Edlen v. Tweed

295 S.W.2d 397, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 184
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1956
Docket29528
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 295 S.W.2d 397 (Edlen v. Tweed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edlen v. Tweed, 295 S.W.2d 397, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 184 (Mo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

*400 HOUSER, Commissioner.

This is a proceeding for the discovery of assets under § 462.400. 1 On November 29, 1954 Mary E. Edlen, Administra-trix of the Estate of W. A. Tweed, Deceased, filed the statutory affidavit against her stepmother, Lucile Tweed, charging that the latter had concealed, embezzled and unlawfully withheld property, or the proceeds thereof, belonging to the estate, namely, 26 certain head of cattle, an autoi mobile, 500 bushels of corn, 20 bushels of wheat, 300 bales of hay, certain farm machinery, and a promissory note for $300. A citation issued and Lucile Tweed entered her appearance. Interrogatories were filed and answered. In her answer to the interrogatories Lucile Tweed admitted that the automobile, some horse-drawn machinery and the $300 note were individually owned by W. A. Tweed and that she had had them in her possession.or under her control after his death; denied that she still had any of the listed items in her possession or control; denied that she had disposed of any items which belonged to the estate of W. A. Tweed at the time of disposal; claimed that under an order of the probate court the estate was found to be no greater in amount than that to which she was entitled by law, and that the court directed her as widow “to take said estate as her own.” Admin-istratrix filed no reply to' the answer. These issues were tried before the Probate Court of Clark County which found that the above listed property belonged to the estate and ordered the party cited to deliver to administratrix all of said items “now remaining in her possession,” except the automobile. On appeal the circuit court, sitting without a jury, found that W. A. Tweed was the owner of the above listed property and the value of each item thereof at the time of the death of W. A. Tweed; that the party cited took possession and wrongfully withholds the property (except the automobile), or the proceeds thereof, from administratrix; and ordered the party cited to deliver the named items of property to administra-trix, or pay to her the ascertained value of the various items, and further ordered that “if none of said property is in the possession or control of said defendant, Lucile-Tweed, she shall pay to (adminis-tratrix) the sum of $6,058.33” (the total value of the several items as of the date of the death of W. A. Tweed). From that judgment the party cited has appealed to this court.

W. A. Tweed died intestate July 27, 1951, survived by his widow, Lucile, and three children by a predeceased wife. On August 11, 1951 Lucile Tweed was appointed Administratrix of the Estate of W. A. Tweed. On October 11, 1951 the probate court made an order dispensing with further administration and setting aside one automobile of the value of $1,-000 as the absolute property of Lucile Tweed upon her representation that she had ascertained and determined that the personal property of the estate consisted only of the automobile, of no greater value than the amount allowed by law as the absolute property of the widow. On February 2, 1953 the probate court set aside the order dispensing with administration, declared Lucile Tweed to be an improper person to act as administratrix and removed her as such, found reasonable grounds to believe that there were unad-ministered assets of the estate and appointed Mary E. Edlen, one of the children of W. A. Tweed, as administratrix.

To establish that W. A. Tweed owned the property in question at the time of his death administratrix introduced in evidence Plaintiff’s Exhibit A, a written document dated August 6, 1951, signed by Lucile Tweed and the three surviving Tweed children, by the express terms ■ of *401 which all of the parties signatory agreed .that the property in question was the personal property of W. A. Tweed. This document was drawn in a lawyer’s office in the presence and at the request of the widow and three children of W. A. Tweed, who told the lawyer that they had arrived at an agreement for the settling of their conflicting interests in the property and estate of W. A. Tweed and that they wanted him to write an agreement embodying the terms of their agreement. (It should be explained that Exhibit A, which fixed the rights of the four signatories at a one-fourth interest in the estate and property of W. A. Tweed and provided for a sale and division of the proceeds, was abandoned later and that neither party to this controversy now relies upon the agreement as determinative of any interest in the property). Exhibit A was introduced in evidence by admin-istratrix solely as an admission against interest by the party cited that the property belonged to W. A. Tweed. Adminis-tratrix also presented evidence that the above listed several items of personal property were located on the Tweed farm at the time of Tweed’s death and that the party cited lived on the farm and had possession of said personal property immediately after Tweed’s death. Evidence of the reasonable market value of each item of the property as of the time of Tweed’s death was given by a witness called by administratrix.

Lucile Tweed, who remained on the farm about five weeks after the death of her husband, conceded that at the time of his death and immediately thereafter the personal property in question was on the farm and in her possession, and that she had never turned over the property or the proceeds of any of the property to administratrix. She did not, however, testify whether she had disposed of or was still in possession of all or any part of the property. She established that she and W. A. Tweed carried a joint checking account in the Bank of Monticello. A banker testified that Mr. and Mrs. Tweed had borrowed money at the bank to buy livestock. On cross-examination he testified that W. A. Tweed alone signed the notes with which to raise money to buy cattle, and that Tweed himself paid off the notes after sales of cattle. Upon paying off the notes Tweed would deposit the balance in the joint account. Lucile Tweed testified that the cattle on the farm at the time of her husband’s death “had not been there long;” that they were purchased in southern Missouri and Arkansas and paid for by check on the joint bank account. Three checks, drawn by W. A. Tweed on the Bank of Monticello, dated March 21, 1951, April 18, 1951 and April 23, 1951, for $1,447.98, $523.31 and $2,-086.88, the first two of which were payable to Clark Sales Co. and the last of which was payable to Pocahontas Sales Co., respectively, were introduced in evidence.

Lucile Tweed testified that she was “forced” to sign Plaintiff’s Exhibit A; that although she was not threatened with bodily harm, one of the daughters did threaten that if she did not sign it the daughter would “never have anything more to do with her;” that she did not know her rights in the estate of her husband and had not been advised with reference thereto at the time she signed Exhibit A.

Administratrix produced rebuttal evidence that no such threats were made and that the conversation in the lawyer’s office was “in a friendly tone.”

Taking the position that all of the property now belongs to her by right of sur-vivorship as the surviving joint tenant, appellant makes the point that the findings and judgment of the circuit court are not supported by and are contrary to the law under the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W.2d 397, 1956 Mo. App. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edlen-v-tweed-moctapp-1956.