163 Mo. 461 | Mo. | 1901
On the twelfth day of August, 1897, the St. Louis Sheet Metal Ornament Company duly executed' a deed of trust conveying all its property and assets to the defendant Walther, to secure the payment of certain debts evidenced by two schedules: schedule A, amounting to about $3,000 and schedule B amounting to about $600. The debts in schedule A numbered from 1 to 7 inclusive, with power to sell and apply the proceeds to the payment, first, of the debts named in schedule A in numerical order, and then to those named in schedule B, pro rata. Debt No. 6, in schedule A is “John R. Bireher, open account, $500,” and No. 7 is “Rudolph Bireher, open account, $1,000.” At the October term, 1897, of the St. Louis City Circuit Court, this suit was brought by
“St. Louis, October 9, 1896.
“Eeceived of Eudolph Bircher, the sum of one thousand dollars for which the undersigned agrees to sell to him twenty shares of the par value of $50 each, of its preferred stock out of the increase of its capital stock now about to be increased to $15,000, and to be made in accordance with the laws of the State of Missouri, said increase to be made as speedily as the law will allow, and the certificates for said stock to be delivered as soon as such increase is authorized, upon the return of this receipt.
“St. Louis Sheet Metal Ornament Company,
“By Ebed Buel, President.
“Chas. A. Schulze, Secy, and Treas.”
That said company never increased its capital stock, never issued any stock to him, preferred, or otherwise; but used said $1,000 in its business, and praying that a prior lien be decreed in his favor for that amount on the assets of said company in the hands of said trustee. Erom the decree of said circuit court in his favor as prayed for, with six per cent interest from the ninth of October, 1896, the defendant Walther, trustee as aforesaid, and defendants, the Jefferson Bank of St. Louis and George W. Lubke, Jr., beneficiaries in said deed of trust, whose debts in schedule A are numbered, respectively, 1 and 2, appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, where the decree of the circuit court was affirmed, but upon the dissent of one of the judges thereof, to the decision of the majority, the case was certified to this court. [Bircher v. Sheet Metal Ornament Co., 77 Mo. App. 509.]
The plaintiff, Eudolph Bircher, and the said John H.
“Resolved, That the capital stock of the company be increased from $7,000, its present capital,' to $15,000, and that of such increase of capital stock $5,000 shall be preferred stock, divided into one hundred shares, of the price of fifty dollars each, upon which a dividend of seven per cent per annum shall be paid out of the net yearly income earned in any one current year, before "any dividend shall be made or paid on the general stock of this company, and that the remainder
This resolution was never carried into effect, no increase of the capital stock was ever had, and, of course, no preferred stock was ever issued or delivered to the plaintiff, who, both before and'after that date, demanded his certificates therefor. The company thereafter continued its business as before until the twelfth of August, 1897, when the deed of trust in question was executed. In pursuance of the power therein contained, the property thereby conveyed, whatever it was, was sold, and the net proceeds thereof, amounting to the sum of $1,425, was in the hands of the trustee at the date of the trial, and it was in this fund that the court found that the plaintiff had a right and equity to the extent of one thousand dollars with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the ninth day of October, 1896, and out of it decreed payment accordingly.
(1) The points upon which appellants rely for reversal of the decree are the same as those u.rged and passed upon by the Court of Appeals, and while we may not concur in all of the dicta of that opinion, as we do agree to the conclusions reached on all of the points except two, one of which is decisive of the case, to a consideration of these this opinion will be confined.
In the recent case of Paul v. Draper, 158 Mo. 197, we had occasion to examine all the Missouri cases on the main question in hand, and while in that case it did not become necessary to formulate the rule to be deduced, not from dicta, but from the rulings of the appellate courts of this State on the facts in judgment in those eases, it may well be done in this case. That rule is, as we understand it, that if trust property has been mingled hy the trustee with his own property, so that one can not be distinguished from the other, and he transfers