Croft v. Morehead

293 S.W. 405, 316 Mo. 1213, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 405 (Croft v. Morehead) 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
Croft v. Morehead, 293 S.W. 405, 316 Mo. 1213, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 708 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

After the first hearing of this cause upon appeal, three of the Judges of this Division concurred in an opinion prepared by my associate, Commissioner SEDDON. One of the judges was absent. A rehearing was granted; the cause was argued orally by counsel on both sides; and there was filed on behalf of plaintiffs an additional abstract and brief.

The plaintiffs are the daughters of William Morehead, deceased, and are judgment creditors of his estate. The controlling question is the validity of two deeds executed by said William Morehead, and his wife, a little more than one year before his death, to his son, defendant Reuben H. Morehead. Upon a reconsideration of the record, we have reached a different conclusion from that stated in the original opinion as to the rights of the plaintiffs as judgment creditors, but we adhere to the conclusions reached in that opinion, that the deeds in question were not to be avoided, either because of lack of mental capacity on the part of William Morehead, or on the *Page 1217 ground that their execution was due to the exercise upon him of an undue influence on the part of defendant and his wife.

The issues made by the pleadings, the evidence, the conclusions reached upon the issues of mental capacity and undue influence, and the reasons therefor as stated in the original opinion, prepared by SEDDON, C., are adopted as follows:

"This is a suit in equity brought by two judgment creditors of William Morehead, deceased (who purport to sue not only for themselves but for all others of like character), to set aside two deeds to residence properties in the city of Milan, Missouri, made by said William Morehead and his wife, Sarah A. (now deceased), to Reuben H. Morehead, his youngest child. No other creditors appear to have joined or participated in the prosecution of the action. Plaintiffs are daughters of said William Morehead, and are full sisters of defendant. The petition is in the conventional form and alleges three separate grounds for setting the deeds aside; (1) Fraud, in that the conveyances were made without consideration and the transfer of the property from father to son rendered the father insolvent and unable to pay his creditors, and his estate is insolvent and unable to pay the demands legally allowed against it; (2) mental incapacity of the father; and (3) undue influence exerted over the father by the defendant son, aided and abetted by the defendant's wife, Nora, and her mother, Sarah A. Morehead, the wife of William Morehead and stepmother of the defendant.

"The answer admits that William Morehead died testate on February 4, 1920; that his executor duly qualified and the estate is in process of administration; admits the execution and delivery of the two deeds in question and their due recording in the proper recorder's office, and denies every other allegation of the petition. By way of defense, the answer alleges that the deeds were made and delivered in part consideration of an oral agreement between father and son that defendant would render to the father and his wife, Sarah A., during their lives, any attention, care, assistance and support they or either of them might need; that said oral agreement was fully performed by defendant; that the father, on April 10, 1912, made a will, in which testator states that he has theretofore made provision for all his children, except defendant, and the said will purports to be pleaded in haec verba, the ninth paragraph thereof devising the real property in controversy to the defendant; that the father had abundantly provided for all of his other children and that it had long been his express will and desire that the property in question should vest in defendant; that, since the execution and delivery of said deeds, defendant has expended $2,000 in improvements thereon and in payment of taxes and insurance; that, at the time of the conveyances, the father was perfectly acquainted with his *Page 1218 financial condition and that said conveyances were made for an honest purpose and with due regard for the rights of all the father's children and creditors; that said property was the homestead of William Morehead and his wife, Sarah A., and had been for several years prior to said conveyances; and that plaintiffs have a complete and adequate remedy at law, if they have any cause of action at all.

"The reply admits the making of the father's will, but denies the correctness of same as alleged and set out in the answer; alleges that, by the making of the two deeds in controversy, due regard was not had by the said William Morehead to the rights of plaintiffs, but that, by the making of said deeds and other certain bills of sale thereafter by said William Morehead to defendant and his mother-in-law, Sarah A. Morehead, all of which were voluntary and without consideration and in fraud of the rights of plaintiffs and other creditors, the father was rendered insolvent and his creditors were thereby hindered and delayed in the collection of their debts; that, before the making of said deeds, defendant and his wife had obtained from the father large sums of money and the making of the said deeds was brought about by undue influence by them over the enfeebled mind of the father, they knowing that his property would not be sufficient to pay his creditors in full and that the legacies in said will to defendant and his mother-in-law would fail and be of no effect; that defendant did not assist, care for, maintain and support his father and wife, but on the contrary that the father not only paid defendant and his wife for the board of himself and wife, but in addition thereto, from time to time, advanced to defendant and wife a large amount of money, and that whenever improvements were made on said properties after the making of said deeds were paid for with the money of the father, and that defendant failed and refused to pay the taxes on said properties or to keep them insured, although receiving and using the rents and profits thereof. The action, being one in equity, was tried and submitted to the chancellor nisi without the aid of a jury.

"The evidence shows that William Morehead was thrice married. Of the first marriage but one child survived, a son, John H. Morehead. Of the second marriage, seven children survived, all living, five sons, Addison, James R., William, Jesse T., and defendant Reuben Morehead, and two daughters, the plaintiffs, Nellie Hannan Croft and Lillie M. Harbolt. The father's second wife died in 1908, and in 1909 he married one Sarah A. Payne, a widow, with one child, Nora, who thereafter became the wife of defendant. Plaintiffs offered to prove that defendant's wife, Nora, had been married four times previously to her marriage to defendant, and that defendant married her when he was twenty years of age and when she was thirty-five years of age, which offer the trial court refused because of *Page 1219 immateriality. At any rate, it does appear that defendant is sixteen years younger than his wife, he being twenty-six years of age at the time of the trial and she being then forty-two years of age; that defendant married when he had not quite reached his majority, and that Sarah A. Morehead, the third wife of the father, William Morehead, is the mother of defendant's wife and the step-mother of defendant. The defendant, Reuben H. Morehead, is the youngest child of William Morehead. No child was born of the third and last marriage. The father, William Morehead, had lived upon a farm in Sullivan County for many years. After the death of his second wife, the mother of the parties to this action, he moved to Milan in March, 1909, purchased the properties in question as a homestead and married the third wife, Sarah A., in December of that year.

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

Related

Mansfield v. Veach
212 S.W.2d 90 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 405, 316 Mo. 1213, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/croft-v-morehead-mo-1927.