Bradshaw v. Yates

67 Mo. 221
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 67 Mo. 221 (Bradshaw v. Yates) 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
Bradshaw v. Yates, 67 Mo. 221 (Mo. 1877).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This is a proceeding in equity, commenced in the circuit court of Lewis county, on the 26th day of' March, 1873, for the purpose of setting aside a deed made by plaintiff, Elizabeth Bradshaw, in April, 1863, conveying to defendant certain land therein described. It is substantially alleged in the petition that William Barclay died in April, 1848, leaving a widow and three children, of whom plaintiff, Elizabeth, was one, and possessed, besides personal estate, of three hundred and ten acres of land;. [225]*225that Sarah Barclay, the widow, lived in the mansion house on said land till 1849, when she intermarried with the defendant, who, with his four children, removed to said mansion house, and there, with the said Sarah and her children, made up the household ; that, at the time of her mother’s marriage with defendant, plaintiff was' about nine years old; that defendant, in 1852, was appointed her guardian, and acted as such till 1864, when he made a final settlement with her. It is further alleged that in 1859 partition of the real estate was made by virtue of an order of the Lewis county circuit court, in which 105 acres oí the land was set apart to plaintiff, and 100 acres assigned and ad-measured to her mother as dower; that she was enjoined by her mother to treat and regard defendant as her father, and that, by virtue of his relation as father and guardian, she trusted defendant implicitly, and relied solely upon him to protect and control her pecuniary interests absolutely; that soon after said dower was assigned, defendant represented to plaintiff that in right and justice her mother was entitled to an absolute instead of a life estate in the land assigned her, and that the commissioners would have so allotted it to her but for the objection of Mr. Sublétt, who had married Sarah, the sister of plaintiff; that he was justly entitled to said one hundred acres in fee; that, he had applied to said Sublett and Sarah to do him justice- and convey to him said land, which they had refused to-do, and appealed to plaintiff not to treat him in like manner, but to convey her interest to him as an act of justice and right. It is also alleged that by reason of such appeals and the repeated and continued importunities of defendant, plaintiff, while yet a minor, was induced to promise defendant that she would convey to him all her interest in said land; that relying on the representations of defend! ant that her mother had been wronged by the commissioners, and that she ought in justice to make him a deed, she promised to do so when she attained her majority; that these importunities were from time to time continued [226]*226till finally, about the time of defendant’s final settlement with her as guardian, and while living with defendant, as a member of his family, and under the influence acquired by- defendant over her, and relying upon his representations that what he claimed was rightful, she was induced to execute the deed conveying to defendant her interest in said dower land; that although four hundred dollars was. named in said deed as the consideration, no part of it was paid or to be paid, and that the same was procured by fraud, undue influence and' misrepresentations of defendant.

- • The defendant’s answer is as follows: “The defendant, for answer, admits the making of the deed, but denies that the same was obtained by him from said Elizabeth by fraud, misrepresentations or undue influence exercised by this defendant over said Elizabeth; that said deed was made by said Elizabeth long after her arrival to the years of her majority, of her own free will and accord, for a legal and valid consideration.” It is further alleged that plaintiff acquiesced in said deed till the suit was brought, and that defendant in the meantime, with the knowledge of plaintiff, and without objection from her, made lasting and valuable improvements on said land, and that she ought, therefore, to be estopped. The cause was tried by the court and judgment rendered for defendant, from which the plaintiffs have appealed to this court.

1. SETTING ASIDE A DEED FOR UNDUE INFLUENCE. The main questions presented by the record are the following; 1st. Was the deed in controversy procured by the undue influence of defendant ? 2nd If so, has plaintiff lost her right to the relief she seeks by delay in instituting her suit, and, if not, should the first question be determined in the affirmative, what is the relief which should be accorded to her under the pleadings and evidence ? We think it is admitted by the pleadings that defendant, at the time the deed was executed, sustained the double relation of father and guardian to plaintiff, the relation of father being assumed in [227]*2271849, and that of guardian in 1852; that defendant had thus acquired the complete confidence of plaintiff1, and rep • resented to her while in her minority, that the commissioners, in making partition of the estate of her deceased father, had committed a wrong in assigning a life, instead of a fee simple, estate to her mother in the one hundred acres of land as dower, that he, in justice, was entitled to said one hundred acres, and appealed to plaintiff to make him a deed in fee of her interest therein as an act of justice and right; that by reason of said appeal and the continued importunities of defendant, plaintiff, while a minor, was induced to promise him that she, on arriving at age, would convey to him such interest; that said promise was made by plaintiff in full reliance on the statements of defendant, that he had been wronged, and that, in right and justice, she ought so to convey it; that these importunities and the said promise of plaintiff' were repeated till, finally,, plaintiff', at about the age of twenty-two years, and about, the time of defendant’s final settlement with her, as guardian, and while being with him as a member of his family, and entirely under his influence, and relying on his representations, and believing by reason thereof, that the making of the deed was an act of sheer justice, and that she was bound by her promise formerly made, she was induced to execute it. It is also admitted that, although four hundred dollars was the consideration named in the deed, no consideration was paid by defendant therefor, and that at the time of its execution, there was no pretense that any valuable consideration had passed, or was to pass from said defendant to plaintiff therefor.

The only denial which the answer contains is to the conclusion which the pleader in his petition reached upon the allegation made therein, viz : that the deed sought to be avoided was obtained by fraud, misrepresentation and undue influence. This does not amount to a denial of the facts alleged in the petition on which the pleader based the allegation, as a legal conclusion, that the deed was ob[228]*228tained by fraud and undue influence. When this answer was filed, it was a requirement of the law that each allegation should be specifically denied, and if not thus denied, they should be taken as admitted. Taking then the allegations of the petition as 'confessed, they not only establish the existence of confidential relations between plaintiff and defendant, but an abuse thereof by defendant at and before the execution of the deed, and fully make out, to* say the least, a prima facie case of legal fraud in the procurement of the deed, thus casting upon defendant the burden of showing that absolute fairness, adequacy and equity characterized the transaction.

In Street v. Goss, 62 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
67 Mo. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradshaw-v-yates-mo-1877.