Bunel v. O'Day

125 F. 303, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri
DecidedOctober 6, 1903
DocketNo. 179
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 125 F. 303 (Bunel v. O'Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunel v. O'Day, 125 F. 303, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095 (circtwdmo 1903).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

The complainant brought suit in equity in this court to avoid, for fraud and perjury in its procurement, a decree rendered by the Supreme Court of New York City, state of New York, in a suit brought at the relation of the New York Life Insurance & Trust Company (hereinafter for convenience called the trust company), by which it was adjudged that the defendant Mary was a legitimate child of one Charles Emile Bunel, deceased, father of complainant, and as such legitimate child was entitled to share equally with the complainant in a certain trust fund held by said trust company, created by the father of said Charles Emile Bunel for the benefit of said Charles and his heirs at law, the said Charles having died.

The bill of complaint charges that said Mary was in fact a child begotten in illicit intercourse between the mother of said child and one Alfred Earles, who has since married the mother of said child. The bill alleges that in October, 1884, in a suit instituted early in that year by said Charles Emile Bunel for divorce from the said mother, he was divorced from her on the ground of her illicit cohabitation with said Alfred Earles, resulting in the birth of said Mary, after trial of the issues of fact in said suit; that while complainant was a minor of tender years he was taken by his foreign guardian to France, in Europe; and that, when said trust company filed a bill in equity in said Supreme Court of New York City for the ascertainment and determination of who were the beneficiaries of said trust, certain named parties in southwestern Missouri, where said Charles Emile Bunel and his former wife had resided, organized a conspiracy for the purpose of having it made to appear that said Mary was the legitimate child and heir of said Charles Emile Bunel, and was therefore entitled to share in said trust fund, and to that end they confederated with the mother, Mrs. Earles, and with the counsel and guardian ad litem of the said complainant in said suit in the Supreme Court of New York City, and by false and perjured testimony, concocted and gotten up by the conspirators, deceived, mislead, and imposed upon the said court, whereby it was led into rendering the judgment declaring that the said Mary was the lawful heir of said Charles Emile Bunel, and entitled as such to an undivided equal part of said trust fund with the complainant; that under and by virtue of said judgment a large amount of money and property had passed into the hands of one John O’Day, as the curator and guardian of said Mary, then a minor of tender years, who was appointed such curator and guardian by the probate court of Greene county, Mo.

The supplemental bill of complaint charges that said John O’Day, as curator aforesaid, was guilty of waste and misappropriation to his own use of a large amount of property ostensibly belonging to his ward, for which he had not accounted; that, on the death of said John O’Day, his son, the defendant John O’Day, Jr., had been appointed by said probate court the successor as curator and guardian [306]*306of said Mary, and that he as such curator and guardian had come into and yet holds the possession, of a large amount of property, personal and real, so coming to said Mary as aforesaid. The bill seeks to have said Mary and said last-named guardian and curator enjoined from further availing themselves of said fund and property, and for an accounting with the curator, and for general relief.

During the pendency of this litigation, and after both the complainant and said Mary had attained their legal majority, to wit, on the 16th day of October, 1902, the complainant and said Mary reached a compromise agreement of said litigation, by which said Mary was to and did file her answer herein, under oath, admitting the material allegaitions of the bill. In consideration of said agreement of compromise the complainant conveyed to said Mary a life interest in 93 acres of land on the Boulevard near the city of Springfield, Mo., estimated to be of the value of $9,300, and the home that said Mary now lives in, in the city of Springfield, and an obligation on complainant’s part to deposit for her use and benefit the sum of $10,000 in said trust company, the said Mary to draw semiannually the interest thereon during her natural life, and also assumed the payment of certain indebtednesses of the said Mary.

On the 12th day of November, 1902, she filed with the clerk of this court a motion, in the nature of a petition, for leave to withdraw her said answer, and for leave to file an answer, tendered with the moj tion, denying the allegations of the bill, and for leave to file a cross-bill, also tendered, against the complainant and his counsel, Mr. Heffernan, to set aside and vacate certain deeds made in execution of the terms of said compromise. It appears from the file-mark of the clerk that this answer and so-called cross-bill were filed with the clerk in vacation; but, as this was done without leave of court, these filings should be stricken therefrom by the clerk.

The said motion refers to the cross-bill, which charges, in effect, that said compromise agreement was procured by certain fraudulent deceptions and misrepresentations, referred to hereafter in this opinion. ' The court referred this matter to a special examiner, by consent of parties, to take the evidence bearing on these issues, and to report the same to the court, which has been done. This evidence is distressingly and unnecessarily voluminous. It contains a mass of irrelevant and incompetent matter, which would be unendurably burdensome on the court to point out in detail. The abstracts of the evidence furnished by the respective counsel were so partial, unintelligible, and unsatisfactory that, in justice to himself and the parties,, the court took upon himself the labor of reading the nearly 700 typewritten pages covered by this evidence, which labor has consumed much of the court’s summer vacation. The court cannot refrain from observing that one remedy for this growing evil in taking testimony in such cases would be to dispense with stenographers, and to require the lawyers to write out their multiplied and repetitious questions and answers, inculcating the useful lesson that expedition is a virtue in judicial inquiry.

1. The sole question for determination by the court is whether or not the answer filed by the defendant herein, and the compromise [307]*307agreement out of which it grew, were induced by reason of the imputed conduct of the complainant and others acting for and in concert with him, within the settled rule that the undue influence must be such “as amounts to overpersuasion, coercion, or force, destroying the will power.” Tibbe et al. v. Kamp et al., 154 Mo. 545, 54 S. W. 879, 55 S. W. 440; Riggin et al. v. Board of Trustees of Westminster College et al., 160 Mo., loc. cit. 579, 61 S. W. 803; Wood v. Carpenter et al., 166 Mo., loc. cit. 481, 66 S. W. 172.

2. It is charged, on behalf of the defendant that she was deceived by false statements made to her by her counsel and guardian ad litem, Judge Robertson. It is claimed that after this court, at the October term, 1902, overruled the demurrer interposed by the defendants to the bill of complaint, that accidentally meeting her on the street near the court building he informed her that the judge of the court had decided her case against her, and that she understood, as far as this court was concerned, the case had gone against her on the merits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 F. 303, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunel-v-oday-circtwdmo-1903.