Boyd v. Jones

60 Mo. 454
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 60 Mo. 454 (Boyd v. Jones) 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
Boyd v. Jones, 60 Mo. 454 (Mo. 1875).

Opinion

V"Okies, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the petition in this case, it is stated that in the year 1862, Alfred Jones was indebted to each of the plaintiffs as well as others, in various sums of money, amounting in the aggregate to about two thousand dollars, for which said several sums he executed to the respective parties his several promissory notes ; that in the latter part of the year 1863, suits were brought on said notes and judgments recovered thereon in the Lafayette Circuit Court, in the month of May, 1864; that after the rendition of said judgments, executions were duly issued thereon and delivered to the sheriff of Lafayette county, by virtue of which., said sheriff levied upon and seized, with other property, the following lands situate in said county, as the property of said Alfred Jones, to-wit: the west half of the south west quarter of section twenty-five, in township fifty-one of range twenty-seven, except twelve acres taken off the east ■side thereof; also twelve acres of'the west half of the south west quarter of said section; also twenty-eight acres off the [457]*457west side of the east half of thejsouth west quarter of said section; that afterwards said sheriff in due form of law, on the 22nd day of November, 1865, sold said lands by virtue of said executions and levies, at which sale the plaintiffs became the purchasers of said lands, at and for the sum of $--; that said sheriff thereupon executed and delivered to plaintiffs a ' deed to said land in due form of law.

The petition alleges that on the 23rd day of July, 1863, the said Alfred Jones, with a view to defraud, hinder and delay plaintiffs and other creditors of said Jones, by his deed of that date, commonly called a deed of trust, conveyed or professed to convey to the defendant, Isaac M. McG-irk, as trustee, said tracts of land, together with a large quantity of personal property, for the pretended purpose of securing the payment of certain debts or pretended debts therein stated to be due from said Alfred Jones to various persons therein named, to-wit: to Isham and Elizabeth Martin the sum of $850, with interest; to Thomas J. Jones the sum of $5,350.00, by virtue of a note alleged to be dated the 5th day of October, 1857; to Washington Talbott the sum of $715 ; to one-Rucker the sum of $200and to one-Russell the sum of $100; that said deed of trust was duly recorded and was executed, made and contrived by said Alfred Jones, to defraud, hinder and delay plaintiffs and other creditors of said Alfred Joños in the collection of their debts against said Alfred Jones, and to cover up his property from said creditors ; that the intent to defraud was contrived by including, in said deed of trust, some real debts of said Jones, with other pretended and fictitious demands against him, and thus to incumber said land and property with some valid debts of an inconsiderable amount compared with the whole.of the indebtedness named in the deed, intending at th.e time to pay the holders of said valid debts and get the same under the control of himself and family, and keep the same, together with said fictitious debts, as apparent liens to cover said property so as to hinder and delay his real creditors, and thereby secnre the use and benefit of said property to himself without the payment of his [458]*458just debts; that there was, and is in reality, no such debt due from said Alfred Jones to Thomas J. Jones, as that described in said deed of trust, as a debtof $5,350.00; but that the same was gotten up as a device to cover up said property as aforesaid; that there whs no consideration for said note; that Thomas J. Jones is a young man, a son of said Alfred, and controlled by him, and was at the time wholly destitute of means; that the debts named in said deed of trust as being due to said Washington Talbott, and to Isham and Elizabeth Martin were long since paid with the means of said Alfred Jones, through one William H. Day and other persons, and that a pretended and fictitious assignment, of the claims and judgments which had been rendered thereon against said Alfred Jones, was, by the direction of said Alfred, made to said William H. Day, as trustee for the wife of said Alfred Jones, for the purpose of keeping said property covered by the apparent lien of said pretended debts after the same had been fully paid; that said Day had no interest in said debts, but was used by said Alfred Jones and wife for the purpose of covering up his property and withholding the same from his creditors ; that the debts, named in said deed of trust, as being due from said Alfred Jones to'said Bucker and Bussell were either originally pretended and fictitious, or have long since been paid by said Alfred Jones, and have been fraudulently assigned to said Day for the same purpose for which the assignment of the other debts were made ; that whatever just or real debts were named in, or secured by, said deed of trust have been fully paid as aforesaid; that the only debt named in said deed of trust which has not been paid, is the pretended debt of $5,350.00 to said Thomas J. Jones, which is pretended and fictitious.

It is further charged by the petition, that by the said deed of trust and other conveyances made by said Alfred Jones, about the same time, all the property of the said Alfred Jones subject to execution under the laws of this State, was conveyed away and covered up from plaintiffs and other creditors, leaving nothing in his name to satisfy the same or any [459]*459part thereof; that the said Alfred Jones has always, since the making of said deed of trust, lived upon and enjoyed the use of said land ; that by virtue of the purchase of said lands by plaintiffs, they became the owners of and entitled to said land, or to the equity of redemption in and to the same, so far as there were bona fide debts provided for in said deed of trust.

It is therefore prayed, that if there are any valid subsisting liens, upon said lands, by virtue of said deed of trust, plaintiffs may be permitted to redeem said land by the payment of such debts, and that said deed, as to other fictitious creditors named therein, may be declared to be fraudulent and void, and that the same be canceled so far as the rights of plaintiffs are concerned, etc.

The plaintiffs, before the filing of answers by defendants, dismissed their suit-as to defendants Talbott, Rucker and Russell.

The suit was removed to Ray Circuit Court for hearing, by change of venue. At the March term of the Ray Circuit Court, for the year 1872, the defendants, Alfred Jones, Thomas J. Jones and McGirk, each filed a separate answer to the petition. The defendant, Alfred Jones, in his answer admitted his indebtedness to plaintiffs and others, asset forth in the petition, and also admitted the execution of the deed of trust to McGirk, as charged, but averred that said deed of trust was executed for the honest purpose of securing the just debts of said defendant, as therein named. The said answer then, after denying material allegations of the petition sets up, as a defense to plaintiffs’ action, that the plaintiffs associated themselves together at the time of the sale of the lands by the sheriff, as charged by plaintiffs, with the intention that one of their number should bid for said land for all of them, thereby to depress competition at said sale and thus to procure said land at a mere nominal sum, and that they did thus bid for said land, and that the bid so made by them was the only bid made for said land a-t.said sale; that no opposing bid having been made the land was sold and conveyed to said plaintiffs, who thereby received no title to -said land, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Mo. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-jones-mo-1875.