174 Mo. App. 272 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
It is claimed that this is a suit in equity. The petition avers that plaintiffs being the owner of certain described real estate in Bollinger county, this State, were induced to exchange
Dtenying all the allegations of fraud or deceit, defendants denied that they were partners at the time of the -transaction or had any joint interest in the restaurant business; denied that the real estate was taken in exchange at the valuation of $3000 but aver that the exchange of the real estate, a part of which belonged to the husband and part to the wife, was on an even trade of that for the restaurant-business, both being valued a-t $2600'; denied that defendants or either of them had sold the restaurant business for $2600, or any other sum, but aver that the transaction was an even exchange between plaintiffs and the defendant Squires, the .restaurant business exchanged for the land, plaintiffs also agreeing to take care of certain judgments which were against the plaintiff Ernest Camren, and a lien on his land, and also to clear the-land of an incumbrance amounting to some $216, evidenced by a deed of trust.
A reply was filed to the answers and the cause submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, both parties as well as the court agreeing to try the case as one in equity. At the conclusion of the trial the court, after taking the cause under advisement, entered a decree discharging the defendant Smith from all demands of plaintiffs and rendering judgment in his favor. It was' further adjudged and
A motion for new trial was filed by defendant Squires and exception saved to the action of the court in overruling it. Whereupon Squires duly perfected his appeal to this court.
Without expressing an opinion as to whether this-is a suit in equity or an action at law, or as to whether plaintiffs could join in this action, w.e have concluded to dispose of it on the theory upon which it was tried by the trial court and by counsel for the respective parties. We have accordingly read all the testimony in the cause with very great care. We have before us, not only all the testimony, but a memorandum filed by the learned trial judge in connection with his decree. While that memorandum is not binding upon us, it has proved a great aid in getting at the theory upon which the trial court handled and disposed of the case.
Treating the ease as one in equity, while the conclusion of facts arrived at by the trial court is persuasive, it does not conclude us. We have arrived at our own conclusions in the case from a very careful examination and consideration of the testimony. It may be said that in considering the testimony, we are governed somewhat by the fact that the reputation
The learned trial court found that dtefendant Smith was acting in the transaction as the agent of defendant Squires. We have not reached that conclusion. It appears that defendant Smith, among other occupations, was a real estate agent, and that he had been approached by the plaintiff Ernest Camren to make a sale or procure, a trade for him for the farm which he and his wife owned and on which they resided. Mr. Smith testified that at the close of the transaction Mr. Camren paid him $125, as commission for effecting the trade, five per cent on the agreed valuation between them of the farm, that is $2500. He paid it by check, which apparently was cashed by Smith. Mr. Camren’s explanation of this is that he loaned Mr. Smith this money on his promise that he (Smith) would repay it within a few days. Smith never repaid it and there is no specific testimony on the part of Mr. Camren that prior to giving his testimony in this case he ever intimated in any way that Smith owed him $125- for borrowed money. The nearest he comes, when pressed to state whether he
A few days after they had been to Jackson, Camren came in to see Smith and told him that he had decided to make the deal; that he had talked it over with his wife and they had decided to go on with it. Smith said, “When are you going back to make an invoice?” Camren said that he did not care to make an invoice. Whereupon Smith said to him that he must understand that everything did not go in with that stock, that some of the things upstairs belonged to Mrs. Squires, to which Camren said that he. understood, and Smith then asked him when he wanted to make the deal, and he said, “Right away.” Asked about the title to his land Camren told him it was all right and Smith then asked him who would make the deed. Camren said he supposed he would have some justice of the peace make it and take the acknowledgment, to which Smith said that he would, rather go out and take the acknowledgment himself and then he would know it was in right shape, but he said to Camren that he did not want to go to the trouble to prepare the deed and drive out to his (Camren’s) place the next day and they “all be out of the notion” of making the deal. In answer to which Camren told Smith to come out the next day and the deed would he signed up. ' Smith testified that he wrote up. the deed for the farm the next morning before he started, putting the consideration as $3000 and the land as 183 acres and a fraction, which was incorrect, as there were only 173 acres. He went out to Camren’s house,
Mr. Camren and his wife testified in the most positive terms that Mr. Smith had stated that he was a partner with Squires and that the articles in the restaurant invoiced at $2500'; that it was a moneymaking concern; that the sales averaged about $1000 a month and were growing better, and that it was in implicit reliance on these statements, which they claim were false, that they consummated the deal.
We cannot, on consideration of all the evidence in the case, accept this as true. Even if they were, they were made by a man the Camrens believed to be acting for himself and for Squires and they had no right, as prudent people, to accept them without any investigar ti on. They were afforded every opportunity to investigate conditions. No concealment was practiced or attempted. If they chose to shut their eyes, they must abide the consequences.
The learned trial court found that Smith, while acting as agent for Squires, was not his partner and not responsible in any amount to the Camrens; that the agreed consideration or the purchase price of the farm wras $2600 and not $3000; as contended by plaintiffs; that the reasonable value of the restaurant, including the entire belongings thereto, was $1000;'
But with this finding the learned trial court found, that treating this as an action in equity, and that while it was to be admitted that her husband acted as her agent in the transaction, it is clear from the evidence that the wife relied upon and acted under the persuasion of her husband. Acknowledging the rule of law that if an agent is derelict in his duty and the principal thereby suffers loss or damage, that the agent is responsible to the principal, the learned trial court concluded that it felt, from an equitable standpoint, that Ernest Camren being the husband of Cora had induced her to part with her separate property and that she is in no position to receive from him the amount for which she was damaged by the trade. The court therefore concluded that under the circumstances
It follows that the finding and judgment of the circuit court must be set aside and the judgment in the cause reversed. It is so ordered.