Brinkerhoff v. Juden

164 S.W. 523, 255 Mo. 698, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 523 (Brinkerhoff v. Juden) 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
Brinkerhoff v. Juden, 164 S.W. 523, 255 Mo. 698, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 51 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

OPINION.

I.

BOND, J.

(after stating the facts as above).— The position taken by counsel for appellants both in oral argument and in their briefs is, first, that the patents issued to Louis Houck were void or voidable, and [713]*713in either event since Irma Juden was a volunteer, the decree should have been in their favor; second, if the Houck patents were neither void nor voidable in this action, then Houck had the equitable title to the land in suit when he made a deed thereto on April 20, 1899, (in which his daughter, defendant Irma Juden, did not join), and the decree should have been in their favor, because his conveyance to Franklin carried this ‘ ‘ equitable title; ’ ’ third, if Houck had no estate in the lands conveyed to his daughter, then the failure to include them in the deed wherein she joined conveying other lands, was such a mistake as equity will correct by reforming the deed.

Summarizing these points. (1) Were the Houck patents invalid, and can that question be determined in this action? (2) Did Houck retain the equitable title to the lands after the deed to his daughter? (3) Were the lands left out of the quitclaim to appellants’ grantor in which the daughter joined by mutual mistake on her part and on the part of the grantee? It will clarify the case to discuss the last two propositions first. Taking these in order.

Warranty Deed: When Creation of Equitable Estate in Grantor. When Houck made a warranty deed to the land in suit to his daughter on June 28, 1898, and recorded the same, and she on the same day, as owner, executed a trust deed on the lands to secure her note, then the delivery and acceptance deed ^11 question were complete, and whatever title Houck had to the land described therein passed to his daughter, and as she did not pay the recited consideration, the transaction was an executed gift or an advancement determinable by the intention of the parties and the attending facts and circumstances. To alter this state of affairs, it was indispensable that appellants should have adduced evidence clear, cogent, and convincing, that the deed was not what it purported to be, but simply evidenced a trust of the property in [714]*714Houck’s favor as beneficiary, and in a manner not repugnant to tbe Statute of Frauds. So far from producing the quantum of proof prescribed in such case, appellants furnished no substantial evidence of the existence of a trust resulting against the grantee, Irma Juden. All tbe circumstances relied upon to show such a trust were matters and things with which Irma Juden was not connected and which were not shown to have taken place with her knowledge and consent. She was not a party to the suit of the State against her father and Franklin, and hence, is not chargeable with any averments made in the answers to the defendants in the suit. She did not join in the quitclaim deed of her father which conveyed the land in suit, but only joined in . another quitclaim which did not purport to convey the land in suit. She did not verbally or in writing communicate with Franklin, the grantee in the two quitclaims, and never was asked by him to make any sale of lands, although he admits he knew of the conveyance to her by her father. Under these circumstances and others in the record, we are unable to perceive any equitable reason, resting on any tangible or material evidence, for the theory, that, despite his aforesaid deed, Houck was thereafter the beneficial owner of the land in suit. The only basis for this motion seems to be inferences or deductions from his conduct and statements, without any proof of the cogni zance and approval of his daughter. Unquestionably the contention of appellants, that Irma Juden would be bound by a ratification with knowledge of the facts of her father, is correct, but we are unable to find in this' record any proof of such ratification on her part in the manner and to the degree required by law. We therefore hold that, regarding alone the deed from Houck to his daughter, no equitable estate remained in him, after the making and delivery and acceptance of the deed, and hence, his quitclaim to appellant’s ancestor did not divest the nonjoining owner, Irma Juden: [715]*715[Weiss v. Heitkamp, 127 Mo. l. c. 30; Derry v. Fielder, 216 Mo. l. c. 193.]

II.

Mutual Mistake: In Description of Land in Deed There is no evidence in this record that a mutual mistake on the part of Franklin and Mrs. Juden was made when the quitclaim she signed was prepared. It is impossible for a mistake to be made as to the land to be conveyed in any deed, unless the minc]s 0f the parties, or their authorized agents, had met previously to the conveyance on the subject of what lands were intended to be conveyed. The testimony of both Franklin and Mrs. Juden discloses that nothing took place between them as to the sale and purchase of any land whatever, except the physical act of Mrs. Juden in signing a quitclaim deed. Mr. Franklin not only knew Mrs. Juden owned the land in controversy, but he had possession of the deed of trust made thereon by her when it was cancelled, and he delivered it to her father, hence it cannot be that he was not chargeable with notice of her title when he afterwards set about acquiring that title or any part of the land. Before accepting her deed, he at least should have examined it to see whether it embraced the lands he desired to buy. The slightest attention to his own business would have dictated this course. It seems, however, that, he simply assumed that he got her land because it was described in. another quitclaim deed, made by Houck, which she did not sign. His credulity in this respect, does not constitute a legal basis upon which either he or his grantees can be permitted now to reform the deed which she did execute and as to which there is no evidence that it omitted any land which she had previously agreed to sell him. Moreover, while there is no evidence the scrivener made any mistake in writing the deed, yet even if he did, still there is no evidence [716]*716that he was the joint agent of both parties, and Mrs. Juden would not he bound by his mistake unless he was her agent or unless there was other evidence of a mistake on her part, as to which there is no showing in the record. We conclude that there was no equitable ground for the correction of the quitclaim to Franklin which was signed by Irma Juden on the theory of a mutual mistake in omitting the description therein of the lands in suit. [Dougherty v. Dougherty, 204 Mo. l. c. 237; Benn v. Pritchett, 163 Mo. l. c. 571.]

III.'

Swamp Lands: Voidable Patents: No Consideration. The question decisive of this appeal is whether the Houck patents are void or voidable at the instance of appellants, for if they are, then appellants must have a decree for the lands in suit, since the legal conclusion that Irma Juden took no better title than her father is unavoidable upon the conceded facts showing voluntary character of conveyance to her. The decision of this question necessarily involves two inquiries; first, as to the legal effects of the method of conveying the lands adopted by the county court of Pemiscot when it patented them to Houck; second, as to the right of these appellants to rely upon the facts impeaching the patents to Houck as validating the later patents to their ancestor, by affording grounds to annul the previous ones.

No dispute can exist as to the elements and true nature of the contract between Houck and the county court upon which its patents to him were based.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 523, 255 Mo. 698, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinkerhoff-v-juden-mo-1914.