Denvir v. Crowe

9 S.W.2d 957, 321 Mo. 212
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 6, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 S.W.2d 957 (Denvir v. Crowe) 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
Denvir v. Crowe, 9 S.W.2d 957, 321 Mo. 212 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This action was instituted December 29, 1922, by the respondent, formerly Mrs. Roscoe R.S. Parsons, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, for damages for the conversion of an Aeolian pipe organ, the damages being laid at $10,000. The answer is a general denial. A trial to the court without a jury resulted in a finding and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $8000, and defendant appealed.

The evidence is in substance as follows:

Mr. C.P. Parsons, actively connected with the St. Joseph Lead Company, had lived with his family in a large brick residence at Riverside, Jefferson County, Missouri. He bought and installed the organ in this building in 1906. The price paid was $6000. The instrument consists of the organ proper and the console, which is the case around the keyboard. The console is attached to the keyboard by two screws. A window in the outside wall of the music room was taken out, a part of the wall removed, a false jam put in, and a room, nine by ten feet inside measurement, was built of concrete blocks on the outside of and against the wall. The organ was installed in this concrete room and rests on the foundation. It is not secured or nailed down. The pipes of the organ stand in racks upon what is known as the chestwork, made of wood, which is fastened to the foundation frames upon the floor. In front of the organ is a grill work attached to the building. It is no part of the organ. The keyboard is in the music room.

Mr. Parsons died, testate, in 1910, survived by his widow, two sons and three daughters. He made certain specific bequests, leaving the residue of his estate to his widow and his two sons Roscoe and Gerard and to the survivors or survivor of them, as trustees. The trustees were to pay the net income to his wife, Jane E. Parsons, during her life and make distribution of the estate at her death. They were required to divide the estate into "as many equal portions as there are children or descendants (or husbands or wives) of then deceased children living at the time of distribution; the descendants or wife of one of my said children, if then deceased, being counted in place of their deceased parent."

The trustees were empowered to make division in kind or to sell and convert into cash or to divide partly in cash and partly in kind, and to place a value on any asset for the purpose of such division, and all divisions as made by the trustees shall be final and conclusive upon the beneficiaries.

Mrs. Parsons died April 29, 1915. Of the three daughters, one, Jessie H. Parsons, married Ben Blewett and died in 1914. Mr. Blewett died before the trial of this case. They had no children. The other daughters married and they and their husbands were living at *Page 217 the time of the trial. One of the sons, Roscoe Parsons, plaintiff's husband, died testate on August 27, 1915, four months after his mother's death. They had one child, Frances, who died in January, 1916, aged seven years. The other son, Gerard S. Parsons, who was living in January, 1916, died before this case was tried. Roscoe Parsons, by his will duly probated, after mentioning his daughter, devised his property to his widow, the plaintiff in this case.

There were numerous family meetings and discussions relative to the distribution or partition of the estate. Finally a meeting was called by Gerard S. Parsons, the surviving trustee, and held in January, 1916, to determine whether certain of the beneficiaries should buy the Riverside property and to distribute the goods and chattels at Riverside. It was agreed that the organ should go to Mrs. Roscoe Parsons, as appears by a memorandum made at the time, and the Riverside property should be conveyed to Mrs. Mabel Parsons Knapp, Mrs. Roscoe Parsons and Ben Blewett. Pursuant to this conclusion a few days later, on February 5, 1916, Gerard Parsons, the surviving trustee, executed a deed (plaintiff's Exhibit B) conveying the Riverside property to Mrs. Mabel Parsons Knapp, Mrs. Frances Parsons and Ben Blewett, with apt references to the powers contained in the will of the testator. The deed contains the following recital:

"The improvements located upon the property hereby conveyed consist of one (1) four-story brick residence at Riverside, Missouri, it being intended to convey not only the real estate hereinbefore described but also the horses, cows and other live stock and chattels constituting the entire equipment of said Riverside property, but not including the household furniture, fixtures and other equipment which have heretofore been divided by voluntary partition and agreement between all of the beneficiaries of said trust."

On July 1, 1916, Mabel Parsons Knapp, Frances Parsons and Ben Blewett, the grantees in plaintiff's Exhibit B, conveyed the Riverside property by warranty deed (plaintiff's Exhibit C) to J.D. DeBuchananne and Richard Francis, with the following recitations:

". . . except the pipe organ now installed in the brick residence located upon said property at Riverside . . . It is understood and agreed that the pipe organ aforesaid installed in the brick residence at Riverside is and shall remain the property of Frances V.H. Parsons, one of the parties of the first part, and the parties of the second part, by accepting this deed, covenant and agree that said Frances V.H. Parsons, her successors and assigns, shall have the right to enter upon said premises and to take possession of and remove said organ," etc.

The defendant read in evidence (defendant's Exhibit 3) a warranty deed dated July 31, 1917, from the grantees, J.D. DeBuchananne *Page 218 and Richard Francis, conveying the said Riverside property to National Farm School Vocational Training Institute, with recitations excepting the organ in the brick residence and reserving plaintiff's right to enter and remove the organ, as recited in plaintiff's Exhibit C. This grantee conveyed the Riverside property by warranty deed dated January 24, 1918 (defendant's Exhibit 5) from Richard Francis to National Farm School Vocational Training Institute, conveying said Riverside property "together with all improvements except pipe organ now installed in the brick residence," etc.

Defendant also read in evidence (defendant's Exhibit 6) a quit-claim deed dated May 31, 1919, executed by National Farm School Vocational Training Institute, conveying said Riverside property to Quick Payment Old Line Insurance Company, without exceptions. This last-named grantee conveyed the property to Richard Francis by warranty deed, dated July 3, 1919 (defendant's Exhibit 7), "together with all improvements thereon except pipe organ now installed in the brick residence," etc.

Richard Francis negotiated a sale of this property to the defendant S.H. Crowe, and tendered him a warranty deed therefor which excepted the pipe organ from the conveyance. All the foregoing deeds had been promptly filed and recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds, and there is substantial evidence that Crowe had actual notice of the exception of the organ and plaintiff's reserved right to enter the residence and remove the organ as recited in the above mentioned conveyances, before he paid for the property. Crowe refused the deed so tendered and thereupon Francis executed and delivered to him a warranty deed (defendant's Exhibit 8), dated August 9, 1919, conveying said Riverside property to Crowe without exception or reservation as to the organ.

The plaintiff was out of the State at the time of this conveyance and on learning that the defendant was asserting some claim to the organ, instructed her attorney to demand it from Mr. Crowe. This was done. The defendant, in a letter to plaintiff's attorney, refused to let her have the organ, saying: "I have a warranty deed . . . with no exceptions. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W.2d 957, 321 Mo. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denvir-v-crowe-mo-1928.