Blake v. Meadows

123 S.W. 868, 225 Mo. 1, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 123 S.W. 868 (Blake v. Meadows) 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
Blake v. Meadows, 123 S.W. 868, 225 Mo. 1, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 1 (Mo. 1909).

Opinions

LAMM, P. J.

Thomas J. Meadows, merchant in the village of Lawson, Ray county, Missouri, doing business under the name and style of “Meadows & Co., ” on May 10,1905, was adjudged a bankrupt by the district court of the United States for the western division of the western district of Missouri. On due steps taken, Daniel P. Blake was appointed trustee of the bankrupt estate and took upon himself the burden of' administering the trust.- Presently said Blake lodged his hill in equity in the Clay Circuit Court, charging (among other things) that Meadows in March, 1898, by a deed duly executed by the then owners, became seized in fee of the southwest quarter and the south half of the northwest quarter, section 35, township 54, range 30, in Clay county; that he took possession under his deed and thenceforth represented' himself, with the knowledge and consent of defendant, as the owner; that subsequently he became indebted to divers persons in sundry sums, proved and allowed [10]*10against Ms estate in bankruptcy; that in February, 1905, intending thereby to hinder and defraud his creditors, he, by a deed put of record, conveyed said farm to his wife, the defendant Susie L., said deed reciting a consideration of $8,000; that the deed was without any consideration in fact, but on the pretended consideration that Susie L. had paid the purchase price at the time of the conveyance to Thomas J. in 1898, and that the conveyance to her was an execution of a pretended trust arising on such payment of the original purchase money; that such pretended consideration should not avail as legal or valid because Susie L. at the time had no intention of claiming the land as her own or claiming any indebtedness due her by Thomas J. by reason of her furnisliing such purchase money; that if she furnished the purchase money it was not paid upon a purchase of the land in her own behalf o,r for her use and benefit, but in order to have the land conveyed to Thomas J. as his own and to enable him to obtain and have credit in carrying on business; further, that such pretended consideration should not prevail as a valid or legal one, for the reason that the title was allowed to remain in Thomas J. of record from April, 1898, to the 9th day of February, 1905, with the knowledge and acquiescence of defendant, during which time Thomas J., with her consent, held possession of the land, controlled and dealt with it as his own, held Mmself out as the owner and was recognized as the owner while engaged in business as a merchant which required him to incur liability and to obtain and have credit on the faith of his financial ability to discharge his obligations as they matured; that defendant well knew all this; that Thomas J. was thereby enabled to and did obtain credit upon the faith and belief of his ownership of said land and that the claims and demands allowed against Ms estate in bankruptcy were contracted and credit therefor extended on the faith and belief he [11]*11was such owner,- that the conveyance to Susie L. left him without sufficient assets to pay such debts and the effect of it was to render him insolvent; and that, the premises considered, the deed is fraudulent and void as to such creditors and void as to the plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy. Wherefore, etc.

After sundry intermediate steps and incidents, not material here, issue was joined by answer charging among other things that defendant’s maiden name was Cummins; that she was the only child of Madison B. and Emma J. Cummins; that Madison B. died in February, 1898, Thomas J. Meadows becoming his administrator ; that on the 6th of April, 1898, defendant and her said mother, acting through Thomas J. as their agent, purchased the land in controversy; that all of the purchase money (except $2500') was on deposit in the Commercial Bank of Lawson in the names of defendant and her said mother, respectively, came from the estate of Madison B. and had been paid over to them by Thomas J. as administrator; that the purchase price of the land (except said $2500’) was paid by checks drawn by said Thomas J. against the said accounts of defendant and her mother, said checks being signed respectively by the names of defendant and her mother by said Thomas J.; that said $2500 was borrowed for defendant and her mother from one J. H. Roney and was subsequently paid out of moneys belonging to defendant and her mother, derived from their separate estates; that defendant and her mother were wholly unfamiliar with legal blanks, documents, forms of conveyances, of the manner of executing deeds or mortgages and business generally; that without the knowledge or consent of defendant or her mother, said Thomas J. took title to the land in his own name and that defendant’s mother died in December, 1900, intestate, without knowledge of the fact that Thomas J. in violation, of his trust had taken title in his own name, she at all times supposing that title to be in herself [12]*12and Susie L., her only heir; that this defendant did not learn for a long time that the title had been taken in the name of Thomas J. and, as soon as she found it out, demanded of him that he put the title in her name and that of her mother where it belonged; that frequently before and after her mother’s death she requested that the deed he corrected and the title placed in the names of the rightful owners; that Thomas J. at all times expressed a willingness and promised to comply with such request hut failed to do so until he executed a deed to defendant in February, 1905; that Thomas J. paid none of the consideration for the purchase of the land; that the conveyance to defendant in February, 1905', was only doing what in law, equity and good conscience he ought to do, for that he held the title in trust for defendant and her mother and, after her mother’s death, for this defendant alone; that said conveyance was and is no fraud upon the creditors of Thomas J. nor was it made for the purpose of hindering, delaying or defrauding anyone hut, to the contrary, was made solely for the .purpose of executing the trust resulting as aforesaid; that Thomas J. did not engage in a business necessary for him to incur debts with the knowledge or consent of defendant or her mother, nor hold out to the world with their consent or knowledge the land as his property, nor was he extended credit upon the faith of such ownership; that defendant had good cause to believe and did believe that Thomas J. was free from debt and in a prosperous financial condition and that defendant at no time knew or had .reason to believe that he was in debt or had incurred liability, or that anyone was extending him credit upon faith or apparent ownership of said land and that while the mother lived she and defendant, and, since the mother’s death, this defendant, at all times claimed to he the absolute owners of said property, received the rents, paid the taxes and exercised the usual and ordinary rights, dominion and control over.the property [13]*13incident to absolute ownership and made improvements thereon.

The reply, pleading no new matter, denied seriatim ¡ the averments of the answer.

At a trial on the merits a decree went in favor oh plaintiff and defendant appeals.

The record is of great volume and no good purpose would be subserved by spreading on the pages of our Eeports the evidence in detail. It appears' therefrom that Emma J. Cummins was a very old lady (three score and ten) who died two years after her husband; that her husband, Madison B., died out of debt and seized of considerable estate in Eay and adjoining counties, leaving her as his widow and defendant as his only child and heir; that Thomas J.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W. 868, 225 Mo. 1, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-meadows-mo-1909.