Benne v. Benne's

56 Mo. App. 504, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 101
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 56 Mo. App. 504 (Benne v. Benne's) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benne v. Benne's, 56 Mo. App. 504, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 101 (Mo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

— Henry Benne, the defendant's testator, died in June, 1892. Shortly thereafter the [506]*506claimant, who is his widow, exhibited in the probate court for allowance against his estate the following claim:

“The estate of Henry Benne, deceased,
“To Elise Benne....................................... Dr.
“1885. To money loaned out by said deceased for me, but not accounted for by him...............■....................$600.00
“To interest on same for seven years at six per cent, per annum... 252.00
“1892. May 31. To amount paid in advance by railroad company as rental of part of land belonging to homestead..... 30.00
“Total.............................................$882.00.

Upon a trial anew the circuit court, hearing the claim on the executor’s appeal without the intervention of a jury, rejected it. The plaintiff appeals, and assigns for error the giving of erroneous instructions, and the refusal of the court to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

The facts developed by the evidence are as follows: One Schone, a witness for the claimant, testified that eight or ten years ago he borrowed from Henry Benne $600, and gave him a note for the amount, payable in one year, with interest at eight per cent, per annum; that on that occasion the claimant said to him in presence of her husband: “I hope I won’t lose the money, for it is my money.” The husband made no reply. The witness did not know whether the note he gave was made payable to Mr. or Mrs. Benne.

On cross-examination, this witness testified that he did not know that Benne heard his wife’s remark; that the transaction may have taken place, eight, nine or ten years ago; that he did not know what season of the year it was in; that he borrowed the money from Benne and repaid it within the expiration of the year, but to whom he could not say, except that he was sure he did not pay it to Mrs. Benne; that he did not know whether the money was advanced to him by check, or [507]*507paid to him in cash; that one Pieper, drew the note which witness signed, hut that Mrs. Benne was not present when the note was signed.

Pieper, being called, stated that about eight or nine years ago Benne and Schone and Mrs. Benne called at his store, and requested him to draw a note for $600; that, to the best of his recollection, the note was made payable to Mrs. Benne, and that some one — whom, he could not tell — said at the time that the money was Mrs. Benne’s money. On cross-examination the witness said that he was not sure that Mrs. Benne was present on the occasion when he drew the note; that he could not say whether the note was for $500 or $600; that he frequently drew notes for parties and had no particular recollection of this transaction; that he had a slight recollection that the note was payable to Mrs. Benne, but would not be positive as to that.

Mrs. Hesskamp testified for the plaintiff that Schone was her son-in-law, and that she was surety on the note for $600 given for money which Schone had borrowed either from Mr. or Mrs. Benne; that she called upon the Bennes about the extension or the note, and that Mrs. Benne told her that either she or her husband wanted the money; that all her transactions were with Mrs. Benne.

This being, in substance, all the testimony bearing upon the question at issue, the defendant requested and the court gave the following instructions.

“1. The court declares the law to be that it devolves upon the plaintiff, Elise Benne, by clear and unquestionable evidence to prove that ■ the money alleged to have been loaned by Henry Benne, now deceased, to one George Schone, was the separate property of said Elise Benne; and unless the plaintiff thus prove her ownership of said money, and that the same was converted by her husband, Henry Benne, to his [508]*508own nse, the verdict on the first count of plaintiff’s demand must be for the defendant.

“2. The verdict on the second count must be for the defendant.”

The court also filed a written opinion in the case, which is preserved in the record and from which the view the court took of the law appears more clearly than from the instruction given for the defendant. After stating in general terms that the evidence of Pieper and Mrs. Hesskamp was too indefinite to be entitled to weight, the opinion says: “If plaintiff recovers, then it is upon the testimony of Schone, where she asserts that the money loaned was her money. But is a statement of that kind sufficient to show that it was her sole and separate property under the act of 1875? Under that act property acquired by her in a certain way became her separate property, and it is for the court to say, after the facts connected with her acquisition are in evidence, whether it was acquired in one of the modes designated by the statutes as conferring ownership in her. Her simple declaration, that the money is her property, is nothing more than her opinion that the facts attending her supposed ownership measure up to some of the statutory requirements investing a married woman with the ownership of personalty.”

Where a cause is submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, declarations of law are of but little use, except to show the theory on which the case was tried. Cooper v. Ord, 60 Mo. 420. The use of the term, imquestionable evidence, in the instruction given for defendant was not very appropriate; yet it sufficiently appears from the memorandum of the judge that he did not intend by the use of the term to imply, as counsel for appellant asserts, that the evidence adduced should place the fact in issue beyond [509]*509doubt. Whether the money was Mrs. Benue’s separate property in 1882 or 1883, when its alleged conversion by her husband took place, must, under any view, depend on the state of the law at that date. Leets v. State Bank, 115 Mo. 184. We certainly cannot place the trial judge in the wrong, if, before finding that the money was Mrs. Benne’s separate property, he as a trier of the fact required some evidence beyond a loose declaration, reported to have been made by Mrs. Benne in the presence of her husband eight nine or ten years ago. Admissions by words shown to have been uttered many years ago, are very unsatisfactory evidence. Admission by silence, when a party is under no obligation to speak, is still weaker.

We would not feel justified in disturbing the verdict, even if we could review it on the weight of the evidence, and would certainly not be warranted in doing so, when, as in this case, we are bound to defer on questions affecting the weight of-the evidence to the finding of the trial court. Todd v. Terry, 26 Mo. App. 598. It must be noted in this connection that, in the cases relied on by appellant, the proof clearly showed that the property was the separate property of the wife, and the controversy was not touching that fact, but uouching the inquiry whether it was reduced to the husband’s possession with the written assent which the statute requires. Boughton v. Brand, 94 Mo. 169; Hart v. Leete, 104 Mo. 335; McGuire v. Allen, 108 Mo. 408.

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Related

Cooper v. Ord
60 Mo. 420 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1875)
Broughton v. Brand
94 Mo. 169 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1887)
Hart v. Leete
104 Mo. 315 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1891)
McGuire v. Allen
108 Mo. 403 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1891)
Leete v. State Bank of St. Louis
21 S.W. 788 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1893)
Todd v. Terry
26 Mo. App. 598 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
56 Mo. App. 504, 1894 Mo. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benne-v-bennes-moctapp-1894.