94 Mo. App. 184 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
Appellants are a mercantile firm doing business in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. The respondent is an attorney at law residing at Laddonia, Audrain county, Missouri. J. G. Harley and M. G. Harley, composing the firm of J. G. Harley & Company, on and prior to January, 1900, were doing a small general mercantile business at the town of Laddonia and were, prior to January, 1900, indebted to the appellants in the sum of four hundred and fifteen dollars. On or about the third day of February, 1900, appellants, through their attorney, J. F. Woodson, at St. Joseph, transmitted their account against J. G. Harley & Company to respondent for collection, with instructions to collect or sue immediately. Respondent received the account for collection and made demand on Harley & Company for payment. The account was not paid. Afterwards respondent procured the promissory note of J. G. and M. G. Harley for the amount of the claim and brought suit in the Audrain Circuit Court thereon and, on the twelfth day of June, .1900, obtained a judgment for the amount due on the note.
On the fourth day of January, 1900, J. G. -and M. G. Harley executed and delivered to respondent a chattel mortgage on their entire stock of merchandise, consisting in part of dry goods, boots and shoes, hats and caps, fancy goods, dress
The answer was a general denial of the allegations of the petition and especially set up as a defense the recovery -of the judgment against Harley & Company, the issuance of the execution thereon, and the levy and sale by the sheriff under the execution.
The answer further pleaded the execution by Harley & Company of the chattel mortgage of January 4,1900, to respondent, alleged that said mortgage was fraudulent and void because given for the purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding creditors of Harley & Company, including the appellants, which fraudulent intent, the answer alleged, was known to the respondent; that the mortgage was fraudulent for the further reason that it was agreed at the time of its execution, by and between the mortgagors and mortgagee, that Harley & Company might buy and sell merchandise in the usual course of business at retail and that the Harleys could retain the proceeds from the sale of the goods for their own use, and that they did keep and retain said proceeds of sales from the mortgaged stock with the knowledge and consent of the mortgagee ; that respondent, knowing that the mortgage was fraudulent, was nevertheless acting as attorney for the appellants and that the appellants having no knowledge of the existence of the chat tel. mortgage or of the fact that the same was fraudulent and void, relied upon the respondent as their attorney to take such action for the collection of the debt as was necessary, but that, unmindful of his duty to appellants as his clients, he took no action at the time of the acceptance of his employment as the attorney of appellants for the collection or protection of their claim, but continued to participate in the fraud of permitting Harley & Company to sell the mortgaged goods and to use the proceeds for their own use; that respondent, still acting as attorney for appellants, was also the attorney of Harley & Company and failed and refused to have execu
The reply was a general denial.
Plaintiff to sustain the issues on his part offered and read in evidence the chattel mortgage executed by J. G. and M. G. Harley to the plaintiff, and also the promissory note to secure which the mortgage was given. On the note were indorsed the following payments:
“Paid on this note aggregate payments up to July 14, 1900, five hundred dollars, credit as of date, April 4, 1900.
“Paid from July 17, to August 21, 1900, $70, which sum is credited of date, August 18, 1900.”
Plaintiff testified that the payments -indorsed on the note ■were all the payments that had been made on it.
The evidence tends to show that on January 4 the respondent had several claims against Harley & Company for
The firm of J. G. and M. G. Harley was composed- of J. G. Harley and his wife. Appellants introdixeed and read in evidence the following letter:
“Laddonia, Mo., February 3, 1900.
“J. F. Woodson, Esq., St. Joseph, Mo.
“Dear Sir: Tours of January 30, containing claim of*191 McDonald & Co. v. Harley & Co., at hand. I have presented same and urged payment, but. am told by Mr. Harley that it is impossible for him to meet it now, but he assures me that it will be paid ‘just as soon as possible’ which I suppose is the same old story that he has been giving you and your clients for some time. In compliance with your suggestion I will institute suit in a few days if I can not arrange to ■secure it, which I cloubt if I can do.
“Yours very truly,
“E. C. Kennan.”
On cross-examination respondent stated, that he did not at any time inform the appellants that he held a mortgage on the merchandise of Harley & Company; that he did not put his chattel mortgage on record until after he had received the account from defendant .for collection; that when the'mortgage was given, J. G. Harley told him that he expected to get some money from his daughter who lived hear Hannibal, who had promised to help him, and that he expected the money from her to take up the mortgage, and said, “Now Mr. Kennan, you know the effect of that mortgage,” and for the reason that Harley expected the money he did not put the mortgage on record when it was first executed; that there was no arrangement or understanding that he should not put it on record; that there was no arrangement made or any defined extension of time in which Harley & Company should make payments; that he permitted them to make payments each day if they had it, or each week or as often as they could, and that the amounts indorsed on the notes as payments were comprised of various payments and that the payments were made in sums of about ten dollars each; that he did not know, when 'the mortgage was executed, whether they owned any other property or not, outside of household goods, and did not know that the firm was insolvent; that he had no agreement or understanding with them that they could use any part of the
On redirect examination ho stated that he presented the appellants’ account to the Harleys for payment about the day he received it; that they -were unable to pay it and he afterwards induced them to give him a note due one day after date so that he could sue on the note and avoid the expense and trouble of proving the account; that he brought suit in the first term of the court in which it could be brought; that the books of Harley & Company were open for his inspection at any time and that he did inspect them sometime in Jan
J. GL Harley testified that he paid eleven dollars a month rent to Mr. DeLaporte for the storehouse and paid at the end of each month and continued to pay after the execution of the mortgage and that he got the money from the proceeds of the sale of the goods; that the respondent represented him in some suits in the circuit court; that he did not think he ever had any other attorney than Kennan; that he told Kennan when he executed the mortgage that he would rather he would not record it that it would affect his credit at home and abroad; that Kennan presented the McDonald claim and demanded payment right then and there; that he told him that he could not pay it, that he had no money to pay it with, and he entered his appearance in the McDonald suit against him and permitted the judgment to go against him; that a book he had lost showed from whom he had bought the goods; that he had taken money out of the stock and that he had taken goods out of the stock and showed his account with Kennan after the execution of the mortgage. He bought goods from Dyer Bros., Evans & Co., LaCross Vinegar Company, Springfield Paper Company, and another claim of one hundred and five dollars from a New York firm, and he got his living out of the store and what he could borrow; that he got a great deal of it out of the goods; that he rendered no written account to Kennan; that ho had a book there and Kennan could come in and look at it every day or any day; that he considered Kennan the owner of the stock; that he paid Kennan all the money that he could and that he kept the account on his books; that he showed it to Kennan at one time he remembered of,
The goods at sheriff’s sale sold for four hundred dollars.
