Cruwell v. Vaughn

353 S.W.2d 616, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 791
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 8, 1962
Docket48621
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 616 (Cruwell v. Vaughn) 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
Cruwell v. Vaughn, 353 S.W.2d 616, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 791 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

HOLMAN, Commissioner.

Andrew J. Cruwell died intestate on September 6, 1957. His heirs were his five children. Four of his children are plaintiffs herein and the other child, Nellie, is a defendant. Nellie’s husband, John Vaughn, was also made a defendant. On December 26, 1956, Andrew executed a deed which conveyed to Nellie his one-half interest in an 82-acre farm located in Jackson County. An error was subsequently discovered in the description of the land in said deed and on April 10, 1957, Andrew executed another deed to Nellie which conveyed the land by a correct description. In this suit plaintiffs sought to set aside those deeds upon the ground that the grantor was mentally incompetent to transfer said property on said dates, and also that the deeds were procured as a result of undue influence exercised by defendants. The trial court found for plaintiffs upon both issues and entered a judgment and decree setting aside said deeds. Defendants have appealed. We have jurisdiction because title to land is involved and also because of the amount in *618 dispute (it was stipulated that said land was of the value of $1,000 per acre). The nature of our review requires a rather complete statement of the evidence.

Andrew and his wife were divorced in 1947. At that time a property settlement was entered into whereby Andrew received a 17-acre tract of land located on Phelps Road in eastern Jackson County. For a few months he lived in a one-room building (with a dirt floor) located on that tract.

The defendants were married in March 1947. Nellie was interested in her father and apparently desired to work out a plan to improve his living conditions. After some discussions Andrew and defendants entered into a so-called partnership. It was not a true partnership agreement because Andrew was to participate in the profits, if any, but was not to pay any losses. The arrangement was that defendants would build Andrew a concrete block house on the 17-acre tract and obtain city water and electricity for the premises. They also agreed to make certain advancements for Andrew’s living expenses and to help in furnishing the house. There was to be a five-year partnership on the farming operations with defendants furnishing the money to purchase chickens, turkeys, and certain livestock. As a part of the agreement Andrew, on June 25, 1947, deeded the 17-acre tract to Nellie reserving, however, a life estate therein.

The defendants built the house and made other advancements during the five-year period, all of which totaled more than $2,200. There were no profits from the farming enterprise and none of the money advanced was repaid to defendants. During the five years following the expiration of the partnership period Nellie gave her father money and equipment of the total value of about $1,800. In addition, she gave him groceries, clothing, and many small items of household appliances.

During most of the time in question defendants lived in Houston, Texas, but would visit in Missouri at least twice a year. They would always come at Christmas and usually in July. Three of the plaintiffs, John Cruwell, Emma Cruwell, and Louise Carson, lived in Jackson County. William Cru-well lived on a farm near Odessa, about 40 miles from Andrew’s home.

The 82-acre tract of land involved in this case was owned by Andrew’s brother, Ben Cruwell, who died intestate December 18, 1956. Ben’s heirs were a nephew, Ernest A. Cruwell, Jr. and Andrew, each of whom inherited an undivided one-half interest in Ben’s farm. At the time of Ben’s death there was a $7,000 mortgage on the land. Andrew was deeply grieved by Ben’s death and a number of witnesses said that he seemed to lose interest in life after that event. All of the parties agreed that Andrew had drunk intoxicants rather heavily for many years and that he probably drank more following Ben’s death. During the period in question Andrew lived alone on the 17-acre farm. He received an old age assistance check of about $50 per month and supplemented that income by working occasionally for a few days at a time. He worked as a laborer and also did some painting and carpenter work.

In addition to some of the facts heretofore stated plaintiffs presented the following evidence: John A. Cruwell testified that he was a son of Andrew and that he saw his father almost every day the last two or three years before his death because he would stop by and do the chores for him; that his father was 71 years old at the time of his death; that after Ben’s death Andrew drank more heavily, didn’t eat sufficiently, was weak, and “didn’t do hardly anything”; that he would start talking about one subject and would change off on another; that his father said he wanted to die; that he was in the Independence Sanitarium for five days following November 19, 1956, and had to be strapped in bed, and on the first day didn’t recognize anyone; that the doctor said at that time that he had had a stroke; that his father’s memory was bad as evidenced by an incident in Decern- *619 ber 1956 when he had taken his father to the doctor and waited to take him home, hut his father forgot that he was waiting and went home with someone else; that toward the last his father would talk like he thought he had plenty of money; that on the morning of December 26, 1956 (the day the first deed was made) he stopped by his father’s home to see if the hogs had been fed and watered and found defendants there; that his father looked weak, didn’t walk very well, and “I could tell he had been drinking”; that his father had a fifth of whiskey with, him with about a third of it gone; that John Vaughn said they were taking him to the doctor; that thereafter, on occasions, his father had told him that he was going to tie up Ben’s farm so that Ernest would not get it; that on September 6, 1957, his father was found dead at the front door of his home.

Upon cross-examination this witness stated that his mother had the family dinner each Christmas and that his father was not invited; that during one summer he had entertained with a barbecue dinner while his sister Nellie was visiting from Texas and his father was not present because “I didn’t have enough to invite the whole neighborhood.”

Another plaintiff, Emma Cruwell, worked in the office at the Rock Quarry located not far from her father’s home. She testified that during the last two years of her father’s life she would see him two or three times a week as she drove down the road, or on occasions when he would come to the office; that it was the family understanding that when her father conveyed the 17 acres to Nellie she was to take care of him until he died; that her father’s health got steadily worse after he was in the hospital in November 1956; that his conversations would ramble, and after Ben’s death he lost interest in life; that every time she saw her father after he left the hospital in November 1956 he had been drinking and as a result of that drinking “I would say definitely he was not able to carry on any business.”

On cross-examination this witness stated that on the evening of December 26, 1956, John Vaughn told her that Andrew had deeded his part of Ben’s estate to Nellie, and on the afternoon of December 27, four of the children were in the office at the Rock Quarry, at which time “Uncle Ben’s property was discussed.” She also stated that at no time had she given her father any money or supplies.

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Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.2d 616, 1962 Mo. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruwell-v-vaughn-mo-1962.