Allaben v. Shelbourne

212 S.W.2d 719, 357 Mo. 1205, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 734
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1948
DocketNo. 40452.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 212 S.W.2d 719 (Allaben v. Shelbourne) 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
Allaben v. Shelbourne, 212 S.W.2d 719, 357 Mo. 1205, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 734 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

[720]

This is á suit in equity brought in the circuit court of St. Louis county by the appellant, Alice T. Allaben, widow of Glenn. Shelbourne, deceased, who is hereinafter called “Glenn”, against his mother, Ella Thomas Shelbourne; his sister, Doris Lee Herbel; and the latter’s husband, Clinton K. Herbel; all defendants-.respondents. The suit was to annul and cancel a promissory note for $3,000 due 20 years after date, and twenty annual interest notes for' $180 each, and also a deed of trust securing the same, all purporting to have been executed by Glenn to his respondent mothér, the respondent sister being named in the deed of trust as trustee. The deed of trust contained the words “grant, bargain and sell,” and under Sec’s 3407, 3497 1 imported a fee simple title. None of the notes have ever been paid.

*1208 The basic grounds of appellant’s suit urged-on this appeal are that the notes and deed of trust were forged and without consideration. She further prays that the title to the land encumbered thereby be quieted in her because: the deed of trust was not recorded until over eight years after its date and almost two months after Glenn’s death; that she had no actual notice thereof until- over two years after his death; - and that by mesne conveyances promptly recorded almost six years earlier she and Glenn had become the owners of the land as tenants by the entireties, in consequence of which she stood seized of' the title in fee simple upon his death, unaffected by the deed of trust. Also an injunction was prayed against a pending foreclosure under a power of sale in the deed of trust.

The respondents, maintain that the disputed notes and the deed of trust were duly executed by Glenn, and that the latter instrument was duly acknowledged by him before a notary public, all as they purported to be. It was respondents’ contention that the deed of trust was withheld from recording at Glenn’s request. They further asserted all these instruments were supported by a valid consideration, namely money advanced by the respondent mother to Glenn for: the purchase of the land; materials used in improving it; the purchase of an automobile.; his personal expenses; and his outlay in a business adventure in California. Still further, respondents charged on information and belief that Glenn had early informed his wife, the appellant, of the existence of the notes and deed of trust, and that she had learned of it in family conferences, particularly one shortly after her husband’s death.

At the time of purchase, the land was an unimproved trapezial tract divided into six adjoining lots, numbered 2069-2074, as shown on a plat of Pharoah Valley, Valley Park, a Subdivision in St. Louis County, Missouri, recorded in Plat Book 24, page 5, Recorder’s Office. Thereafter, over a period of about four years a four room stone bungalow, two outbuildings and a rock fence were erected on the tract by the physical labor of Glenn and his friends, and with the physical and financial assistance of the appellant and/or his respondent mother, there being a dispute in the evidence as to their respective contributions to the project, and as to its stage of completion when the deed of . trust purportedly was given. The instrument recited it covered the lots “with house and appurtenances and all improvements thereon.’’. And across the end of the principal note and each interest note was a recital, in varying phraseology, that it was secured by a deed of trust on the lots and on “house and all improvements,” or “all improvements. ’ ’

The chronology of the principal events was as follows. . Glenn bought Valley Parle lots No’s 2073 and 2074 for $210, with a down payment of $25 and monthly payments of $5, by written’ monthly installment purchase contract dated June 1, 1935. Lot 2072 was *1209 .bought for $95, with a down payment of $5 and monthly payments of $2, by a similar contract dated June 16, 1935. Shortly thereafter the improvement work was 'started on these three lots. Lots '2069; 2070 and 2071 were purchased outright for $175 cash on August 12, 1936, [721] and Glenn received a warranty deed therefor that day. The disputed notes and deed of trust here involved were dated September 1, 1936. Appellant and Glenn were married on January 5, 1938 and lived with the respondent mother for fourteen months and then in a separate apartment for four months. The payments on Lots 2073 and 2074 were completed on April 14, 1938, and on Lot 2072 on or about June'2, 1938, and the respective warranty deeds therefor were delivered to him on those dates. On October 24, 1938, appellant and Glenn (while living with the mother) conveyed all the lots to a conduit of title who on the same day reconveyed them to him and her as husband and wife. . These deeds were filed for record that day. In July, 1939, the couple moved to the incompleted improvements on the Valley Park lots.

The improvements were completed, or nearly so, by April 24, 1940, when Glenn and appellant jointly borrowed $1600 at 8%, due in three years; evidenced by a principal note and six semi-annual interest notes for $'48 each, secured'by a “Lewis” deed of trust on the lots, which was promptly recorded. The next month (May) Glenn went to Miami, Florida, with his mother and used most of that money in a building project there, the appellant moving to an apartment in St. Louis and working for a telephone company. Glenn and his mother returned to St. Louis in April, 1941, and he and appellant again resided in the Valley Park bungalow until March, 1942, when they both went to 'Florida for about six weeks, and then ■ resumed their residence in the bungalow. They lived there for almost two years until April, 1944, when both returned to Florida to live there permanently.

Glenn died there unexpectedly on October 1, 1944, and was buried in St. Louis. Respondents say that in a family conference the latter part of that month or early in November appellant was apprised of the existence of the-disputed notes-and deed of trust, and by her conduct indicated she already knew of it. At any rate the respondent mother caused the deed of trust to be recorded November 21, 1944. The appellant testified she first- learned of the existence of the notes and deed of trust on October 6, 1946, by a letter from a St. Louis realtor with whom she had listed the Valley Park place for sale; that she immediately came 'to St. Louis by airplane, ascertained the facts and brought this suit on October 10, 1946. Other facts will be stated, as necessary.

The first issue to be considered is whether the $3,000 principal note, the twenty interest notes and the deed of trust were forged. The originals and photostatic copies have been filed here with the transcript. All of them were filled in longhand in ink on printed forms *1210 issued by the Real Estate Printing and Publishing Co., St. Louis, Mo. They were crudely drawn. The longhand part of the deed of trust is interlined in four places, two of these in blacker ink.’ In two other places words are traced over. The $3,000 principal note and the first fourteen interest notes had originally been dated “July 1, 1936,” with interest running from that date, and serially due “July 1” of the proper anniversary years. This was over a year after the contract purchase of the first three lots, but before the last three lots were bought on August 12, 1936.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W.2d 719, 357 Mo. 1205, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allaben-v-shelbourne-mo-1948.