Dameron v. Harris

219 S.W. 954, 281 Mo. 247, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 954 (Dameron v. Harris) 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
Dameron v. Harris, 219 S.W. 954, 281 Mo. 247, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 14 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

Prior to 1893, plaintiffs husband, James Dameron, died, leaving a last will, by which he devised to plaintiff, for her life, a farm of 640 acres, of which 200 acres lie in Lincoln County and 440 acres in Pike County. The farm is two miles south of P'aynesville, in Pike County, where James H. Patton, known in the vicinity as Colonel Patton, resided. He was an experienced aud prosperous farmer and had managed his own affairs well; so on October 1, 1893, plaintiff employed him to take charge of her faun for an indefinite period, as she intended to go to Bowling Green, in Pike County, for the sake of the health of one or more of her children, of whom there were living at that time one son and two or three daughters. Col. Patton was to be paid fifty dollars a year for his services, which began October, 1898, and continued twenty years, and until November 17,1913. Meanwhile plaintiff and her family resided or sojourned for periods not definitely stated, at Bowling Green, Kirksville. and Eolia, places not far away: at Hugo, Oklahoma, Hot Springs, Arkansas, and St. Louis. Col. Patton died in 1914, and. on May 11, 1915, a demand against his estate for $29,209.18', which is the subject-matter of the present proceedings, was presented to the probate court and later was lodged in the circuit court by appeal. The demand is for many items of indebtedness alleged to be due plaintiff on account of money received by Col. Patton for rent of the farm, or portions of it, the proceeds of crops, timber and other articles sold from the farm, which were never accounted for to plaintiff; overcharges for the services of deceased; rentals never paid to plaintiff; damage to the farm to the amount of $2500, caused by cutting down timber trees, contrary *252 to plaintiff’s order; damage in the sum of $3000, due to not rotating the crops to preserve the fertility of the soil, and permitting the fences and other improvements to get out of repair; and for $3500, the value of corn, hay and other products of the farm which lie is alleged to have surreptitiously converted to his own use. Attached to the statement of demand is an itemized account, composed of four hundred and seventy-six debits against the deceased and two hundred and five credits, showing the balance of $29,209.18 in favor of claimant, the total debits- amounting to $47,466.12 and the credits to $18,-256.94.

Defendant’s answer, as administrator of the estate of deceased, states that plaintiff knew what was being done on the farm during the years deceased managed it; that deceased kept a book account of all items of money received by him as plaintiff’s agent and baliff, which showed for what they were received, and his disbursements connected with the management of the farm from the year 1893 to and including the year 1913; that said account covered not only the receipts and expenses of the farm, but money paid by deceased to plaintiff, or on her order during those years.

.The answer also alleged that a true accounting was made to plaintiff' by the deceased yearly, or oftener.

The bar of the Statute of Limitations was pleaded against all items of plaintiff’s demand which accrued prior to the year 1910.

Defendant set up a counterclaim upon allegations that deceased, during the years from 1910 to 1913, inclusive, paid out for expenses in conducting the farm and to plaintiff, or others upon her order, sums in excess of his total receipts from the farm during those years, to the amount of $1140.75, and that these payments were made at the request of plaintiff. An itemized account was attached as an exhibit and referred to in the answer, which showed a balance due defendant, as administrator, of the amount aforesaid.

On account of the multitude of transactions involved in plaintiff’s demand, ranging over twenty years, .the *253 case was referred by the circuit court to Hon. L.H. Blair, who was directed to take testimony regarding the various items of the demand, make a full statement of the account between the parties, together with his findings thereon, and return the same with the evidence, into court. The evidence consisted of the testimony of nearly fifty witnesses and about two hundred and fifty exhibits, in the form of letters which passed between plaintiff and .deceased,-and checks drawn by her on her bank account, or by deceased for payments to her' or others by her order, or for the expense of the farm. The referee found, and the numerous letters in evidence support the finding, that deceased kept plaintiff informed regarding his management of her affairs while he had them in charge; that he reported regularly about the crops raised and sold, collections made, contracts with tenants, the condition of the crops, the clearing of land and the cutting and sale of timber, lumber, and posts, repairs made and the expenditures therefor, the payment of premiums due on fire and life insurance policies held by plaintiff, the sums paid to her daughters and on her debts to other persons, and credits made on a promissory note of plaintiff to deceased; that he stated from time to time the balances of money in his hands belonging to plaintiff and subject to her order; notified her when she overdrew her accountwith.the Clifford Banking Company; that he balanced her account from time to time, and sent her statements of the condition of the account. The referee found further that, by letter and orally, plaintiff, on several occasions. expressed satisfaction with the way deceased had conducted her business, and that the first complaint made by her was on December 5, 1913, which was about some matters deceased explained, in a letter dated December 23, 1913', written in answer to her complaint.

Plaintiff resumed possession and management of the farm in November, 1913.

The referee held all items of the demand which accrued more than five years before May 11, 1915, when *254 the claim was presented in the probate court for allowance, were barred by the Statute of Limitations.

Deceased kept in a book of accounts minutes of his transactions in handling plaintiff’s business, and after his death a copy of said book account, showing the receipts and expenditures of deceased as bailiff, from October 1, 18S3, to November 17,1913, was furnished by the administrator of the estate to Dr. T. E. Garrett, plaintiff’s son-in-law. It was found by the referee that the present demand is based, with few exceptions, on the various items of income from the farm shown by said copy of deceased’s book account, but that credit is not allowed for many of the expenditures and other payments made by deceased and recorded in his book; and that whereas the deceased had entered a charge- of $100’ a year for seiwices, the plaintiff only gave the estate credit for fifty dollars a year, claiming deceased had agreed to serve for the latter sum.

Not only does the itemized Statement attached to the statement of plaintiff’s demand omit a large portion 'of the credits in his favor, which he had recorded in his book account, but it charges him with various debit items not shown ip his book. These debits are for sums alleged to have been received in many ways; rentals collected, sales of produce from the farm, wood, timber, etc., sold by‘deceased or converted to his own use.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 954, 281 Mo. 247, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dameron-v-harris-mo-1920.