Bostwick v. Freeman

160 S.W.2d 713, 349 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 26, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 160 S.W.2d 713 (Bostwick v. Freeman) 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
Bostwick v. Freeman, 160 S.W.2d 713, 349 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 354 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, filed suit in ejectment against defendant in error to recover possession of the SW¼ of the SE¼ of Sec. 30, Twp. 57, R. 32, Clinton County. A question of title was raised, by subsequent pleadings, by both parties and the cause concededly became one in equity to determine title. The venue was changed from Clinton County to Gentry County, where the court found that plaintiff in error had no interest in the land, but that defendant in error was the owner, and plaintiff below sued out writ of error. We shall refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant.

James W. Watson executed his will July 21, 1925, and died in May, 1926, seized of the land in question and other land. In the will, six forties, in said section 30, were devised to testator's children, and grandchildren, subject to the life estate devised to his wife, Kansas Watson. The wife and the other devisees survived the testator, but the wife died in 1926. The remainder interest in the land in question was devised to Charles E. Watson, son of the testator. The wife was named executrix in the will, but she waived her right to administer, and Charles E. Watson was appointed administrator with will annexed.

Plaintiff claims title under a quitclaim deed dated June 1, 1927, from Charles E. Watson and wife, and under a deed dated May 9, 1928, made to him by Watson as administrator. The administrator's deed is based upon an alleged private probate sale. April 18, 1928, of the land in question to pay debts of the testator. Defendant claims title under a sheriff's deed based upon a probate court judgment, Clinton County, rendered May 11, 1935, against Charles E. Watson as administrator of the Watson estate and the sureties on his administrator's bond. The judgment, sheriff's sale, and the sheriff's deed to defendant were subsequent to plaintiff's deeds, but defendant contends that the quitclaim deed and the administrator's deed to plaintiff were mere shams, phony, and that Charles E. Watson was, *Page 6 in fact, the owner of the land in question at the time of the judgment and at the time of the levy and sale thereunder. Defendant has been in possession since shortly after his purchase at the sheriff's sale September 23, 1935.

The principal questions are: (1) Was administrator Watson, in fact, the owner of [715] the land at the time of the probate court judgment, or, to state the question otherwise, were the quitclaim deed and the administrator's deed, under which plaintiff claims, mere shams, phony, as defendant contends? and (2) Was the probate court judgment against Watson a valid judgment?

Plaintiff introduced, with other evidence, the quitclaim deed, the administrator's deed, and called administrator Watson as a witness. The quitclaim deed to plaintiff, as appears, supra, was executed by Watson and wife June 1, 1927, and recites a consideration of $300. The administrator's deed (May 9, 1928) to plaintiff recites that it was based upon an order (April 18, 1928) of the probate court of Clinton County; that Cecil T. Bostwick, plaintiff here, became the purchaser of the land in question for $2400, and had paid $1600 cash to the administrator and for the balance had executed a note for $800 due in 5 years and secured by deed of trust on the land. The quitclaim deed and the administrator's deed were duly recorded.

Administrator Watson, as a witness for plaintiff, testified that prior to his father's death, he had the land in question rented from his father, and that upon his father's death, he went into full possession and remained in possession until defendant took possession. He says, however, that, after "the sale of the land in the probate court," he rented from Bostwick, the plaintiff. Watson further testified that plaintiff got the $1600 claimed to have been paid when the administrator's deed was executed, from his (Watson's) wife, and gave a note therefor to her, and that plaintiff executed the $800 note and deed of trust as recited in the administrator's deed. He said that plaintiff paid $1600 first, and paid later $300 on the $800 note, and paid the balance of the $800 note by paying the balance on a note owed in his lifetime by James W. Watson, deceased. Administrator Watson, January 6, 1933, satisfied the record of the deed of trust securing the $800 note.

The facts upon which defendant relies are about as follows: The probate court judgment against administrator Watson, and upon which defendant's claim of title is based, was for $459.15, and, as stated, was against Watson, administrator, and the sureties on his administrator's bond. Among the grounds upon which the validity of the judgment is attacked is that there was no notice given the administrator or his sureties of the hearing resulting in the judgment. Administrator Watson filed five settlements and these were introduced by the defendant. The record does not show the date of the first settlement, but it appears from the settlement that the *Page 7 balance due the estate was $3447.64. The second settlement was filed and approved August 11, 1927, and shows a balance due the estate of $3385.23. The third settlement was filed and approved January 17, 1928, and shows a balance due the estate of $3521.91. According to the settlement, $2136.80 of this balance was for notes due the estate.

So far as appears, no settlement was filed subsequent to January 17, 1928, until February 5, 1935, at which time the administrator filed what is termed a final settlement. By this settlement it is made to appear that the estate owed the administrator $38.42, but the settlement was not approved. Thereafter, Cora Roberts, Mollie Watson, guardian of Carl J. and Edna L. Watson, minors, grandchildren of James W. Watson, deceased, A.R. Alexander, and Merrill K. Watson, filed exceptions to the final settlement. February 28, 1935, the court issued a citation to the administrator, which stated that the named exceptors had filed exceptions. The citation directed the administrator to appear in the probate court on March 14, 1935, at 10 A.M. and show cause why he had not made a just and true account, and why he should not be removed as administrator, "and to make final settlement of all property and assets of said estate in your hands and deliver same as may be ordered by the court." The citation was served on the administrator on March 1, 1935, in DeKalb County, by the sheriff of that county.

March 14, 1935, the return day of the citation, there was a hearing in the probate court on the exceptions, at which hearing the administrator was present, but not the sureties on his bond, or either of them. The court, in its finding, reviewed various charges and credits made and taken by the administrator and found that he owed the estate $1663.34.

March 20, 1935, the court made an order which recited that the court had that day examined the administrator's bond, and "it appearing to said court" that on September 3, 1932, citation was issued to the administrator directing that he make a "new bond," and it further appearing that on September 17, 1932, the sureties on the administrator's bond had filed a suggestion of his insolvency [716] (See Sec. 28, R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W.2d 713, 349 Mo. 1, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-freeman-mo-1942.