Adams v. Smith

232 S.W.2d 482, 360 Mo. 1082, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 679
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 11, 1950
Docket41722
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 482 (Adams v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Smith, 232 S.W.2d 482, 360 Mo. 1082, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 679 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

*1085 LOZIER, C.

This is a suit to determine title to Lot 125, Albert Frye’s Add. to the City of Joplin, with a house thereon. . The original defendant, Bessie Allen Holman, filed answer. On their own motion, respondents Claude V. Smith and Dora Smith, his wife (hereinafter called defendants), were substituted as defendants and answered. Appellants (hereinafter called plaintiffs) appealed from a judgment for defendants; determining that defendants were vested with fee simple title, and that plaintiffs had “no right, claim or interest in the estate or title whatsoever * * * or any lien thereon”; dismissing plaintiffs’ petition; and giving defendants judgment for $320 on their counterclaim.

The lot was conveyed to John P. Lange and wife, Shilah, by the entirety in 1921. John Lange died in 1936. On Nov. 1, 1943, the lot was sold for 1938, 1941 and 1942 taxes ($18.05) but the consequent collector’s deed (consideration, $18.05) to Arthur L. Miller (assignee of the purchaser’s certificate of purchase) was not executed until Jan. 22, 1946. On Feb. 12, 1946, Miller quitclaimed . (recited consideration, $1.00) to Mrs. Holman who, on Nov. 12, 1946, quitclaimed to defendants for $79.

Plaintiffs claim as purchasers for $450 at a sheriff’s sale (in special execution of a $109.55 judgment rendered Feb. 5, 1944, against Shilah Lange, George Lange and Myrtle Lange, his wife) on Oct. 14, 1944, and consequent sheriff’s deed dated the same day. On Nov. 2, 1944, defendants entered into a contract with plaintiffs, through their agent, McIntosh, to purchase the lot for $850, payable in installments, by warranty deed to be delivered upon completion of the payments. (This contract, apparently unacknowledged by any of the signers, was recorded Sept. 25, 1945.) The record does not show whether .the abstract of title was ever delivered to defendants or, if it was not, whether they ever demanded it. Plaintiffs’ evidence was that they *1086 “were ready to funiish it at any time.” At the trial plaintiffs offered a'warranty deed to the property upon payment by defendants “of such sums as the court may find to be due under the contract of sale and offer to get up an abstract of title to the premises at their own expense.” ■ About Jan. 1, 1945, defendants took possession, thereafter expended about $1000 improving the house and made total payments of $320 under the contract. Other pertinent facts are hereinafter' referred to.

Plaintiffs raise two issues here: the right of defendants (as purchasers in possession under an executory contract to purchase) to acquire an outstanding interest adverse to plaintiffs’ title, and the validity of the tax sale proceedings resulting in the collector’s deed to Miller. Defendants suggest (but do not assert) that plaintiffs were “nonexistent persons”; suggest (but do not assert) the invalidity of the contract of purchase; and contend that they “were justified in purchasing the outstanding title and asserting it against” plaintiffs.

An interesting' phase is that both parties proved all of the material allegations' of fact contained in their respectivé pleadings, viz.: plaintiffs’ title; defendants’ title; negotiation of the contract with plaintiffs’ agent, McIntosh; execution of the contract; taking of possession thereunder; payment of $320 on the purchase price; defendants’ expenditures for improvements; Mrs. Holman’s assertion of ownership (the evidence was that she did not demand possession or threaten ejectment, as defendants alleged); oral notice to McIntosh of Mrs. Holman’s claim; defendants’ and their attorney’s inquiries of McIntosh as to plaintiffs’ address and their inability to secure such information from him (there was evidence that defendants and their attorney did not endeavor to locate plaintiffs in any other way than through McIntosh); letter of April 12, 1946, from the attorney to plaintiffs and McIntosh advising them of the Holman claim and demanding that defendants be protected against same under the contract; and payment by.defendants of a $150 attorney’s fee for.advice as to the Holman claim, for trying to locate plaintiffs through McIntosh, for writing the letter and for representing defendants in this. cáse.

Plaintiffs proved all of the factual allegations of their petition. There was no evidence to support these immaterial allegations of Mrs. Holma.n’s answer, which defendants adopted: that she was the purchaser at the 1943 tax sale (she was the grantee of the collector’s grantee who was the assignee of .the purchaser); that she paid all taxes due (Miller,’ the grantee in the collector’s deed apparently paid $18.05) and to become due, and that plaintiffs did not pay any other taxes, but permitted them to be,come delinquent, and that she (Mrs. Holman) had to pay same in order to protect her interest (the record is silent as to who paid the 1944 taxes, plaintiffs’ ob *1087 ligation: under the contract, or those ■ for 1945 and - thereafter, defendants ’ obligation under the contract). ■

Defendants failed tó' prove these immaterial allegations of their answer: that defendants did not personally sign the contract of purchase “purported to have been signed by” them; and that Mrs. Holman demanded possession and threatened ejectment. Defendants alleged that, because of plaintiffs’ failure to protect defendants’ interest, they were “unable to complete the improvements already commenced,” and that by reason of that fact, together with having to employ ah attorney, they were damaged $500. It was not disputed that defendants paid the $Í50 attorney’s fee. • Defendants testified that the Holman claim prevented ■ them from • making further improvements, and the defendant husband stated that they had been damaged because “since he started to do the work, labor and materials prices had practically doubled.”

We stated that these allegations of defendants’ answer were immaterial. Defendants could not challenge the validity of plaintiffs’ signatures on the contract of purchase".' They pleaded the contract both in their motion (to be substituted as defendants) and in their answer. They admitted signing the contract, being put in possession under it and making payments of installments due under it. They admitted notifying plaintiffs ’ agent of the Holman "claim. They had their attorney write a letter, addressed to plaintiffs and their agent, calling upon plaintiffs to protect them “under the contract.” So far as the record shows, at no time "prior-to trial itself-did defendants intimate that the contract document was not in fact signed by plaintiffs. There was- no substantial evidence that it was not. Even in this court defendants do not contend otherwise. Such a contention would be wholly without iherit as defendants would have been estopped to deny the validity of their contract to purchase.

The attorney’s fee was shown to have been reasonable. But the record shows that - the work of defendants ’ attorney was pri- : marily in assisting them in their effort to1 locate plaintiffs, and in notifying plaintiffs that defendants intended tti hold them liable for any loss resulting "from the Holman claim, in advising defendants to purchase the Holman claim and in representing defendants in this lawsuit, viz., in asserting a claim of title adverse to plaintiffs. Here defendánts weré attacking plaintiffs’ title and on this issue were in the position of a plaintiff. Horton v. Gentry, 357 Mo. 694, 210 S. W. 2d 72.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 482, 360 Mo. 1082, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-smith-mo-1950.