Collins v. Harrell

118 S.W. 432, 219 Mo. 279, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 432 (Collins v. Harrell) 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
Collins v. Harrell, 118 S.W. 432, 219 Mo. 279, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1909).

Opinions

GANTT, J. —

This is a suit to partition 152 acres of land in Schuyler county and eighty acres of land in Macon county, Missouri. The suit was brought in the Schuyler Circuit Court. The plaintiffs and the defendants are the collateral kindred of Caleb Collins, who died intestate, without widow or issue, in Davis county, Iowa, on August 11, 1905, in which last-mentioned county he owned at the time of his death about five hundred acres of land. At the trial the defendants Albert Collins, Ira Collins, James Collins, Edward Collins and Sarah Gibson filed a joint answer disclaiming any interest in the land in suit. Iowa Harrell, a minor, on motion of her guardian, was made a defendant and filed a separate answer claiming title to the 152 acres of land in Schuyler county, and known in the record as [286]*286“The Queen City Farm,” by virtue of an alleged oral contract entered into by and between her and Caleb Collins in his lifetime, in the summer of 1898, when she was less than nine years old, to the effect that if she, the said defendant, would live with him, the said Caleb Collins, stay with him and comfort him until his death, he would give, transfer and convey to her all of the said Schuyler county land above described in consideration therefor. That she accepted said proposition on the part of Caleb Collins and contracted and agreed with the said Caleb Collins to live with him, to stay with him and comfort him until his death, and in pursuance of said agreement, she did live with him and stay and comfort the said Caleb Collins from the time the said agreement was entered into until his death and fully performed the said agreement on her part; that the said Caleb Collins died August 11, 1905, by reason of which said contract and the performance thereof by the defendant the said real estate situated in Schuyler county, Missouri, was owned absolutely by this defendant; that the said Caleb Collins failed and neglected to keep his part of said contract prior to his death and failed to convey, transfer or deed said land to this defendant, and that the plaintiffs herein and the other defendants have no interest in said land. Wherefore she prayed the court for a decree declaring her to be the absolute owner of said real estate and to divest all the title and interest of the plaintiffs and the other defendants in and to said tract of land in Schuyler county, Missouri.

Thomas R. Hollingsworth, a minor, by his guardian ad litem, prayed the court to strictly protect his interest.

The plaintiffs in reply to the answer of Iowa. Harrell denied all of the allegations therein and for further reply stated that the alleged pretended promise and contract of the said Caleb Collins pleaded in said defendant’s answer to give, transfer and convey the said [287]*287land to the said defendant, if ever made, was not in writing, signed by Caleb Collins.

The ease was tried at the November term, 1905, without the intervention of a jury, though the defendant and interpleader, Iowa Harrell, demanded a jury. As her interplea and answer stated a cause in equity for the specific performance of an alleged contract, the issue was not triable before a jury and the court properly refused a jury.

To sustain her claim to the land in question, the defendant introduced her mother, Mrs. Maggie Harrell, who testified that she was forty-six years old and that the defendant Iowa was her only child. The witness was married in March, 1878. Iowa Harrell was bom in 1889. Caleb Collins married the sister of the witness and the witness lived with Mr. and Mrs. Collins until witness was married in 1878. Mr. Harrell died in 1890. After the death of her husband, the witness and the defendant, Iowa, went to the home of the deceased, Caleb Collins, where they continued to reside as members of the family until the death of Mrs. Collins in 1898, save and except a portion of that time witness was away settling up her husband’s business. In April, 1902, after Mrs. Collins’s death, the witness bought a small hotel at Leroy, Kansas, took her goods and moved there, taking the defendant,' Iowa, with her for the purpose of giving her a better education and getting her into better society. Witness was for a time a stenographer in a lawyer’s office, but her health failed and she and her daughter returned to the Collins home in Iowa, where they made their home until Mr. Collins’s death in 1905. During all of this' period Caleb Collins gave them a home, clothed and gave them half of the produce and cared for them and sent Iowa to school and paid their medical bills. Caleb Collins became greatly attached to Iowa and on frequent occasions remarked that he intended doing something for her and on several occasions stated that he intended to [288]*288give her the Queen City farm. Mrs. Collins died August 24,1898, and it was on this day that the alleged contract upon which defendant claims the land in suit was entered into. At that time she was less than nine years old. Prom that day until Caleb Collins’s death some seven years later, Mrs. Harrell made her home with him except the short time she' resided in Kansas. She could recall but four conversations with him wherein he mentioned giving Iowa the Queen City farm. The first of these conversations occurred on the day of her sister’s funeral in the yard of Mr. Collins’s residence. She and her brother, Zeke, and his wife and Caleb Collins were standing in the yard talking, Iowa was playing with her cousins, thereupon the witness, Mrs. Harrell, said to Iowa, “We will get our things and go home with brother Zeke and make our home.” Mr. Collins said, “No. ” Iowa was in the yard and he went up to her and said, “You are not going to leave me now in my bereavement and leave me here alone, ’ ’ and he began to cry, and the little girl sympathized with him, she ran to him and put her hands in his hands, and he said, “No, Iowa, stay with me and I will school and educate you and give you all your clothes. You live with me and I will see that you have plenty. ’ ’ And then Iowa put her hands in his, and said: “I am going to stay with Uncle.” And then the two went off in the house together. On cross-examination she gave this version of that conversation, speaking of Mr. Collins: “Cale said, ‘You are not going to leave me now when I am in so much trouble. She is all I have got.’ ” On re-direct examination she stated it in this way: “Cale said if Babe stayed with him until he died he had made up his mind to give her the Queen City farm.”

Mrs. Ezekiel Dooley, the wife of Mrs. Harrell’s brother, detailed this conversation in this way: “I re-xhember Mr. Collins came up and said to her, she was not going to leave him, and commenced to cry. The [289]*289little girl went np to Mm and took Mm by the hands and he said, ‘Babe, yon are not going to leave me, yon are all I have got now. ’ He talked on and said if she wonld stay he would always see that she had a home and he wonld school her, that is abont all.” The second conversation occurred abont six months later. She stated that he went on doing for her, we stayed there with him and he said that he had made np Ms mind to give her the Queen City farm. That she was to stay with him and take care of him until the last, or as long as he lived. On cross-examination, she restated it in these words: “Cale said I have made np my mind to give Babe the Queen City farm.” “We were talking abont the home place that we lived on in Iowa and the two farms that he owned and he said he had concluded to give her the Queen City farm.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 432, 219 Mo. 279, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-harrell-mo-1909.