Clark v. Bettelheim

46 S.W. 135, 144 Mo. 258, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 135 (Clark v. Bettelheim) 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
Clark v. Bettelheim, 46 S.W. 135, 144 Mo. 258, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 293 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Brace, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Linn county on the final settlement of respondent as administrator of the estate of Jared W. Clark, the father of the appellants, which settlement was filed in the probate court of Linn county at the February term, 1891, of said court, showing a balance due respondent of $2,791.60, and to which the appellants then and there filed written exceptions. Thereupon, the probate judge being a material witness in the case, the same was certified to, and heard by the said circuit court as provided by statute. Revised Statutes 1889, section 3403. The exceptions are in substance as follows:

First. That said administrator has failed to inventory, appraise and account in his settlements for eighty head of cattle- of the value of $4,000, and three thousand pounds of wool of the value of $1,000, the property, of his intestate, but converted the same to his own use.

Second. That he has taken credit in his said settlement for the sum of $1,944.78, on account of a certain [265]*265promissory note given by the said Jared W. Clark, deceased, in his lifetime, to one Flora E. Hodge, to which he has no title, and which was paid off and discharged by the widow of said deceased with money of the estate before the said Bettelheim became administrator thereof, and was so adjudicated by the circuit court of Linn county, at the June term, 188-, of said court in a case wherein these exceptors were plaintiffs and the said Bettelheim and one Wyath were defendants.

Third. That he has taken credit in said settlement for the sum of $982.42 on account of the “Kerr” note which was fully paid off and discharged in the lifetime of said Jared W. Clark, deceased, with his own money, and to which the said Bettelheim has no title, but which he nevertheless by fraud procured to be allowed by the probate court as a demand against the estate of said deceased.

Fourth. The fourth exception is to the credits taken in his settlements in the sums of $270.50 and $18, claimed by the administrator to have been uncollected on the note of E. J. Scott, inventoried at $300, with interest.

Fifth. The fifth exception is to the credit amounting to the sum of $168.50 taken in his. fourth annual settlement on account of moneys paid for Gertie and Eva Clark not chargeable to said estate.

The circuit court sustained the fourth exception and charged the administrator with $300 and interest, the amount of the Scott note as per inventory, and overruled all the other exceptions and the exceptors thereupon appealed to this court. The exceptions will be considered in their order. ‘

I. After a careful examination of all the evidence in the case we find the ruling of the court on the first exception sustained by the evidence. So far as the [266]*266charge on account of wool is concerned, that is not now insisted upon, and by a preponderance of the evidence it is shown that the cattle, with which it is sought to charge the administrator, were his own cattle.

II. As to the second exception, it appears from the undisputed evidence that on the twelfth day of October, 1881, Jared W. Clark executed his promissory note to Flora L. Hodge, of the State of Ohio, for the sum of $1,000 payable on or before October 12, 1883, with compound interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, as part of the purchase price of a tract of land which the said Hodge had conveyed to said Clark. That to secure the payment of said note and another for the sum of $700, of the same date, payable on or before October 12, 1882, the said Clark executed a deed of trust of the same date in favor of the said Flora L. Hodge to said land. That Clark in his lifetime paid off the $700 note. That on the twenty-third of April, 1883, he died, leaving the $1,000 note unpaid in the bank of Brookfield, to which it had been sent for collection at his request. That on the third of May, 1883, Bettelheim paid the bank the sum of $1,043.35, the amount due on said note less a rebate of $50, and that thereupon said note was taken up and thereafter held by him; that after the death of said Clark his widow remained in possession and control of the estate without administering until'the twenty-third of August, 1883, when letters of administration were granted on said estate to the respondent Bettelheim; that on the thirteenth of November, 1884, he presented to the probate court for allowance against said estate a demand based on said note, and the Kerr note which is the subject of the third exception, and thereupon in a proper proceeding the same was in due form allowed as a demand against said estate and assigned to the fifth class of demands. Afterward on the fifth day of July, 1887, at a sale [267]*267made by the trustee in said deed of trust the said Bettelheim became the purchaser of said real estate for the sum of $1,726 and received a trustee’s deed therefor. Afterward the appellants brought an action in ejectment in common form against one Wyatt, tenant in possession under said Bettelheim, to recover said real estate, to which the said respondent became a party on his own motion and defended the same. In his answer, after a general denial and a special plea settingup the title acquired under the trustee’s deed, in' which it is averred that by mistake the land was advertised to be sold in a newspaper published in the town of Brook-field instead of a newspaper published in the town of Linneus as provided in said deed of trust, he set up as a 'further special plea, the giving of said note, and deed of trust by the said Clark upon the real estate sued for, and alleged in substance that said note was taken up by him in pursuance of an agreement entered into between himself and the said Clark in his lifetime, by which he was to take up and hold said note and deed of trust as security for the money advanced by him for that purpose,; that said debt remaining long past due and unpaid, he entered into possession under said contract and deed of trust after condition broken, and holds possession by virtue thereof, and is by virtue of the premises subrogated to all the rights of the mortgagee therein; that no part of the money so advanced has ever been repaid to him; “that he is ready and willing and has offered to the plaintiffs to surrender to them all right, title and interest which he has in said, property upon the payment to him of the money so advanced with interest thereon and now herein is willing and offers to the plaintiffs the privilege to so redeem said property from said mortgage,” and prays to be discharged, and for any affirmative relief that the court can award.

[268]*268In reply to this answer the plaintiffs (appellants herein) denied generally all the allegations of the answer, and specially denied that the $1,000 note and deed of trust were paid off and taken up by Bettelheim, and averred that said note was fully paid off and discharged by the widow of said J. W. Clark, out of money belonging to the estate of J. W. Clark, deceased, and averred that said pretended sale by the trustee was without authority of law and no money was paid on account of said purchase, and denied that the said Bettelheim went into possession by virtue of said deed of trust, but averred that he took possession as administrator of said Clark. The issues thus made were submitted to a jury upon instructions. The jury returned the following verdict:

“We, the jury, find that the plaintiffs are entitled to the possession of the following described lands, to wit: N. X N. E. X and N.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 135, 144 Mo. 258, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-bettelheim-mo-1898.