Davidson v. I. M. Davidson Real Estate & Investment Co.

125 S.W. 1143, 226 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 1143 (Davidson v. I. M. Davidson Real Estate & Investment Co.) 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
Davidson v. I. M. Davidson Real Estate & Investment Co., 125 S.W. 1143, 226 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 41 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

On January 3, 1895, Isaac M: Davidson departed this life in Butler county, Missouri, leaving an estate, consisting mostly of real estate, valued at something near $200,000. He was a lawyer by profession. He prepared, executed and left a will, only one clause of which has any significance in this suit. That clause reads:

“ Secondly: I give and bequeath all the remainder of my estate, both real and personal, or mixed, debts and wages due me, except the law office and fixtures therein contained, to my eldest son, Dr. Ira M. Davidson, and his mother, my beloved wife, for the use hereinafter declared, and request them to hold the same without sale or disposal, for a period of at least fifteen years, and then only to .be disposed of by the. concurrence of all the heirs. Also to cause the houses, lots and farms, wheresoever they may be, to be kept rented and in good repair, collecting the rents and paying the same over to my said heirs according, to their respective rights.”

Mr. Davidson left surviving him a wife and eight children. By the fifth clause of the will he defines what he means by the terms “my heirs,” there naming his wife and children. At his death most of his children were minors and three of them were yet minors when this suit was brought. The plaintiff in this suit is one of the children, and the widow and the other children are made defendants, together with a corporate defendant and two individual defendants. Under the will, the widow, Mary J. Davidson, and a son Ira M., were made executors.

[13]*13The purpose of the plaintiff’s suit is well described in the prayer of her petition, thus:

“Wherefore, plaintiff prays the court to cancel, set aside and for naught hold the decree of partition aforesaid and the order of sale made thereunder, set aside and for naught hold the report of sale made by the special commissioner thereunder, set aside and for naught hold the order of this court ordering said special commissioner to make and execute the deeds aforesaid, and to cancel, set aside and for naught hold both of the special commissioner’s- deeds above referred to as constituting a cloud upon the title of plaintiff, and to render judgment against the defendants, determining the title to said real estate, and quieting and confirming plaintiff’s title to an undivided one-ninth interest in and to all the above described real estate, and to enjoin the defendants, their officers, attorneys, agents, servants and employees from selling or disposing of said real estate, or otherwise dissipating or injuring the same, pending the final disposition of this cause; and that the court appoint some suitable person to take charge of said real estate as trustee or receiver, collect the rents and profits thereof, and pay the same over to this plaintiff and the other heirs of Isaac M. Davidson, deceased, as is provided by the terms of said will and for all other proper relief in the premises, plaintiff. will ever pray.”

The petition in this case charges that in September, 1901, a certain attorney filed a suit in the circuit court of Butler county asking for a construction of the will and a sale of the property; that in January, 1902, the petition was amended, the amended petition setting out the will, describing the real estate, and asking for a construction of the will and for a sale of the real estate. In that suit -Mary J. Davidson, three adult children, and four minor children, through Mary J. Davidson, appeared as plaintiffs in the petition, and [14]*14Rosa Belle Finley, nee Davidson, and others were defendants. The court in that case determined and ended the trust created by clause two of the will, decreed partition of the property and ordered it sold, one-half of the purchase price to be paid in cash, and the balance in one and two years, to be secured by deed, of trust, or all cash if the purchaser elected so to pay before approval of sale; that under this decree on October 12, 1903, the land was sold by the sheriff as a special commissioner and was bid in for $98,752 in the name of I. M. Davidson Real Estate and Investment Company; that report of sale was made by the commissioner and deed, immediately made to said company; that later a deed amendatory of the first was by said commissioner made and delivered; that the petition in said partition suit did not state a cause of action and that the judgment and all subsequent proceedings are void or voidable; that the order of partition violated the express terms of the will; that said judgment and subsequent proceedings were beyond the jurisdiction-of the court making the same; that all this was without the consent of plaintiff, then a minor; that the report of sale was never confirmed by the court; that at the date of sale and at the time the property was bid off by an attorney for the corporate defendant herein, said corporation had not been organized and no title did or could pass; that at the date of sale neither the circuit court nor the county court of said county was then in session; that the judge of the circuit court was absent from the county; that the record of the circuit court showing the said judge present and court in session was false and untrue; that the probable bidders knew these facts and would not bid; that it was generally understood that no title would pass owing to the irregularities aforesaid; that $200,000' worth of real estate was sold at a sacrifice for the sum named above as the selling price; that $98,752 was a shockingly inadequate price for the [15]*15property sold; that only two attorneys bid at sneh sale, and parties who would have bid agreed with them not to bid and complied with the agreements; that said sale was not made in accordance with the order, viz., one-half cash and the balance in one and two years, which was prejudicial. The petition names the parties to the agreement not to bid at the sale and then further charges that the purpose of the pretended sale was to get the property out of responsible hands, those of a trustee previously appointed by the court, and place it in the hands of an irresponsible corporation, so. that said estate might be dissipated and taken from the rightful owners; that the corporation defendant never had a dollar of its stock paid up; that said corporation has since been managing the property and trying to sell the same and denies that plaintiff has an interest therein.

All of the defendants except the corporation and Dalton and Lavin filed answers admitting the things charged in the petition.

The other defendants file lengthy and appropriate answers admitting some things in the petition, denying others and in addition plead certain matters of res adjudicata and estoppel. So far as necessary these will be mentioned and discussed in the course of the opinion. Eeplications in due form were filed.

The cause was taken by change of venue to Mississippi county where it was tried, a finding of facts made and a judgment entered. By the judgment, the chancellor, nisi, said:

“Wherefore, it is considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the attempted sale of the above described real property made on the 12th day of October, 1903, and report of said sale made by the special commissioner thereunder, the two deeds made by the special commissioner to the I. M. Davidson Eeal Estate & Investment Company, the record of the circuit court of Butler county, Missouri, approv[16]*16ing said sale and ordering said deeds made, be set aside, cancelled and for naught held.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 1143, 226 Mo. 1, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-i-m-davidson-real-estate-investment-co-mo-1910.