, the North Center Creek Mining & Smelting Company and David C. Mastín, this defendant, on the twenty-fifth day of March, 1881, procured an undivided one-half of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter [331]*331of the said section 17, township 28, of range 32, in Jasper county Missouri, to be sold under an execution issued out of the circuit court of the United States, for the western division of the western district of the state of Missouri on a judgment in favor of the Metropolitan National Bank of New York, and against the North Center Creek Mining & Smelting Company, John J. Mastin and Thomas EL Mastin, defendants, to this defendant, David C. Mastin, for the grossly inadequate price and sum of $125, when in truth and in fact said property was well worth at the time the sum of $20,000; that said property was so purchased at said sale by said David C. Mastin, for the purpose of hindering and delaying and cheating and defrauding said creditors and this plaintiff out of their just claims and demands.

D. C. Mastin answered denying the fraud on his part and alleging his good faith in the two purchases of the property and the payment for it by himself. Ele also alleged that since the institution of this suit he had sold the land in controversy to John J. Mastin, and that he and John J. Mastin since said trustee’s sale had expended “the sum of $48,000 in removing liens upon said land and property.”

John J. Mastin filed separate answer in which he set up that the trustee’s and marshal’s sales to D. C. Mastin were made in good faith, and for value, and that he and D. C. Mastin had .aid $48,000 in removing liens and demands against the company.

The "suit was originally begun in 1884, in Jasper county, and was, on stipulation, transferred to Greene county, where a trial- was had which resulted in the dismissal of plaintiff’s bill, and he has appealed to this court.

I. The main question presented to us for decision is one of fact upon the evidence contained in the record. Were the sales of the property in dispute by the trustee and marshal fraudulent as to the creditors of said company, as alleged by plaintiff % In the discussion of the [332]*332question, it will not be necessary for us to examine the bona Jides of the sale by the marshal; for it is conceded, if not in terms, at least tacitly, that, if the trustee’s sale was fraudulent, as alleged, the subsequent purchase of the same property by the fraudulent grantee would not help him.

We will first examine this transaction in the light of the evidence presented by defendants, which is substantially as follows: D. C., Thomas EL and John J. Mastin were brothers. D. C. Mastin was a farmer and dealer in stock and lived on a farm near Kansas City. Thomas EL and John J. Mastin up to 1878 had been engaged in -the banking business in Kansas City, but during that year their bank failed, leaving John J. Mastin financially wrecked. The mining plant, outside of the lands, of the North Center Creek Mining & Smelting Company near Webb City cost at least $40,000. Thomas H. Mastin went to St. Louis, after the W ahl deed of trust was given, to look after some debts the company owed there, and while there met: John Wahl and told him the company would not be able to pay him, and if he wanted his money he would have to sell the property under his deed of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Mo. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodard-v-mastin-mo-1891.