61 Mo. App. 37 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
The plaintiffs are judgment creditors of the C. E. Blell Millinery Company, a business corporation. Their execution against the company having been returned unsatisfied, they instituted the present action, which is in the nature of a creditor’s bill, against the defendant, C. E. Blell.' The company was also made a party defendant. It is charged in the bill that Blell was the president and managing director of the corporation, and as such received the sum of $2,500, which represented a portion of the capital stock of the corporation, and which he had failed to account for, and that during his management, which extended over a period of about twenty months, he received divers other sums of money, aggregating the further sum of $2,500, of which no satisfactory account had been rendered, and that, if the accounts between him and the company were properly adjusted, a large ballance would be found due from him. The petition prays that such account be taken, and that whatever amount is thus found to be'due be divided ratably between the plaintiffs and such other creditors of the Millinery Company as may see proper to come in and assist in the prosecution of the action.
The defendants filed answers denying the averments of the bill, and setting up the special defense that on the thirtieth day of November, 1887, the Millinery Company made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors; that the assignee qualified and proceeded to adjust all claims and demands against the assigned estate; that the plaintiffs failed to have their demand allowed by the assignee, and that subsequently the assignee was, by the order of the court where the assignment was pending, duly discharged.
The cause was sent to a referee with instructions to take the testimony, and report his findings and recommendations to the court. This was done. The
Both parties filed exceptions to the report, the plaintiffs’ exceptions going to the recommendation that other creditors should share in the distribution, which the court sustained. The defendants’ exceptions were to the effect that the finding of the referee as to the indebtedness due from Blell to the Millinery Company was unsupported by the evidence, and that the referee erred in finding against the special defense set up in the answers. These exceptions the court overruled, and a decree was entered in favor of plaintiffs against Blell in the total sum of $1,800.30, for which execution was ordered to be issued. The court also found that Blell was indebted to the Millinery Company in the total sum of $3,329.58. The defend-' ants have appealed.
The defendants insist that the ease was not a proper one for reference, and that they were thereby wrongfully deprived of their right of trial by jury. There is no merit in this. The statute provides that the trial court may, on its own motion, direct a reference “where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the examination of a long account on either side.” R. S., sec. 2138. The question of reference must in every case be determined by the face of the pleadings. Father Matthew, etc., Society v. Fitzwilliams, 12 Mo. App. 445; s. c., 84 Mo. 406. In that case the court also held that a reference does not become erroneous expost facto, for the reason that the evidence was such
It is also claimed that the finding of the referee as to the indebtedness of Blell is not warranted by the evidence, and that the evidence adduced in support of the finding was erroneously admitted. The only evidence offered by the plaintiffs was a certified copy of their judgment and the execution showing a return of nulla lona, and the deposition of Blell taken in the original case of plaintiffs against the C. E. Blell Millinery Company. The deposition was properly admitted, as it contained admissions by Blell against his interest. The competency of such evidence is no longer an open question in this state. Kritzer v. Smith, 21 Mo. 296; Priest v. Way, 87 Mo. 16; Bogie v. Nolan, 96 Mo. 85.
Blell stated in his deposition that the Millinery Company was organized in the spring of 1886 with a paid up capital of $5,000; that he subscribed for $4,500 of the stock, and his two sisters subscribed for the balance; that $2,500 of the money was used in the purchase of an old stock of goods from him, and that he kept the remainder of the money in his private safe. He admitted that he did not deposit any portion of the money in bank. He claimed that he paid it out during the first three or four months for goods. He could not remember from whom he made such purchases, or where they did business. He could not name a single one. The referee accepted his admission that he received the money, but rejected as unworthy of belief his statements as to its disposition. It was stated that the explanation was too incredible to be accepted. It is contended that this was violative of the established rules of evidence — that the admission of a party, when coupled with matter of discharge, must be accepted or rejected as a whole. This is not the rule in this state.
It is insisted by the appellants that, if Blell is indebted to the Millinery Company, such indebtedness belongs to the assigned estate, and that, as the plaintiffs failed to have their demand allowed by the assignee,
In support of this assignment the defendants rely on the decision of the supreme court in the recent case of St. George’s Church Society v. Branch, 25 S. W. Rep. 218. In that case Branch had made an assignment, and the assignee had been discharged. At the time of the assignment Branch was a stockholder in the • St. George’s Church Society, a corporation, but the assignee was not advised of this. After the estate had been closed the church building of the society, which was heavily insured, was burned. The insurance was collected, and the society determined to disincorporate. The society claimed to be the owner of Branch’s stock through some arrangement with him, and some of his judgment creditors levied upon his portion of the fund. Thereupon the assignee made application to the court to have the assigned estate reopened for the purpose of administering this newly discovered asset. This was done, and the several claimants interpleaded for the fund. The supreme court decided that the assignee was entitled to themoney. The principle of the decision is that the effect of the assignment was to vest in the assignee the title to all property owned by Branch, and that the discharge of the assignee did not of itself reinvest the title in the assignor. Conceding that the decision is applicable to a case presenting the state of facts we have here, provided the proper parties were before the court, we can not understand how it can be invoked by the defendants. They certainly can not, as against the plaintiffs, who are acknowledged to be Iona fide creditors, of the Millinery Company, and whose claim is enforceable, assert the alleged priority of the
“The practical results of this proposition seem to me to amount to a rechictio ad absurdwm; a form of proof older than the days of Euclid. An assignee, knowing of a certain claim alleged to exist in favor of his assigned estate, decides (and we admit in exercise of proper discretion) that the claim is bad in law, or practically incapable of enforcement. It cuts no figure in the assignment; not even in the inventory. The assignee pays seven and one half per cent, on the claims allowed, and is discharged. A creditor, who did not prove his claim before the assignee, assumes the burden and risk of establishing and collecting this doubt? ful claim, which neither the assignee nor any other creditor would handle, for the benefit of all creditors who may chose to join him. None join him in the contest; the claim is established as true in fact; but the bill is defeated because this plaintiff, though having a judgment against the assignor, failed to put in his claim before the assignee. Is it possible that such is the law?
*46 “The absurdity could be made more palpable by modifying these concrete facts. Let us suppose that the creditors who proved before the assignee had made settlement with the debtor before filing of this suit, or let us suppose that these proving creditors, for any of several good reasons which might be imagined, refused to lend their names to any suit for the recovery of this asset under any condition; can it be said that under such circumstances the assets shall be lost, and the plaintiff in this case be denied all right to proceed?”
When the report of the referee came in, the defendant Blell asked leave to file an amended answer setting up the statute of limitations. The court refused to grant the leave. Of this he complains.
Section 2098 of the Revised Statutes of 1889 provides that “the court may, at any time before final judgment, in furtherance of justice, and on such terms as may be proper, amend any pleading * * * when the amendment does'not change substantially the claim or defense.” * * * It is largely in the discretion of the trial court to permit amendments to be made, and appellate courts interfere only where it appears that such discretion has been arbitrarily exercised. Ensworth v. Batton, 67 Mo. 622. Blell was fully advised by the averments of the petition of the nature of the action against him, and he must, under the circumstances, be presumed to have had knowledge of all facts bearing on the additional defense at the time he filed his original answer. The proposed amendment was untimely, and the circuit court committed no error in refusing permission to make it. Henderson v. Henderson, 55 Mo. 534.
With the concurrence of the other judges the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed. It is so
ordered.