78 Mo. App. 374 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is a suit in equity by plaintiff asking for the rescission of a contract of purchase of ten shares of the capital stock of defendant bank; to recover $900 paid on the purchase of the stock, and for the surrender and cancellation of a $200 note given the bank by plaintiff for the balance on the contract price of the stock; on the ground that the defendants, other than Dempsey, as directors and cashier of the bank, falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiff that the bank was in good condition; was solvent; had a surplus and was paying annual dividends; and averred that plaintiff relied on these representations as true and purchased the stock.
The answer was a general denial and a plea of estoppel by conduct.
The evidence makes it quite clear that as far back as August, 1895, when the bank was examined by a State bank examiner, it was insolvent and not a dividend paying institution, its president, cashier and assistant cashier being indebted to it by notes and overdrafts for more than double the amount of its capital stock ($25,000); a considerable portion of which indebtedness proved a loss to the bank, on account of the insolvency of the president and cashier. The ten shares of stock purchased by the plaintiff had been received by the bank as collateral security for a portion of the indebtedness of Phillips, the indebted cashier, and the bank had become the owner of the shares on account of Phillips’ inability to redeem them. Phillips died about-, 1896, and R. L. Pollard was appointed cashier. Defendants Joseph H. Tapley, Joseph B. Purnell, Marion E. Motley and William B.
“1st. Did the officers and agents of the bank in negotiating the sale to plaintiff, represent to plaintiff that the bank was in a solvent condition ?
“2nd. Did said officers and agents then and there represent said bank as doing a good paying business ?
“3rd. Did said officers and agents then and there represent to plaintiff that said bank was paying regular annual dividends ?
“If the jury find any of the above issues in the affirmative then the jury will answer these two questions:
“5th. Did said officers and agents then and there know said representations to be false?
“6th. Did plaintiff in making said purchase rely on said statements and representations?” To which the jury responded by their verdict as follows:
“We the jury find the issues of fact as follows:
“1st. We find the first issue in the affirmative.
“2nd. We find the second issue in the affirmative negative.
“3rd. We the jury find the third issue in the affirmative. ^
“4th. We the jury find the fourth issue in the affirmative negative.
“5th. We the jury find the fifth issue in the affirmative.
“6th. We the jury find the sixth issue in the affirmative negative.”
The verdict was rendered on November 24, 1897; on the twenty-seventh day of same month defendants filed their motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment. On the sixth day of December, 1897, the court rendered judgment for plaintiff against all of the defendants, except Pollard and Motley, for or against whom no finding was made or judgment rendered. On the second day of the term thereafter defendants renewed or filed their second motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment; none of said motions called the attention of the court to its failure to render judgment for or against Pollard and Motley; these motions were on the eighth day of December, 1897, by.the court overruled; on the seventh of January following and during the same term of court the defendant filed the following motion:
“In the circuit court of said county.
“L. N. Spaulding, Plaintiff,
v.
“Citizens’ Bank et al., Defendants.
“I. O. Dempsey, Receiver of said Bank.
“Now at this day come the defendants and move the court to render some judgment or dispose of this cause in some way in so far as the same relates to the defendants, Marion E. Motley and Robert L. Pollard, not confessing that judgment should be rendered against said defendants so named.”
This motion was on the same day by the court overruled; the appeal was taken and allowed on December 8, 1897, so that the motion for judgment for or against Pollard and Motley came too late, as the court after granting the appeal, had no further jurisdiction of the cause, and could make no orders therein except such as were necessary to perfect the appeal. Burgess v. O’Donoghue, 90 Mo. 299. But the error, if it is error, is apparent on the face of the record. Nnder our practice act but one final judgment can be given in an action (R. S. 1889, sec. 2213), and the court should have rendered a judgment either for or against Pollard and Motley. McCord’s Adm’r v. McCord, 77 Mo. 166. In Miller v. Bryden, 34 Mo. App. 602, it was held, that in a suit against two defendants jointly, a judgment against one only, ignoring the other, can not be upheld against the objection of the defendant in judgment, citing Schweickardt v. City of St. Louis, 2 Mo. App. 571, and Eichelmann v. Weiss, 7 Mo. App. 87, the court in this case saying that the “principle is analogous to the well known rule, that where there are several issues in a civil case a verdict which does not dispose of all the issues is bad on motion in arrest.” The action was