Dent v. Dent

166 S.W.2d 582, 350 Mo. 560, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 10, 1942
DocketNo. 38138.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 582 (Dent v. Dent) 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
Dent v. Dent, 166 S.W.2d 582, 350 Mo. 560, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 394 (Mo. 1942).

Opinions

Action to set aside two deeds to about 100 acres of land in Pike County, and to cancel a deed of trust on the land and to determine title. The cause was filed in Pike County, but went on change of venue to the Hannibal Court of Common Pleas, where the finding and judgment went against plaintiffs and in favor of defendants in plaintiffs' cause to set aside and to cancel. And the court found that defendants John and Bonnie B. Dent were the owners of "a life estate in the real estate" involved, and that these defendants had a homestead in said land. Also, the court found for the defendants John and Bonnie B. Dent on a cross complaint whereby a money judgment was asked against plaintiffs. Plaintiffs appealed.

[1] Respondents, defendants below, have filed motion to dismiss the appeal because of alleged failure to comply with our rules 11, 12 and 13, pertaining to the preparation, etc., of abstracts. Also, it is claimed that the brief of appellants does not comply with paragraph 2 of rule 15, pertaining to statement in numerical order of points relied on, etc., The motion was taken with the case. The abstract and brief may not be worthy of recommendation as a model, but we do not think they are such as to justify dismissal of an appeal. The motion to dismiss is overruled.

Plaintiffs are husband and wife and reside at Burlington, Iowa, and defendants John and Bonnie B. Dent are husband and wife and reside in Pike County, Missouri. Defendant Donald J. Lampson is a son of Bonnie B. Dent by a former marriage, and defendant Riefesel is the beneficiary in the deed of trust involved. Plaintiff W.H. Dent and defendant John Dent are cousins.

July 28, 1931, for borrowed money, defendant John Dent gave his note, dated at Burlington, Iowa, for $200.00, to plaintiff Celia[584] Dent. The note was due "on or before one year after date." August 31, 1931, for borrowed money, defendant John Dent gave his note, dated at Louisiana, Missouri, and for $200.00, to plaintiff W.H. Dent. This note was due "one year after date", and was secured by a chattel mortgage on houshold furniture, rugs, etc. January 1, 1933, defendant John Dent gave his note for $475.00, due one year after *Page 565 date, to plaintiffs W.H. and Celia Dent. Plaintiffs say that the consideration for the $475.00 note was the balance due on the two $200 notes, and was a renewal of both those notes. Defendant John Dent says that the $475.00 note was for additional borrowed money and had no connection with and was not a renewal of the two $200 notes. We might say that defendants John and Bonnie B. Dent were married subsequent, as we understand, to the execution of these notes.

July 9, 1932, and prior, the land in question was owned by Rebecca M. Fleece, mother of defendant John Dent. On the date mentioned, Mrs. Fleece and her husband, James G. Fleece, by "deed of gift" conveyed the land to defendant John Dent "for and during his natural" life, remainder in fee to Carl E. Dent and Ruth Dent, children of defendant John Dent, "subject only to the life estate herein reserved in favor of" the grantors. Rebecca M. Fleece died April 2, 1937, and her husband, James G. Fleece, and stepfather of defendant John Dent, died October 24, 1938. Thereafter, defendant John Dent and his present wife occupied the land as a homestead.

April 3, 1939, defendant John Dent, by quitclaim and in consideration of "one dollars and other valuable consideration", conveyed an "undivided one half interest" in the land involved to defendant Donald J. Lampson. And on same day, Lampson, by quitclaim and in consideration of "one dollar and other valuable considerations" conveyed the interest he received to defendant Bonnie B. Dent, his mother. April 14, 1939, the defendant Dents executed the deed of trust on the land to defendant Riefesel to secure their note for $260 dated April 14, 1939, and due "on or before one year after date."

October 9, 1939, plaintiffs obtained judgment against defendant John Dent in the sum of $648.21, in the Pike County circuit court, on the $475.00 note. Execution was issued and the land involved here was levied upon and advertised for sale under the execution. Prior to the date of sale, defendant John Dent filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and the sale was not had. In the bankruptcy court defendant John Dent claimed the land as a homestead and the referee found "that the value of the interest of the bankrupt in the real estate in which bankrupt claims homestead" was less than $1500, and that at the time of filing the petition in bankruptcy the land was occupied by John Dent and family as a homestead, and it was ordered that the bankrupt "take and hold as his homestead exemption his life estate" in the land.

On February 15, 1940, on petition of plaintiffs in the present case, to be permitted to proceed on any remedy they might have in the circuit court, the referee in bankruptcy ordered "they (plaintiffs here) be authorized to proceed with any remedy that they may have on their cause of action or judgment in the circuit court of Pike County, Missouri, against" the land involved here, "without prejudice from the adjudication of bankruptcy." *Page 566

After plaintiffs were remanded to the circuit court for whatever remedy they had on their judgment against defendant John Dent, and on April 11, 1940, execution was again issued on the judgment. Under this execution the land involved was levied upon, advertised for sale, and on May 7, 1940, was sold at public sale to plaintiffs on a bid of $500. On the same day the sheriff executed and delivered his deed, and on the next day, May 8, 1940, this cause was filed.

We might here advert to the answers. Originally, plaintiffs' petition was in two counts. Count one was to determine title and count two was in ejectment. Plaintiffs dismissed the ejectment count and filed an amended petition, the one upon which the cause was tried, asking that the quitclaim deeds respectively to defendants Lampson and Bonnie B Dent, supra, be set aside, and that the deed of trust to defendant Riefesel be cancelled as above stated. Also, the amended petition asked determination of title.

Defendants Lampson and Bonnie B. Dent answered separately by a general denial. Prior to the filing of the cause, defendant Riefesel had endorsed his note to defendant Lampson, and for his separate answer filed a disclaimer of interest in the land.

Defendant John Dent, in his separate answer, denied generally, claimed that the [585] land was his homestead and was not, therefore, subject to sale under the execution. He pleaded also the order of the bankruptcy court finding that the land was his homestead, as being res adjudicata on the question of homestead.

In the cross complaint for a money judgment against plaintiffs, defendant John Dent alleges that plaintiffs, through their agent, Cletus Love, in 1940, "did with force and arms, maliciously, wrongfully and unlawfully enter" upon the land involved and take therefrom 3000 bushels of corn of the value of 75 cents per bushel, and pastures, etc. of the value of $500. That in 1941 (trial commenced September 29, 1941) plaintiffs, through their agent, Love, have 4000 bushels of corn "in their possession and under their control raised on the farm, of the value of 75 cents per bushels, and also some 15 acres of soy beans, being about 500 bushels of the value of $2 per bushel, together with all the pasture lands and other land subject to cultivation upon said farm of the value of $500 for the year 1941."

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 582, 350 Mo. 560, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dent-v-dent-mo-1942.