Defendant offered in evidence a letter of J. G. Harley & Company dated January 27, 1900, in answer to a dun that had heen made upon them in payment of defendant’s account, in which they pleacted for time but made no mention of the fact that they had given Kennan a chattel mortgage-on the goods.
J. G. Harley further stated that when he gave Kennan the mortgage he told him that he expected money from his daughter and that was the reason he made the note due ten days after date.
There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for four hundred and eighty-three dollars and seventy cents. After
I. At the close of the evidence appellants asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which the court overruled. Appellants’ contention is thát this instruction should have been given for the l’eason the mortgage is fraudulent on its face and for the further reason that the respondent was estopped by his conduct to claim under the mortgage, as against the appellants. While the mortgage provided that the mortgagors might remain in possession and continue to sell goods in the ordinary course of business, it further provided that they (the mortgagors) should account for and pay over the proceeds of their sales to the mortgagee. The mortgage was not, therefore, to the use of the mortgagors and was not fraudulent on its face. Dunham v. Stevens, 160 Mo. 95; Bank v. Powers, 134 Mo. 432. Whatever may be said in regard to the respondent’s professional conduct in accepting the claim of appellants for collection and failing to notify them of his mortgage, his conduct was not such as to estop him from claiming under the mortgage after the appellants had taken the collection of the judgment out of his hands and caused the goods to be levied upon on an execution taken out at their instance and after they had learned of the existence of the mortgage. Bespondent had represented nothing to appellants nor concealed anything on which they were induced to act, and they lost no right that they had before the claim was received by respondent for collection. The withholding of the information of the existence of the mortgage is not show to have prejudiced the appellants in the collection of their claim or to have occasioned them any loss. Some of the necessary elements to constitute an estoppel are therefore lacking. Shields v. McClure, 75 Mo. App. 631; Blodgett v. Perry, 97 Mo. l. c. 273; Hequembourg v. Edwards, 155 Mo. l. c. 522. The cases of Alleman v. Manning, 44 Mo. App. 4, and Akers v. Hobbs, 105 Mo. 127, cited by appellants,
II. Instruction No. 3, given for respondent, is criticised for the reason that the phrase “in good faith” is used in the instruction without explanation as to its meaning. The instruction reads as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that although you find from the evidence that E. C. Kennan received from. McDonald & Company an account against Harley & Company for collection, and that he placed his mortgage on record immediately after receiving said account, and that he did not notify McDonald & Company that he had a mortgage on said stock of goods, these facts are not sufficient to constitute a defense of estoppel herein, if you further find from the evidence that the note and chattel mortgage read in evidence was given by said Harley & Company to said E. C. Kennan in good faith for a valid debt.”
If the phrase should be stricken out of the instruction, it would be complete. The use of the phrase was mere surplusage and did not in the least prejudice appellants or invalidate the instruction. The same may be said of instruction No. 7, of which appellants also complain. The same phrase used in the same connection is found in instruction No. 4, asked for and given on the part of appellant. If, therefore, it was error to use the phrase in respondent’s instruction without explanation, the appellants are guilty of the same error and are in no condition to complain. Grocery Co. v. Smith, 74 Mo. App. 419; Christian v. Ins. Co., 143 Mo. 460.
III. There was evidence tending to show that the mortgage was fraudulent in fact, and also countervailing evidence. On this issue the jury were fully and fairly instructed by
IV. Appellants assigned as error the giving of instruction No. 11, on the measure of damages. The instruction is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if you find for the plaintiff you should return a verdict for the amount of the balance due on the note held by E. C. Kennan, read in evidence, not exceeding the value of the stock of goods, furniture and fixtures levied upon by the sheriff under the execution, referred to in the evidence, on the twenty-seventh day of*198 August, 1900, to which you may add six per cent interest from that date to the present time.”
The admitted facts are that the levy was made on August 21, 1900. This is therefore the date on which the goods were taken and converted, and their value on that date, with six per cent interest per annum, is the proper measure of respondent’s damages to be allowed or disallowed in the discretion of the jury. Sec. 2869, R. S. 1899; Carson v. Smith, 133 Mo. 606.
The instruction is not as definite and full as it should have been in calling the attention of the jury to the fact that the allowance of interest was in their discretion. But it did, in fact, leave the allowance of interest to the discretion of the jury and if the defendants were not satisfied with the instruction they should have asked for a more definite direction.
Discovering no reversible error in the record the judgment is affirmed.