Yarbrough v. W. A. Gage & Co.

70 S.W.2d 1055, 334 Mo. 1145, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 19, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 70 S.W.2d 1055 (Yarbrough v. W. A. Gage & 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
Yarbrough v. W. A. Gage & Co., 70 S.W.2d 1055, 334 Mo. 1145, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 535 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

The plaintiff resided at Steele in Pemiscot County, Missouri. He engaged, over a period of many years, in the mercantile business in that county and as a buyer and dealer in cotton, raising, buying and selling cotton. For several years he also owned and operated a cotton gin. Defendant, W.A. Gage and Company, Incorporated, is a nonresident or foreign corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee authorized and engaged in carrying on the business of a cotton factor or merchant with its office and place of business at Memphis, Tennessee. A business arrangement, which continued over a period of ten years or more, existed between plaintiff and Gage Company whereby plaintiff in the carrying on of his business as a cotton dealer or cotton merchant shipped his cotton to, and marketed it through, Gage Company, as cotton factors, at Memphis, Tennessee. In 1926 plaintiff executed two promissory notes, one for $8000 and one for $10,000, payable to Gage Company and at the same time executed a deed of trust, on real property situate in Pemiscot County, securing the payment of said notes, Gage Company being the beneficiary therein. The terms and provisions of said deed of trust and a "cotton contract" entered into by the parties at the same date and time and as part of the same transaction, as well as something of the history of the course of dealing between them, will hereinafter be more fully stated.

The indebtedness secured by said deed of trust being past due and unpaid Gage Company in 1929, caused proceedings to be commenced to foreclose the deed of trust. Whereupon plaintiff brought this suit seeking to enjoin and restrain such foreclosure alleging the notes and deed of trust to be void for that Gage Company "in procuring said deed of trust and notes from plaintiff . . . was doing business in this State for which it was incorporated under the laws of Tennessee" and that said corporation "was not authorized or licensed to do business in this State . . . and had wholly failed to comply with the laws of this State relative to foreign corporations doing business in this State and in fact at no time has said defendant W.A. Gage Company, Incorporated, complied with such laws." The petition then states, "that if said deed of trust is valid plaintiff does not owe" Gage Company "said notes or any part thereof; . . . that since the execution and delivery of said instrument and notes plaintiff has delivered for sale from time to time large quantities of cotton to said defendant" Gage Company "to be sold according to instructions of plaintiff and the business transactions between plaintiff and said defendant since then have been many and numerous; that said defendant claims to have kept a complete record of all the business transactions between it and plaintiff since and before the execution and delivery of said instrument and notes while the plaintiff has not kept or been able to keep a complete *Page 1151 record of all the business transactions between himself and said defendant" Gage Company "since or before the execution and delivery of said instrument and notes;" that Gage Company "fails and refuses to properly account to plaintiff for cotton delivered by plaintiff to it as aforesaid" and "is indebted to plaintiff for damages in the sum of $10,000 or more for failure to sell his said cotton according to true weights or the instructions of plaintiff and therefore plaintiff would have a counterclaim to prosecute against said defendant" Gage Company "should said company sue plaintiff upon said notes but plaintiff is powerless to offset said matter of counterclaim against said notes in the proceedings of said trustee to foreclose said deed of trust." The prayer of the petition is that "an order be issued at once temporarily restraining" the defendant trustee "from proceeding with the threatened" foreclosure sale "under the power of sale contained in said deed of trust until the matters herein set forth have been heard and adjudicated by the court and" that "on final hearing of this cause defendants be permanently enjoined from selling said property under said deed of trust and that said deed of trust be canceled and for naught held, and, if said deed of trust is valid, then plaintiff prays the court to ascertain and determine the amount of damages due plaintiff from defendant for failure to sell the cotton of plaintiff according to true weights or the instructions of plaintiff and that such amount be offset against said notes and that an accounting be had between plaintiff and defendant to ascertain what amount, if anything, the plaintiff owes on said, notes, and that the amounts of the mutual demands or indebtedness between plaintiff and defendant be ascertained and determined and that whatever sums the defendant owes plaintiff the same shall be offset against said notes, and if the court finds after ascertaining and offsetting the mutual demands of plaintiff and defendant against each other plaintiff owes defendant any amount on said notes the court shall adjudge the same and permit plaintiff to pay such amount to defendant and upon the payment of such amount to defendant the court adjudge said deed of trust and notes to be fully paid and satisfied and order and direct defendant to satisfy the record of said deed of trust . . . and restrain defendants from selling said property under said deed of trust." A temporary injunction issued. The answer of Gage Company admits that "it did not take out a license to do business in the State of Missouri" and avers that "in its business as a cotton factor and in making the loan in question to plaintiff in this case it was not doing business in the State of Missouri so that it was required" by the statutes of this State "to take out a license as a nonresident corporation in Missouri" and "denies that it violated the law" of this State "in that regard." Continuing the answer describes the nature and extent of the business carried on by defendant as a cotton factor and the manner in which same *Page 1152 was conducted, sets forth an alleged course of dealing between plaintiff and Gage Company over a period of "several years" and the circumstances of the loan which is evidenced by the notes and deed of trust; and asserts that the transactions with plaintiff were not such as required that defendant "take out a license to do business in this State." It is denied that the notes have been paid or that "plaintiff is not indebted to defendant by reason of said notes" or that defendant "failed to sell any cotton by it held . . . for the plaintiff upon request of plaintiff to sell same."

On the trial of the cause the business transactions between plaintiff and defendant covering a period of approximately four years next preceding July 1, 1929, were examined and an accounting made. The court found; that Gage Company is a foreign corporation "not licensed to do business in this State;" that the mortgage and notes described in the petition were made in this State but were given in a transaction of interstate business and therefore same are valid and can be enforced in this State; "that according to the evidence, accounts, books and records of the defendant W.A. Gage and Company plaintiff owed defendant W.A. Gage and Company a balance on said notes of $15,518.81 on the first day of July, 1929, and that said accounts, books and records are true and correct, except as to the charge of $7859.12 against plaintiff for commissions, which the court finds to be excessive and unreasonable and finds that the defendant W.A.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.W.2d 1055, 334 Mo. 1145, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yarbrough-v-w-a-gage-co-mo-1934.