Chadwell v. Reed

95 S.W. 227, 198 Mo. 359, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 95 S.W. 227 (Chadwell v. Reed) 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
Chadwell v. Reed, 95 S.W. 227, 198 Mo. 359, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 74 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

BURGESS, P. J.

This is a suit to set aside a deed made by Waterman Reed, deceased, in his lifetime, to his wife, Ruth Reed, the defendant, on the 31st day of January, 1895, conveying to her the farm and homestead, consisting of 590 acres, upon which they then resided. The land was worth at the time from ten to twelve dollars an acre, and was then encumbered with a deed of trust for $2,850. At the time of the trial, June 3, 1903, the land was worth from twenty to twenty-five dollars an acre, and was still encumbered with the said deed of trust.

On the 31st day of January, 1895, Waterman Reed, accompanied by his wife and son, Sherman or ‘ ‘ Golden, ’ ’ went to the Knox County Savings Bank, at Edina, and told the cashier of said bank, Capt. Henry R. Parsons, that he wanted to convey his farm to his [363]*363wife, and inquired of him as to the proper way to have it done. After being advised in that respect, the transfer of the title was effected by a deed made and executed by Waterman Reed and his wife conveying the land to said Henry R. Parsons, and by a conveyance made immediately thereafter by said Parsons to the defendant. The deeds so made were delivered and recorded that day.

Waterman Reed died the latter part of March, 1895, and this suit was instituted November 3, 1902.

The plaintiffs are three of the children of the grantor, Waterman Reed, and the defendant is his surviving widow. They had five children, but the other two children were satisfied with the disposition their father had made of the farm, and declined to be made parties to the suit.

The validity of the deed is assailed in the petition on the ground of the want of mental capacity of the grantor, Waterman Reed, and of lack of any consideration moving to him; also on the ground of undue influence over him by defendant and one of her sons. It is also averred in the petition that the deed was made to defendant in trust; that she was to divide said lands, or the proceeds thereof, above her living, among the five children, and that the defendant now denies such trust; that the reason this suit was not sooner brought was that for four or five years the defendant admitted such trust.

The petition, omitting the formal parts and the description of the land, is as follows:

“Plaintiffs for second amended petition herein say they are three-of the five children and heirs at law of Waterman Reed, late of Knox county, Missouri, now deceased. That the defendant is their mother and the widow of said deceased who died intestate in this county and the owner in fee ~ of the following lands: . . . .
[364]*364“That plaintiffs as children and heirs of said deceased are entitled each to an undivided one-fifth of said land, subject to the dower and homestead rights of the defendant, and subject also to a deed of trust and encumbrance thereon, dated April 1,1902, to secure the payment of $2,850 to one Mortimer Parsons, with interest at 6 per cent per annum, and recorded in book 54, page 413, deed records of Knox county.
“Plaintiffs state that for sometime prior to the 31st day of January, A. D. 1895, the said deceased was old and infirm in body and mind, and had become and was incompetent to and had not for some time attended to his business affairs, and much less able to make a deed. That at that time and while in that condition the defendant and her son, A. S. Reed, and Golden Reed, by advice, persuasion and undue influence, induced him to believe that he might and ought to make a general conveyance of all his property in lands, the 590 acres hereinbefore described to the defendant, his wife, about eleven years younger than he and then in robust health, and that she could and would finally by will or otherwise, make a division of his estate as he desired it to be done, of share and share alike to his children. And that with that understanding and agreement and by persuasion and influence, they did, on account of his weakness and imbecility of mind and when he was unable to fully comprehend and understand the effect thereof, make a deed absolute in form to Henry R. Parsons on that day and date for all his said land, and being nearly all his property, reciting that it was for one dollar and other, valuable considerations, when in fact it was for no consideration moving to him, said grantor. That immediately on the same day at the same sitting and as part of the same transaction, said Parsons and his wife Sarah made and delivered to the defendant a deed for all said lands, also reciting that it was made for one dollar and other valuable considerations ; and was in fact made for no consideration. That [365]*365said grantor, the deceased, was then in such a state o£ debility of body and mind, as to be incapable of making a deed or engaging in such business with a comprehension and understanding of it. That after its execution he proposed that his will and that of his wife be prepared, and upon being informed he had nothing to will, wept like a child. And in a few days thereafter he died.
“That defendant accepted said deeds.and put them on record. But for a few years thereafter she admitted the trust of said deeds, that she was to divide said lands or the proceeds thereof above her living and support among hers and the children of deceased. And did actually make a will or two to that effect, partial, however, to the two children and heirs who failed to join in this suit. That she has finally become so prejudiced against these plaintiffs she will not visit or communicate with them, and now absolutely repudiates and denies the terms of the agreement and trust and terms upon which she and her son procured it from the deceased and claims under it absolutely. That the reason this suit was not sooner brought was that for four or five years the defendant admitted said trust and its legal and moral binding effect upon her.
“That the other two children and heirs of said deceased are satisfied with the said deeds and disposition of the said land, and for that reason refuse to join in this suit, and for that reason are not made parties herein.
“Plaintiffs ask that both said deeds made by deceased to said Henry R. Parsons and by him and wife to defendant be set aside and for naught held and for general relief and costs of suit.”

The answer denies the allegation of the petition with respect to the want of mental capacity of the deceased to make the deed in question; denies the charge of undue influence, and denies that the deed was made to defendant in trust. It affirmatively avers that the [366]*366deceased was of sound mind and fully understood the nature of the business in which he was engaged when he made said deed; that the deed was not procured or induced by persuasion or undue influence on the part of the defendant or anyone else; that ever since January 31, 1895, the date of the execution and delivery of said deed, the defendant has been in the actual possession of said lands, claiming title thereto under said deed, and has made lasting and valuable improvements thereon of the value of one thousand dollars. The answer also avers that plaintiffs have been guilty of laches in bringing this suit and pleads the same in bar of this action.

The reply was a general denial.

This interrogatory was submitted to the jury:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 S.W. 227, 198 Mo. 359, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwell-v-reed-mo-1906.