Citation Numbers: 32 Mo. App. 595, 1888 Mo. App. LEXIS 421
Judges: Ellison
Filed Date: 12/10/1888
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
— The defendant Penquite and one A. J. Hall jointly owned four promissory notes for one thousand dollars- each, made by one Eubanks and secured by a second deed of trust on two hundred and forty acres of land near Lamonte in Pettis county, Penquite owning one undivided half, and Hall the other half of the notes. These were payable in one, two, three and four years, respectively, after, date, with eight per cent, interest per annum, payable annually, and were dated August 15, 1883. The plaintiff Patton owned a piece of property in the town of Lamonte ; about October 16, 1884, the defendant traded his half interest in the four notes and transferred the same to plaintiff without recourse, and for defendant’s interest in said notes plaintiff conveyed his Lamonte property to defendant and executed to defendant his promissory note for two hundred dollars, payable one year after date. At the time of the trade the notes, including accrued interest, amounting to about forty-three hundred and sixty dollars, and defendant’s half-interest to twenty-one hundred and eighty dollars. ' Plaintiff brings this suit on the grounds : (1) That the defendant falsely and. fraudulently represented that said deed of trust, to secure said four notes, Avas a first deed of trust, when in fact it was a second deed of trust, there being in fact a prior deed of trust for three thousand dollars. (2) That plaintiff falsely represented that said Eubanks had given Penquite and Hall a chattel mortgage on the crop of 1884 to secure the first year’s interest on said four notes, when in fact there was no such chattel mortgage ; and (3) that after defendant had signed and transferred his interest in said notes to plaintiff that defendant and said Hall surrendered said notes to said Eubanks,
The following instructions were given for plaintiff:
“ 1. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant, to induce plaintiff to make the trade with him, represented to plaintiff that the land mortgaged or conveyed by deed of trust to secure the notes he traded to the plaintiff had no prior mortgage thereon, or that the title thereto was clear, with the exception of the mortgage to secure said notes so traded to the plaintiff, and that plaintiff did not know to the contrary but relied, on said representations and so made said trade, then the .plaintiff has a right to recover of defendant so much as he is damaged by reason of the fact that said land was in fact covered by a prior mortgage.
“2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the defendant represented to the plaintiff to induce him to make the trade that there was in existence a chattel mortgage to secure the first year’s interest on the notes, one-half of which defendant traded to the plaintiff, and plaintiff did not know to the contrary, but relied on said representations and so made said trade ;»then the plaintiff is entitled to recover herein so much as he is damaged by reason of there being in fact no chattel mortgage securing said first year’s interest.
“3. If the jury find for. the plaintiff under the first instruction then the measure of plaintiff’s damages is the value of the property he traded and the amount of the note he gave, amounting together to two thousand dollars, with six per cent, interest from the sixteenth, of October, 1884, to date.
“4., And if the jury find for the plaintiff under the second instruction and not under the first, they will assess.his damages at the interest on said two thousand
The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for three hundred and seventy-five dollars. The payor of the notes was insolvent.
The third instruction tells the jury, in terms, that if they find for plaintiff under the first instruction they will fix his damages at two thousand dollars, with six per cent, interest. This instruction, in connection with the first, is an assumption that merely by reason of there being a prior mortgage on the land plaintiff was damaged in the sum of two thousand dollars. By this means a great part of the case is practically taken from the jury. A note, although the payor be insolvent, -is not necessarily worthless because secured by a second mortgage. It may still be well secured. Again, notwithstanding there may have been fraudulent concealment- of the existence of the first mortgage, or fraudulent representation that the mortgage securing the notes traded was a first mortgage, in this case it does not necessarily follow that plaintiff can recover. There must be damage arising by reason of the existence of the concealed mortgage. The second and fourth instructions should not have been given. It seems to be conceded that there was no evidence tending to show the value of the crop upon which it was represented there was a chattel mortgage to secure the first year’s interest on the notes. The net value of the mortgaged property, up to the amount of the interest due plaintiff on his part of the notes, would certainly be the measure of the plaintiff’s damages. If the crop was valueless or not worth the cost of foreclosure, it would not be easy to see wherein plaintiff could have been damaged on this branch of the case. The instruction should likewise have been predicated upon the hypothesis of the non-existence of the chattel mortgage being the cause of the loss of the interest.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.