26 Mo. App. 194 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
delivered the opinion oí the court.
This was a suit at'law upon a promissory note for three hundred and fifty dollars, alleged by the respondent to have been executed by the appellant, dated March 31, 1884, payable one year after date. The petition. states that the note is unpaid, with the exception- of the sum of sixty-seven dollars, paid thereon May 20, 1885, and prays judgment for thp amount still due, to-wit: two hundred and eighty-three dollars, with interest at ten per cent, from maturity.
The answer first denies the execution of the note, and then sets up that its execution' was brought about by the fraud and deceit of the plaintiff, together Avith the execution of another note, of the same date, tenor, and amount, payable two years after date ; that the defendant, in March, 1884, intended to lease a lot from the plaintiff for a long time, and, on account thereof, his wife, without the defendant’s knowledge, paid to the plaintiff the sum. of one hundred dollars; that the plaintiff fraudulently represented to the defendant that, in order to complete this supposed leasing transaction, it would be necessary to execute certain papers, and, by that pretense, caused the defendant to execute the two notes, and a deed of trust on the property securing them, such property being the one which the defendant intended to lease, but which, in fact, the plaintiff sold
The answer prays for a cancellation and surrender of the notes, a cancellation of the deed of trust, and a money judgment against the plaintiff for the sum of ninety dollars, being the difference between the rental value of the lot for one year, while the defendant was in possession thereof, and the one hundred dollars', which the defendant’s wife paid to the plaintiff on account of the supposed leasing transaction.
The case was tried by the court. The court rendered judgment for the plaintiff on the note sued on, but decreed a cancellation, and surrender, of the other note. From the judgment and decree thus rendered, the defendant, alone, appeals.
We have carefully examined and analyzed the testimony in the record, and can see no ground upon which we can legally vacate the judgment thus rendered. It is needless to decide whether the review of the judgment should be governed, in this court, by rules applicable to legal, or equitable proceedings, as, in either view, the-defendánt’s complaint that the judgment is erroneous,, so far as he is concerned, must fail.
That the defendant is an ignorant man, that the lot in controversy was sold to him at an exorbitant value, and that the bargain was an unconscionable one, may be readily conceded. -All these facts entitle him to no relief, of themselves, either legal or equitable. His claim is, not to have the transaction vacated on any of these grounds, but, to have it vacated on the ground that he intended to sign a lease, and was, by the fraud of the plaintiff, made to sign, instead, some notes, and a deed of trust securing them.
As to what preceded the execution of any papers is stated by the defendant’s wife as follows :
“ I met .Mr. Schields one day, and says to him, {it will be an accommodation if you will give me the privi*197 lege of putting carts on that lot there.’ He says, ‘ yes.’ And I says, ‘ well’ sir, I didn’t know that you were going to charge me anything for the lease of it, but I thought you were to give’ me the privilege of doing so.’ So he says to me, ‘ I will give it you if you want it, if you will give me one hundred dollars.’ Then, sir, I raised him •one hundred dollars to- save my husband so much trouble for his going all over with his carts; so I counted him out one hundred dollars ; that was all that I had to do about it.”
This witness denies that she- ever saw the plaintiff :after that, or that she ever signed-any paper, although the deed of trust, as well as the notes, purport to be •signed by her mark ; and she is identified by the notary ■as one of the persons who signed the deed of trust and notes in his office. She is, also, contradicted on .that subject by her own husband, who swears that they went together to the plaintiff’s office, -the plaintiff being present, and that neither of them signed any papers there, his wife sitting by his side all the time while they were there.
The defendant’s own testimony is full of contradictions. He states that he never signed any note for the plaintiff ; that he never had any dealings with him, but, ■shortly afterwards, states that a certain conversation with the plainiW took place just Before the execution of the notes. He first states that he never met the plaintiff after his wife gave to the plaintiff the one hundred dollars, and, then, that he and his wife went to the plaintiff’s office, after that, and saw him there. He •states that he never got any papers from the plaintiff, and yet, his counsel produced the deed for this property in court. We have, however, looked in vain for any •evidence whatever, either in the defendant’s testimony or that of his wife, tending to show that a certain paper was represented to him or to her to be a lease, when, in fact, it was a trust deed, and two notes, which facts are ■stated in his petition as the basis of his claim for relief.
The true version of the transaction appears to be this : The plaintiff sold the property to the defendant at an unconscionable and exorbitant price. The defendant, discovering that he had made a bad bargain, and being too ignorant to know that he was personally responsible on his notes, in case the amount realized from the property at trustee’s sale failed to satisfy the debt,, concluded to abandon it, when he learned that it was-advertised for sale under the deed,' and tried to get back from the plaintiff part of the purchase money which he had paid in cash. Failing in this, he did nothing further, until suit was brought against him on the residue of the notes.
This is the only version of the transaction that ffnds an intelligent support in the evidence and surrounding circumstances. The defendant was clearly laboring under a mistake of law, as to the contract he actually entered into ; but it does not appear that that mistake was the result of any fraudulent act. on the part of the-plaintiff. No case has been cited in the able and exhaustive brief presented by the defendant’s counsel, which would entitle him to relief under such circumstances.
The trial court, iijoon the hearing, did grant to the defendant partial relief. Wlipther this was warranted or not, under the evidence, it is clear that the defendant is in no position to complain.
The judgment is affirmed.