Dallas v. McNutt

249 S.W. 35, 297 Mo. 535, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 35 (Dallas v. McNutt) 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
Dallas v. McNutt, 249 S.W. 35, 297 Mo. 535, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 319 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*539 RAGLAND, J.

-This proceeding was originally commenced before a justice of the peace as an action for rent against the defendant, (McNutt, as tenant. It was certified by the justice to the circuit court on the ground that the title to real estate was involved. The real estate giving rise to the controversy, a dwelling house and an acre of ground in Pleasant Hill, Missouri, was formerly owned by Civilla J. Denton, who died about January 1, 1920. In the circuit court her administrator and heirs were made parties defendant, and permitted to file answers and cross-hills. . The cross-bill of the administra,tor alleged, among other things, that Civilla J. Denton at the time of her death was the owner in fee simple of the real estate just referred to; that she died intestate; that he as her administrator had inventoried said real estate as the property of her estate; that the personal estate being insufficient to pay the debts allowed against the estate, the probate court had ordered him to take charge of said real estate and rent it; and that in compliance with such order he had leased it to the defendant, 'McNutt. It also, alleged that whatever right, title or interest the plaintiff claimed in said real estate was derived through a certain so-called deed, purporting to have been executed by Civilla J. Denton and Joseph Den-ton, her husband, to C. W. ¿Dobbins, on January 10, 1905, and recorded January 14,1920:; that said pretended deed transferred no title because: (1) it was testamentary in character; (2) it was never delivered; and (3) it operated as a fraud upon creditors. The cross-bill further alleged that by reason of said pretended deed being of record the administrator was unable to sell the real estate to pay debts pursuant to an order of the probate court, and that it constituted a cloud upon the title. The prayer was, that the alleged deed be cancelled and for naught held, and that the rights of the respective parties in and to said real estate be defined and adjudged. *540 The other defendants adopted the answer and cross-bill of their co-defendant, the administrator.

By his reply plaintiff pnt in issue the allegations of the cross-bill with respect to infirmities of the deed from M'rs. Denton to Dobbins.

On.January 10, 1905, Mrs. Denton owned'the property in controversy; her husband, Joseph Denton, also owned several residence properties in Pleasant Hill. A ■daughter, Mrs. Elmore, and two grandchildren, Dobbins and a Mrs. Hawkins, were their ostensible heirs. On the date just mentioned they signed and. acknowledged three deeds; one to Dobbins, purporting to convey Mrs. Denton’s property; one to Mrs. Elmore; and one to Mrs. Hawkins, the last two purporting to convey the property belonging to Joseph Denton. Within a short time thereafter Joseph Denton appeared at one of the banks in Pleasant Hill with the three deeds. These he handed to an officer of the bank, and in that connection said that “at the death of him and his wife the deeds were to be turned over to the people they belonged to.”

The deed to Dobbins, the one involved here, was a general warranty deed, conforming in all respects to the form of such deeds in general use in this State, except that immediately following the description of the property this clause was inserted:

“It being expressly understood and agreed, that first parties or either of them shall hold this deed and enjoy the above described property as long as either of the said first parties shall live.. When both of said first parties have died, then- in that event this deed shall be delivered, by whomever shall get hold of same, to said C. W. Dobbins, and by him recorded for his sole and only use, the said property then and there to vest in him the C. W. Dobbins, absolutely and in fee simple.”

Soon after the incident of the signing, acknowledging and depositing of the deeds as just related, D'obbins took up residence in a part of the house on the lot described in the deed to him, his grandfather and grandmother occupying the other part. He continued to live *541 there until 1918, with the exception of two years during which time he was away from Pleasant Hill. During his occupancy of the premises he “put a roof on the house, made some sidewalk, built a kitchen, . . . a wood and coal house and some more sidewalk,” all at his own expense. As to why he made these improvements Dobbins testified: “They [his grandfather and grandmother] both told me to go ahead and improve the property in whatever way I wanted to; I wanted to put in things, improve the place; I spent four or five hundred dollars; they told me there was no other way for me to get it but I didn’t do it.” At the time of the making of the improvements Dobbins knew that a deed purporting to convey the premises to him had been placed in the bank; how he acquired that knowledge or whether he obtained any other information with respect to the deed or its contents does not appear. He did not see the deed itself until after his grandmother’s death. Prior to the death of his grandfather, which occurred in 1908, Dobbins did not pay any rent; after that time he paid rent regularly to his grandmother during the remainder of his occupancy of the property. She remained in possession of it until her death. Soon after Mrs. Renton’s death Dobbins went to the bank and requested the deed; it was turned over to Km and he at once filed it for record. Knowing that the validity of the deed was challenged, Dobbins, on the same date that he placed it of record, sold, and conveyed by quitclaim deed, his interest in the premises to the plaintiff. The latter purchased with full knowledge of the impending controversy.

The foregoing embraces all the facts disclosed by the evidence having any bearing on what we regard as the controlling’ question in the case, namely, whether there was a delivery of the deed from, Mrs. Denton to Dobbins.

The trial court found the issues for defendants and gave .judgment accordingly. From such judgment plaintiff appeals.

One of the essential requisites of the validity *542 of a deed, so as to passi the title, is delivery. On the question of whether in a given case there has been a delivery the intention of the grantor is the controlling element. Delivery connotes that the grantor not only parts with all dominion and control over the instrument, but that he does, so with the intention that it take' effect and pass the title as a present transfer. Such intention may be manifested by acts, or by words, or by both words and acts. [Sneathen v. Sneathen, 104 Mo. 201; White v. Pollock, 117 Mo. 467.]

So far as Mrs. Denton is concerned the only manifestation of her intention, touching the delivery and the taking effect of the deed, is found in the language of the instrument itself heretofore set out. No paraphrase or analysis can make its meaning plainer. According to it the possession of the deed, as well as the enjoyment of the property, was to be retained by the grantors, or one of them, during their joint lives and by the survivor during the remainder of his or her life; after the death of the survivor the deed was to be delivered, “by whomever should gejt hold of same/’ to the grantee, “the said property then an%d there to vest in him.”

The provision is very similar to the 'one considered in Griffin v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 35, 297 Mo. 535, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-v-mcnutt-mo-1923.