Carter v. Carter

167 S.W. 570, 258 Mo. 439, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 26, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 167 S.W. 570 (Carter v. Carter) 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
Carter v. Carter, 167 S.W. 570, 258 Mo. 439, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 354 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

ROY, C. —

This is a proceeding to cancel a deed on the ground of an alleged fraud of the grantee in procuring it. There was a decree for the defendants, and plaintiffs have appealed.

Washington Carter died intestate in 1874, owning 538 acres of land northwest of and adjoining Webb City. He left a widow who died in 1887. His son G-eorge died about 1882 intestate and without ever having been married. Another son, A. G-. Carter, died in 1903, leaving a widow Harriet and a minor son, George. The surviving children of Washington Carter are the defendant S. Elmore Carter, the plaintiff Wm. L. Carter, Mary Leslie and Laura Miller. The plaintiffs are husband and wife, the wife having no interest in the property except her inchoate right of dower. Defendant Byrd is the son-in-lgw of his cq[440]*440defendant. Where not otherwise indicated, we shall hereafter speak of Wm. L. Carter as the plaintiff and of S. E. Carter as the defendant, as the controversy herein in mainly between those two.

S. E. Carter was fifty-four years old at the time of the trial in 1909 ; the plaintiff was forty-one. The plaintiff lived on the land in controversy from his birth until about 1896. He was married in 1890, and from that time had charge of the farm, cultivating it and paying rent to the other heirs. In 1896 he moved to another farm several miles distant and in 1898 bought a farm in McDonald county, on which he lived until after the transaction in controversy. Mining for lead and zinc on the Carter land began about 1887. In 1890 the defendant and his brother A. G-. Carter took a mining lease on the land from the other heirs. They subleased various portions of it; and mining operations were carried on in an intermittent way until the time of the making of the deed in controversy. Prior to the making of that deed some very valuable mines were opened on the land adjoining the Carter land on the east and south. After the death of A. G-. Carter, the defendant had charge of the land as the agent and representative of the other heirs and as lessee under the mining lease.

On November 30, 1904, the plaintiffs signed and acknowledged a deed which purported to convey the undivided fifth of the land to defendant C. A. Byrd for the expressed consideration of $10,760'. That deed was not then delivered, but was in escrow in a bank in Webb City, to be delivered upon the payment of the consideration named. The circumstances under which that deed was placed in escrow were as follows: Defendant represented to the plaintiff that he was negotiating for the sale of the land at one hundred dollars an acre, and that he was anxious to sell at that price, stating that he wanted the other heirs to put their deeds in escrow in the bank so the deal could [441]*441be closed when the parties were ready. The envelope enclosing that deed had the following indorsement:

“November “30, 1904.
“The enclosed deed from me to Chas. A. Byrd may be delivered to him upon payment to "Webb City Bank, of Webb City, Mo., for me, on or before one year from the date hereof of the snm of ten thousand seven hundred and sixty dollars ($10',760), otherwise to be returned to me.
“W. L. Carter., Neosho, Mo., Route 3.”

After the expiration of the year, the deal not having been closed, on the request of the plaintiff, the bank returned the deed to him. Sometime in January; 1906, the defendant visited the plaintiff at his home in McDonald county. Plaintiff and defendant went to Neosho together; and while at that place the following so-called option was executed:

“This agreement made and entered into by and between S. E. Carter and W. L. Carter that in consideration of one dollar and other valuable consideration do hereby agree that if S. E. Carter pays to W. L. Carter $8000 and deeds to him his 35/96/100 acres of land west of Waco, Jasper county, Mo., that W. L. Carter will deed to S. E. Carter upon request all of his undivided one. fifth interest in 538. of land about two miles west of Webb City, Mo., in section 1 and 12 Jasper county, Mo., on or before the first day of May, Í906.
“S. E. Carter.
“W. L. Carter.”

That tract of land west of Waco will hereafter be called the Waco land. It had belonged to S. É. Carter and A. G-. Carter. The latter had conveyed his half in 1903 to the former for $600:

About February 9, 1906, plaintiff took the deed that had been previously signed by him and his wife to Webb City. S. E. Carter assigned his option to his [442]*442co-defendant Byrd on February 8, 1906, and on February 9 be and bis wife executed a deed for tbe Waco land called for in tbe option and placed it in escrow in the bank. Sometime in April thereafter the deal was closed by tbe payment of $8000' to tbe plaintiff and by tbe delivery to him of tbe deed for tbe Waco land and by tbe delivery of tbe deed from tbe plaintiffs to Byrd.

Tbe petition alleges that tbe defendant bad charge of tbe land, collecting rents, paying taxes, and remitting to tbe heirs tbe net amounts due them respectively. That tbe defendant bad superior knowledge of mining land and that tbe plaintiff bad no knowledge of tbe value of lands for mining purposes. That zinc ore bad been discovered at different places on tbe Carter land of such richness as to make it very valuable. That tbe defendant knew of such facts and that tbe plaintiff did not. That tbe plaintiff relied on tbe defendant’s judgment and honesty.

Tbe fraudulent statements alleged to have been made by defendant are as follows: that tbe land was of little value; that tbe mineral developments on tbe Carter land and on tbe adjoining land did not amount to anything; that tbe rains and floods destroyed tbe agricultural value of tbe land; that tbe defendant wanted to sell bis interest in tbe land at tbe rate of one hundred dollars an acre, making one-fifth thereof amount to $10,760; that if plaintiff did not sell, be, defendant, would proceed to partition tbe land, and that tbe purpose of putting tbe deeds in escrow in tbe bank in tbe name of Byrd was for tbe purpose of having Byrd make a deed to tbe purchaser when tbe deal was closed, and that $8000 and tbe Waco land was all be could afford to give for plaintiff’s interest.

Tbe petition also alleged that at tbe time tbe deed was delivered, tbe defendant bad given options on tbe land at tbe rate of $300 or $400“ an acre.

[443]*443The petition alleges that said representations were false and known to be false by the defendant and that plaintiff did not know of such falsity. The answer pnt those allegations in issue.

In July, 1905, defendant purchased the interest of his sister, Laura Miller, in the land for $3500. Shortly after that purchase, Mrs. Miller sued him for the purpose of canceling that deed in the Federal court at Joplin. In May, 1906, he compromised with her by paying her an additional sum of $8760. About December 9, 1905, he purchased the interest of his sister, Mrs. Leslie, who lived in Alaska, for five thousand dollars. She sued to cancel that deal, resulting in a decree in her favor, affirmed by this court in the 240 Mo. 552,

In February, 1906, at about the same time with the closing of the deal with plaintiffs, Byrd purchased the interest of the widow and minor heir of A. G-. Carter, for $10',7601, paying one half to each. The deed from the curatrix of the minor heir was declared void by this court in Carter v.

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Related

Carter v. Carter
141 S.W. 873 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1911)
Leslie v. Carter
144 S.W. 797 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W. 570, 258 Mo. 439, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-carter-mo-1914.