Blackiston v. Russell

44 S.W.2d 22, 328 Mo. 1164, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 20, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 22 (Blackiston v. Russell) 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
Blackiston v. Russell, 44 S.W.2d 22, 328 Mo. 1164, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 503 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

This is an action in equity to set aside a deed, to real estate in the city of St. Joseph, made by Rebecca S. Fleming to respondent Edward Flint Russell. Mrs. Fleming, a widow, died December 14, 1926, in St. Joseph, Missouri, at the age of 82 years. In 1925 she owned a residence at 1922 Clay Street, which had belonged to her deceased husband, and another tract of approximately 25 acres, which had been the home of her father, Captain Blackiston. Mrs. Fleming had no children. She had a sister, respondent Ionia B. Russell, who lived at Lawrence, Kansas, Mrs. Russell was made a defendant because she would not join as plaintiff. Mrs. Fleming was very fond of this sister and her children and visited in Lawrence frequently. Mrs. Russell also visited Mrs. Fleming frequently in St. Joseph. Mrs. Russell had four children, respondent Edward Russell, of Kansas City, Percy Russell, Memphis, Tennessee, Mrs. Rudier, of Lawrence, Kansas, and Mrs. Steward, of Phoenix, Arizona. The Russell children frequently visted Mrs. Fleming in St. Joseph and it was her custom to spend every other winter with Mrs. Steward in Phoenix. Mrs. Fleming had a deceased sister, Mrs. Anna Ellsworth, who had two children, appellants Belle Ellison and Ebenezer Ellsworth, who were not residents of Missouri and whom Mrs. Fleming *Page 1168 seldom saw. Mrs. Fleming also had a deceased brother, Frank Blackiston. His six children are the other appellants. One of them, Mrs. Susan Kackley, had lived in St. Joseph for some time. About 1925 she and her husband moved into the house on Mrs. Fleming's 25-acre farm. Mrs. Kackley's mother lived there with her, as did Mary Anna Upson, Mrs. Kackley's sister.

During 1925 the Blackiston family seems to have gathered in St. Joseph. Ebenezer Blackiston had lived there since 1921. It is not in evidence where Mrs. Upson lived prior to 1925, but she said beginning with the fall of 1925 she saw Mrs. Fleming often. Charles Blackiston came to St. Joseph in December, 1925. He first went to Mrs. Kackley's and later he and his wife moved in with Mrs. Fleming. Percy (William P.) Blackiston also came, in 1925, to St. Joseph, from Oklahoma. The record is silent as to the whereabouts of Frank H. Blackiston. Mrs. Kackley and her husband took much interest in Mrs. Fleming and her property. The Moila Temple Association of St. Joseph owned a golf course, adjoining Mrs. Fleming's 25-acre tract, where the Kackleys lived. Mr. Kackley tried to sell it to the Association for an addition to its golf course. He got Mrs. Fleming to sign a letter offering it to the Association for $25,000. There were also real estate men working on the same deal for Mrs. Fleming, and there was evidence that she valued it as high as $40,000. However, the $25,000 offer was not accepted and the deal was dropped.

In August, 1925, Mrs. Fleming conveyed ten acres of this farm, including the residence, to Mrs. Kackley, for an agreed price of $7,000, of which Mrs. Kackley paid $500. The deed was immediately recorded by Mrs. Kackley, but nothing was done by her to pay or secure the balance of the purchase price. The matter remained in this condition for about three months. In October, 1925, Mrs. Fleming became ill and was taken by Mrs. Kackley to the Blackiston place. The doctor who treated her said that it was some digestive trouble. He also said that she had a general weakness and arteriosclerosis. She recovered in about two weeks and went to her sister's at Lawrence. While she was there her nephew, Percy Russell, came from Memphis to visit his mother.

Mrs. Fleming was worried about the failure of Mrs. Kackley to do anything about the balance of the purchase price of the ten acres, and regretted making the conveyance to her. Percy Russell returned with Mrs. Fleming to St. Joseph about the middle of November and went with her to Mr. J.W. Mytton, her next-door neighbor, who was her attorney, and had been her deceased husband's attorney. Mr. Mytton saw Mrs. Kackley, but she refused to do anything about the balance due. Whereupon, on November 18th, Mr. Mytton commenced suit for her against Mrs. Kackley to set aside the deed. *Page 1169 On the same day Mrs. Fleming made a will which Mr. Mytton prepared. By this will she left her property principally to the members of the Russell family, although she made bequests of from $100 to $3,000 to some of her other nieces and nephews. Some of the Blackistons were not mentioned at all, and Mrs. Kackley was bequeathed one dollar. Soon after the suit was filed, Mrs. Kackley and her husband came in and gave a deed of trust of $6,500, on the ten acres, to secure the purchase price.

On November 21, 1925, Mr. Mytton prepared the power of attorney by which Marmaduke B. Morton, a neighbor of Mrs. Fleming and an officer in the Bartlett Trust Company of St. Joseph, and Edward Russell were appointed by Mrs. Fleming to manage and control all of her property. The Kackley affair made Mrs. Fleming consider it advisable to have a younger person, more experienced in business, actively in charge of her property. Mr. Mytton and Percy Russell both advised Mrs. Fleming to make this arrangement, although they testified that Mrs. Fleming made the decision herself and that it was at her suggestion that Edward Russell was included in it. Edward Russell was in Kansas City at the time and knew nothing about it until after it was made. The evidence was that he was Mrs. Fleming's favorite nephew. He frequently came to St. Joseph to see her and was very kind to her and solicitous about her welfare. He attended to such matters for her as putting in coal and looking after screens. She considered him almost as a son.

Mrs. Fleming and her husband had always transacted banking business with the Farmers Traders Bank of St. Joseph. After executing the power of attorney she went with Percy Russell and got the contents of her deposit box there and took them to the Bartlett Trust Company, and her deposit was transferred there. Mr. Morton was actively in charge of paying her bills and taxes, and looking after her property. It does not appear that Edward Russell actually did much in the way of managing and controlling her property under the power of attorney. He was a traveling salesman and was on the road a considerable part of the time.

In February, 1926, Mrs. Fleming again became ill at her residence. Charles Blackiston and his wife were there at the time and the Kackleys were called in. This illness was more severe than the one in October. Later in the month, when she recovered, she went to her sister in Lawrence, Kansas, and early in March went to Mrs. Steward's home, in Phoenix, Arizona. The evidence was that during the time she was in Phoenix she was much improved in health; that her only illness there was a slight attack of indigestion which lasted only one day; and that she went out with the Stewards on drives, to dinner parties, and theatres, and helped them entertain guests in their home. *Page 1170

After she had been there a little more than a month, the evidence of the Stewards, which was the only evidence about the matter, was that Mrs. Fleming said: "She wanted to give Ed Russell that home at her death, and asked me (Mr. Steward) if there was any way she could give Ed her home when she no longer needed it." Mr. Steward had his attorney look up the Missouri law for the purpose of advising her. Upon the advice of this attorney, Mr. Steward told her: "That she could make a deed and put it in escrow in a bank with instructions to the bank to deliver the deed to Russell upon her death." She requested him to prepare such a deed. He had it prepared and gave it to her. According to Steward's testimony, Mrs. Fleming kept the deed a day or two and then told Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 22, 328 Mo. 1164, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackiston-v-russell-mo-1931.