Cravens v. Jameson

59 Mo. 68
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 59 Mo. 68 (Cravens v. Jameson) 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
Cravens v. Jameson, 59 Mo. 68 (Mo. 1875).

Opinion

Napton, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a proceeding in the Circuit Court of Jackson County in 1872, to have a cloud removed from plaintiff’s title to a small tract of land in the vicinity of Kansas City, which was described in the petition. The plaintiff in his petition asserted a title to the land, though what that title was, and when and how acquired, he did not state.

[70]*70The petition then stated, that on the 17th of December, 1867, the defendants filed for record, and had entered on the record a deed from one J. C. F. Maloney and Cornelia A. Maloney, his wife, acknowledged before one Baird, a notary public, and purporting to convey to Jamison, as trustee, a tract of land to secure a note signed by Maloney and wife. What land was convey.ed by this deed is not stated; but it may be inferred from subsequent proceedings, that the deed conveyed the same land of which the plaintiff claimed the Ownership.

The petition then asserts, that at the time said deed of trust was" executed, said Cornelia, the wife of Maloney, was holding the legal title to said real estate, and then charges that she never executed said deed, nor acknowledged it in conformity to law. It farther charged, that the record of said deed of trust cast a cloud on plaintiff’s title. And therefore, the plaintiff asks that said pretended deed of trust may be set aside and held for naught, so far as it affects the title of plaintiff, and that the defendants and all persons claiming under them may be perpetually enjoined from setting up any claims to said real estate by reason of said pretended deed of trust.

The answer to this petition is simply a denial of every allegation asserted by plaintiff, and an assertion of everything denied by plaintiff. The parties went to trial on this state of pleadings. The plaintiffs then introduced a deed from the sheriff of Jackson County, dated June 2, 1871. purporting to convey to plaintiff all the interest of J. C. F. Maloney to the land in .controversy. This deed recited a judgment before a justice in. 1870, in favor of plaintiff for seventy dollars, against J. C. F. Maloney, and a transcript of said judgment filed in the clerk’s office in 1871, and an execution in favor of plaintiff in 1871, and a levy and sale of the real, estate in controversy and a purchase by plaintiff.

The plaintiff then read a record of a suit in equity in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, in which plaintiff in this case was the plaintiff, and J. C. F. Maloney, Cornelia A. Ma[71]*71loney and Win. P. Allen were defendants. In this record, it is averred in the petition, that in 1866, Maloney was largely indebted in the sum of two thousand dollars, and has been ever since ; that he was then and ever since has been insolvent; that in March, 1866, and November, 1866, and in March, 1867, Maloney bought several pieces of land from Allen for about $1,800; that being then insolvent, and with a view to hinder and defraud his creditors, he caused said Allen to convey the real estate to his wife, Cornelia A. Maloney; that no part of the purchase money was paid by the wife.

The petition then states that in 1869, said Maloney became indebted to plaintiff in the sum of seventy dollars; that the plaintiff obtained judgment, execution, etc., and ultimately a deed from the sheriff conveying all the interest of said Maloney in said real estate. The prayer is, therefore, that the said several deeds so made by Allen to Mrs. Maloney may be set aside, and that the title and interest of said J. C. F. Maloney be vested in the plaintiff.

There was a judgment by default in this case, of which the record was read in evidence, and a final decree ultimately made, reciting all the facts alleged in the petition, and decreeing the several deeds so made by Allen to Mrs. Maloney to be set aside, and vesting all the title of Maloney in the plaintiff.

The admissibility of this was objected to because the present defendants were not parties to this suit; but the objection was overruled. The plaintiff then read a lease from herself to J. C. F. Maloney, dated Jan’y, 1872.

The deed of trust from Maloney and wife to Jamison, trustee of Miller, was made leth December, 1867. It was to secure a promissory note of Maloney and his wife, of that date for $2,200 dollars, payable five years after date. It purported to convey thirteen acres of land near Kansas City, being the same before described in the deeds of Allen to Mrs. Maloney. It purported to have been executed and acknowledged by Maloney and wife before a notary public, and the certificate was formal and regular.

[72]*72Evidence was then introduced to show that the notarial certificate was false, and that Mrs. Maloney, never, in fact, acknowledged the deed in conformity to law, and counter evidence was offered to establish that she did sign and was duly examined. It is unnecessary to state the evidence— the fiuding of the court was for the plaintiff on this point, and was justified by the weight of testimony. The court accordingly decreed “that the instrument of "writing in the plaintiff’s petition described, that is to say, the instrument purporting to be a deed of trust, signed, sealed, and acknowledged by J. C. F. Maloney and Cornelia A. Maloney on the leth December, 1867, and purporting to convey the real estate therein described, to-wit: (here follows a description) to the defendant, W. C. Jamison, as trustee, to secure to defendant, John S. Miller, a promissory note therein described, which instrument is recorded in the recorder’s office of Jackson County in book 57, etc., be, and the same is by the court set aside, and for naught held, so far as the same purports to convey any interest of the said Cornelia A. Maloney in the real estate therein described, and the said W. C. Jamison and John S. Miller, and all persons claiming by, through or under them are perpetually and forever enjoined from claiming or asserting any right or title to the real estate therein described, by reason of the said deed of trust so far as the same purports to have been signed or acknowledged by the said Cornelia A. Maloney. From this decree the present appeal is taken.

The petition in this case is clearly defective, but as no objection was made on this ground, and the case went to trial, we may consider the case as it appears from the evidence.

It appears then, that in 1870, the plaintiff had a small claim against Maloney, upon which he sued him before a justice of the peace, and obtained a judgment for seventy dollars, and in 1871 had this judgment filed in the office of the Circuit Court, and an execution issued on it, and had this execution levied on the thirteen acres of land owned by Maloney as he claimed. The plaintiff bought under this execu[73]*73tion, and obtained a sheriffs deed. He then, in 1872, instituted a proceeding against Maloney and his wife, and one Allen, the person from whom this tract of land was bought, alleging that this land was bought with Maloney’s money, and that his wife had no interest in it, and that the title had been put by Allen, at Maloney’s request, in Mrs. Maloney, with a view to defraud Maloney’s creditors. There was no defense in this case, on the part of Maloney or his wife or Allen, and the decree of the court was in accordance with the petition, declaring Maloney the owner and conveying all Maloney’s interest to plaintiff, as the purchaser at sheriff’s sale in 1871.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Ex Rel. Kirby v. Trimble
32 S.W.2d 569 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Brady v. Kirby
22 S.W.2d 52 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1929)
McLaren v. International Real Estate & Improvement Co.
102 S.W. 1105 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
McPherson v. Julius
95 N.W. 428 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1903)
Coleman v. American Fire Insurance
74 Mo. App. 663 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
Ford v. O'Donnell
40 Mo. App. 51 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Mo. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cravens-v-jameson-mo-1875.