Derby v. Donahoe

106 S.W. 632, 208 Mo. 684, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 632 (Derby v. Donahoe) 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
Derby v. Donahoe, 106 S.W. 632, 208 Mo. 684, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 273 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

FOX, P. J.

This cause is now pending in this court by appeal on the part of the plaintiff from a judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis dismissing her bill in equity and denying her the relief sought by such bill.

It is not essential to an understanding of the nature and character of this case to burden the opinion with a reproduction of the pleadings which present the issues upon which it was tried. It will suffice to say [688]*688that this is a proceeding in equity to set aside and cancel a certain quitclaim deed executed by plaintiff to defendant conveying her interest to certain property in the city of St. Louis, designated as the Montgomery Street property, on the ground that said deed was fraudulently procured, by false and fraudulent representations, and in its procurement a fraud was perpetrated upon the plaintiff. The answer interposed to this petition in effect sharply presents the issue as to the truth of the facts alleged in the petition and avers that the execution of the deed sought to be set aside was brought about by an amicable arrangement of the mother of the plaintiff and defendant’s deceased husband, and that such deed was voluntarily, without any representations made or inducements held out by the defendant, executed and delivered to the' defendant. The replication was a general denial of the new matter set up in the answer. The evidence introduced at the trial will further indicate the nature and character of the issues involved in this proceeding.

In October, 1904, this cause came on for trial of the issues presented in the pleadings. The trial as indicated from the issues presented, involved the investigation of a conveyance charged to have been fraudulently obtained and procured, and upon questions of that character great latitude is allowed in making the proof; therefore, the testimony as detailed by the witnesses, as disclosed by the record, is quite voluminous. While we have read in detail all of the testimony developed at the trial, we do not think it is essential, and shall not undertake in a statement of this cause, to give anything like a detailed statement of the testimony of witnesses testifying in the cause. We shall be content with a brief statement of the facts developed at the trial which the testimony tended to prove. Upon some of the material facts involved in [689]*689this controversy there is no conflict; as to others the testimony is somewhat conflicting.

The plaintiff in this case, Mrs. Honora Derby, is a daughter of Mrs. Kate Donahoe. Cornelius P. Donahoe was a son of Mrs. Kate Donahoe and a brother of the plaintiff in this action. Cornelius died August 31, 1900, leaving Mary A. Donahoe, his widow, who is the defendant in this cause. Cornelius P. Donahoe died seized of the property designated in the petition as the Montgomery street lot. Cornelius P. Dona-hoe left no children surviving him; it was, however, developed at the trial that Cornelius P. Donahoe and his wife, Mary A. Donahoe, now his widow and the defendant in this cause, in 1896 had in custody an orphan child named Bessie Williford. They procured this child from the Catholic Orphan Board. This child was, at the time they received it, three or four years old, and there was testimony tending to show that Cornelius P. Donahoe and his wife, the defendant in this cause, at the time they received the custody of the child, had to sign what Mrs. Mary A. Donahoe says they supposed was a deed of adoption, and she further states that she and her husband always supposed that they had legally adopted this child. There was testimony tending to show that the child continued in their custody and care as though it was their own and had been legally adopted, and Mrs. Mary A. Dona-hoe states that since the death of her husband she has retained the child in her custody and that it assumed the name of Donahoe and has been treated as her child and was recognized by the people generally as the child of Cornelius P. Donahoe and his wife. It is further shown by the evidence that in April, 1900, Mrs. Kate Donahoe, as heretofore stated the mother of this plaintiff, Mrs. Derby, and Cornelius P. Dona-hoe, the late husband of the defendant in this cause, [690]*690owned a certain lot of ground'in the city of St. Louis which is designated as the St. Louis Avenue lot. On the 28th day of April, in the year 1900', Mrs. Kate Donahoe executed a deed to the lot known as the St. Louis Avenue lot to her son, Cornelius P. Donahoe, and the plaintiff in this cause, Honora Derby. This deed was properly executed and duly acknowledged and was delivered to Cornelius P. Donahoe, who kept it among his papers, but it was never placed of record. In consummating the transaction relating to the real estate involved in this controversy it was arranged that the defendant, Mrs. Mary A. Donahoe, should send for Mr. E. 0. Dodge, an attorney-at-law, who was to attend to the defendant’s affairs in connection with the transactions between the defendant and her mother and the defendant and the plaintiff, Mrs. Derby. On September 5, 1900', Mr. Dodge, attorney for the defendant, went to1 the house occupied by Mrs. Kate Donahoe. "While at the house the defendant, Mary A. Donahoe, produced the deed of April 28, 1900, by which the mother, Mrs. Kate Donahoe, had conveyed to her deceased husband during his lifetime and to his sister, the plaintiff, Mrs. Derby, the St. Louis Avenue lot. This deed had not been recorded, and Mr. Dodge suggested that they ought to treat this deed as though it had never been made and tear it up, and that the mother, Mrs. Kate Donahoe, and Mrs. Derby, the plaintiff, should give a quitclaim deed to the defendant, Mary A. Donahoe, for the Montgomery Street lot, and the defendant should give Mrs. Derby a quitclaim deed for the St'. Louis Avenue lot, and the mother should by will give and devise whatever she had to her daughter, Mrs. Derby. It appears that at this meeting the question was discussed whether it was best for Mrs. Kate Donahoe- to make a deed or will, and it was concluded that a will was preferable. At this meeting on September 5, 1900, Mrs. Kate Donahoe executed a con[691]*691veyance to the defendant, Mary A. Donahoe, conveying her interest in the property described as the Montgomery Street lot. Mr. Dodge, the attorney, then left, taking along with him the deed of April 28, 1900, and was to come back in a few days with the other papers. The facts developed at the trial as to the meeting on September 5,1900, at which time Mrs. Kate Donahoe, the mother, executed and delivered her deed to the defendant, Mary A. Donahoe, indicate that the parties were all proceeding in the transactions between them upon the theory that Bessie Williford was the legally adopted child of Cornelius P. Donahoe, and the property designated as the Montgomery Street lot, of which he died seized, would go to her Subject to the rights of the widow and the payment of debts. Mr. E. C. Dodge in his testimony states that it was understood that Bessie Williford was the legally adopted child of Cornelius P. Donahoe and that the deed executed by Mrs. Kate Donahoe, on the 5th of September, was a mere matter of form and in fact, she had no title upon which to predicate a conveyance. On the following morning after the meeting on the 5th of September, 1900, at the home of Mrs. Kate Dona-hoe, which was the morning of the 6th of September, the defendant, Mary A. Donahoe, accompanied by her attorney, went to the probate court to administer upon the estate of Cornelius P. Donahoe, and made the usual affidavit that the heirs of the deceased1 Cornelius P. Donahoe were Mary A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 632, 208 Mo. 684, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derby-v-donahoe-mo-1907.