Burger v. Boardman

162 S.W. 197, 254 Mo. 238, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 197 (Burger v. Boardman) 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
Burger v. Boardman, 162 S.W. 197, 254 Mo. 238, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 209 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

BLAIR, C.

From a decree for plaintiffs in the Butler Circuit Court rescinding, on the ground of fraud, an exchange of lands, canceling certain deeds upon condition and stating an account, defendants have appealed.

At the time (1908) of the occurrences which gave rise to this suit Adam Burger, who was sixty-six years old, owned and, with his wife and coplaintiff, occupied as his home about 119 acres of land in Scott county. This land adjoined the towns of Edna and Ancell, and the evidence justifies the conclusion that it was worth [245]*245about $100 per acre. It was subject to two deeds of trust securing an aggregate of $1750.

Plaintiffs, are Germans and not fully conversant with English though their testimony indicates they have a very fair vocabulary of ordinary English words.

Defendant Boardman moved from Wright county to Scott county about March, 1907, locating in a town very near the Burger farm. Boardman had formerly lived in Webster and Wright counties. He had had considerable experience in dealing and trading in Wright county lands, and about the time he removed to Scott county he and defendant Leo Dohogne had jointly acquired 480 acres of land in Wright county and 200 acres in Texas county, Missouri. The first mentioned tract was known as the Garrett place. It was twenty miles from the railroad, rocky, hilly and unimproved except, perhaps, for a small log cabin which was little more than a ruin. A portion of the Garrett place previously had been cultivated but some fifteen years before the exchange now sought to be rescinded it had been abandoned and the improvements, including fences, burned. Subsequently brush and trees grew up on the previously cultivated portion, many of the trees having grown to a diameter of four inches or more. About eighty or 100 acres of the 480 in this tract could have been cleared and cultivated as before but the soil was thin and worn out. This tract was. about two miles from Manes, a village of about 150 souls. This description and history, in essential particulars, sufficiently applies to the Texas county tract that it need not be separately described. For these two tracts defendants Boardman and Leo Dohogne paid three dollars per acre in March, 1907, and took title by the same deed, share and share alike. According to the evidence they paid more than the lands were worth either then or at the time of the exchange with the Burgers, in February, 1908: The Burger land in Scott county was crossed by a railroad and had on it a very good dwell[246]*246ing house and barn, several small houses or shanties and one uncompleted eight or nine room concrete house, finished “up to the roof.” Boardman and the Dohognes knew the Burgers and the Burger land very well. Defendant Leo Dohogne was born and raised almost or quite in sight of the place and all his life had known Adam Burger. He (Leo Dehogne) was cashier of a bank in the town of Kelso in which, his father, defendant Constantine Dohogne, seems to have been interested, and both of them were perfectly familiar with the Burger land and, before the exchange was consummated, knew to what extent it wasi encumbered. Leo Dohogne had never seen the Wright and Texas county lands but his father, Constantine Dohogne, had and had been over part of it. From the testimony of the two Dohognes, father and son, it appears that the father, Constantine, bought the half interest in these-tracts in March, 1907, but that he and his son, defendant Leo, owned it jointly, the legal title, however,'being put in Leo Dohogne’s name.

In 1907, as a result of an expensive illness and obligations contracted in connection with the erection of the concrete house, Adam Burger became indebted to the extent of several hundred dollars and this indebtedness with the encumbrances upon his land and the so-called panic of 1907 seems .to have agitated him considerably and he began to take measures looking to a readjustment of his affairs to the end that he might rid himself of all indebtedness. Sometime in the fall of 1907, or the early part of the following winter, he visited Boardman at his store in Kelso and disclosed his desire to dispose of his Scott county farm and home in such way as to rid himself of debt and secure other unencumbered property for Ms equity. Board-man thereupon called to his aid an old acquaintance named Short, who lived in Wright county and was also in the real estate business, and Short came to Scott county-and he and Burger entered into an arrangement [247]*247whereby Short agreed to pay Burger $1800 and convey to him 160 aeres of land in Wright county in consideration of the conveyance to him by Burger of twenty-five or twenty-six acres of the 119 acre tract. This seems to have been a very fair arrangement. Very soon thereafter, February 11, 1908, Boardman visited the Burger home and a contract was dictated by Boardman, drawn by one of his clerks and signed by plaintiffs and Boardman, whereby Boardman agreed to convey to plaintiffs his one-half interest in the Wright and Texas county tracts in exchange for 214 acres of the Burger farm, including the improvements. At the same time another contract was drawn, concerning which defendants’ witness Donnenmueller, the draftsman and Boardman’s employee, says: “Well, it was a short form of a contract for Mr. Leo Dohogne. Mr. Leo Dohogne hadn’t made up his mind that evening to come in a half interest, and we drew up a contract that if Mr. Leo Dohogne wanted to come in that he could later on. ’ ’ Leo Dohogne was not present then, but witness Donnenmueller testified he thought he (Dohogne) “was implicated in it” at that time. On this occasion Boardman called for and took away plaintiffs ’ copy of the contract with Short, and it is heard of no. more. Short’s contract eliminated Boardman and the latter did not relish this. Plaintiffs say Board-man told them Short would not deal further with them because he objected to- their religion. Boardman says' plaintiff said they preferred to deal with him. Board-man, in the first instance, had, he says, approached the Dohognes but they raised an objection to the title to Burger’s land — an objection subsequently discovered to have no foundation. Boardman says the Dohognes had been “working with” him “to some extent” theretofore. After D'ohogne objected to the title, Board-man, so he testifies, then took the matter up with Short, who agreed to go in with him. Subsequently Boardman went to see Short and discovered he “didn’t [248]*248have any money and couldn’t furnish the stuff,” and then he says, he “came back and got Leo Dohogne to go in with” him “and his (Leo’s) father furnished the money to raise the mortgage.”

Plaintiffs never saw the Wright and Texas county lands until they moved to Wright county after the trade was made. They testified that Boardman represented that the lands were about five miles from Mountain Grove, a flourishing town on the St. L. & S. F. R. R., were fertile and well improved; that there were practically no rocks; that the expense of hauling them off would be twenty or twenty-five dollars; that the land was worth twenty-five dollars per acre and the Texas county tract was particularly fine, “just as level” as one of plaintiffs’ fields, having good fences, houses sufficient for tenant houses and a “big red bam” and orchards and strawberry beds.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 197, 254 Mo. 238, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burger-v-boardman-mo-1914.