Bybee v. S'renco

291 S.W. 459, 316 Mo. 517, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 459 (Bybee v. S'renco) 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
Bybee v. S'renco, 291 S.W. 459, 316 Mo. 517, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 520 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*519 OTTO, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff to set aside a deed executed by her in March, 1920, to certain real estate in St. Louis County. The grounds upon which plaintiff seeks to set aside said deed are that at the time said deed was executed and long prior thereto the defendant Sigmund S’Renco was her attorney and occupied a fiduciary relation to her; further that plaintiff received no consideration for the execution of said deed, and that she was induced to execute the same by reason of her confidence in her attorney, as aforesaid, and by his false representations and deceitful conduct toward her.

The separate answers of the defendants deny each and every allegation in the petition. They further allege that the defendant Ray Angel, who was shown to be the sister-in-law of the defendant S ’Ren-co, was the real purchaser of the real estate from the plaintiff, and that the sale was not one from client to attorney, but rather one from client to a stranger, The answers further allege that the sale of the property was free from any fraud or misrepresentations on the part of the defendants or either of them.

The facts out of which this lawsuit grows may be briefly stated as follows :

Prior to June 21, 1918, the plaintiff, Florence Bybee, was the wife of one Elmer Bybee and resided in the city of St. Louis. Sometime prior to June, 1918, the plaintiff employed the defendant, S ’Renco, to institute a suit for divorce against her husband, Elmer Bybee. This suit was duly instituted and on June 21, 1918, a judgment was entered for the plaintiff. The defendant entered his voluntary appearance to the suit and prior to the date of the trial agreed upon a settlement of alimony in gross. This agreement was reduced to writing and filed with the court. By the terms of this agreement the defendant, Elmer Bybee, agreed to pay the plaintiff alimony in gross in the sum of $890 and also agreed to make certain monthly payments for the support of their minor children. ■ Bybee also agreed to pay the defendant S’Renco’s attorney’s fees in the sum of $175. Bybee then paid both S’Renco and 'his wife by notes executed at the time and payable in monthly installments. It is admitted that S’Renco received full payment of his fee in the manner stated. Testimony for the plaintiff shows that S’Renco also received the notes representing the gross alimony due the plaintiff herein. It further shows that S’Renco never accounted to the plaintiff for any of said *520 notes or the proceeds thereof. That he obtained them on the date of the divorce and retained possession of them at all times thereafter. That the plaintiff at different times requested S’Renco to surrender the notes to her, but that he failed and refused to do so. The evidence also shows that S ’Renco negotiated and discounted these notes without authority from the plaintiff and kept and retained the proceeds thereof. When pressed by the plaintiff for a settlement S’Renco finally admitted that he had discounted the notes and had spent the money. The evidence shows that in order to satisfy plaintiff he then induced her to purchase through him, if not from him, a piece of property in St. Louis County, hereinbefore referred to, the legal title to which appeared to stand on the record in the name of the defendant Ray Angel. This deed was executed in January, 1919.

The undisputed evidence further shows that this property was worth at the time not to exceed $3,000. At the time defendant S’Renco induced the plaintiff to buy this property and caused the defendant Angel to execute a deed to the same to plaintiff, the property was mortgaged for $2500 and was encumbered by a lien for delinquent taxes covering a period of four years and amounting to some two or three hundred dollars. As a part of the consideration of the conveyance of the property to plaintiff the defendants further induced the plaintiff to execute a second mortgage on the property to the defendant Ray Angel to secure the payment of notes aggregating $1200. In addition to all of this plaintiff released her claim on the defendant S ’Renco for the alimony notes converted by S’Renco as aforesaid; in short, the defendants induced the plaintiff to pay for this property an aggregate sum of something like $4,500 whereas the undisputed evidence shows it was worth not to exceed $3,000.

The evidence shows that the defendant S’Renco at all times exercised dominion and control over the real estate above mentioned; that he permitted the plaintiff to move into the property without the payment of rent and live there from August, 1918, until January, 1919; that he arranged for the sale of the property to the plaintiff; that he supervised the execution of all the papers and that the plaintiff did not at any time deal directly with the defendant Ray Angel.

The evidence further shows that the plaintiff occupied the property above described for sometime after January, 1919. -In March, 1920, she was unable to meet the payments due upon the first and second mortgages, whereupon the defendant S’Renco, while still acting as the attorney, advisor and friend of the plaintiff, induced her to execute a deed re-conveying, the property to the “straw” woman, Ray Angel. This deed was also made without any cash consideration, but upon the agreement that the defendant S’Renco would have *521 the second mortgage canceled of record, which, the evidence shows, he did the following day.

The evidence further shows that the plaintiff is an uneducated woman and was and is inexperienced and unskilled in business matters ; that the defendant S ’Renco, on the other hand, was, at 'the time of the transaction herein mentioned, a college graduate and a lawyer of several years’ experience.

The defendant Ray Angel filed a separate answer in this case, but made no appearance at the trial and did not testify.

The judgment of the trial court found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and set aside plaintiff’s deed executed in March, 1920. The court found that at the time said deed was executed the defendant S’Raneo occupied the fiduciary relation of attorney toward the plaintiff as client. The court further found that the defendant S ’Renco had a substantial interest in the real estate at the time it was deeded to the plaintiff and after the property was re-conveyed by the plaintiff to the defendant Ray Angel. The court further found that the defendant S ’Renco overreached the plaintiff and misled, deceived and defrauded her and that she received no consideration for the execution of the deed in March, 1920. The court further found that the defendant S’Renco was the agent of the defendant Ray Angel and dominated and controlled her and dealt with the real estate as his own.

It is our opinion that the court might also have found as a fact that the defendant S’Renco was at all times the real owner of the real estate above described, although it stood on the records in the name of his sister-in-law, Ray Angel.

The chief contention made by the defendants for a reversal of this case is that at the time the plaintiff executed the deed to the defendant Ray Angel in March, 1920, the defendant S’Renco was not the attorney of the plaintiff and did not occupy a fiduciary relation toward her.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 459, 316 Mo. 517, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bybee-v-srenco-mo-1927.