Farmers & Merchants Bank v. Funk

92 S.W.2d 587, 338 Mo. 508, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 516
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 92 S.W.2d 587 (Farmers & Merchants Bank v. Funk) 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
Farmers & Merchants Bank v. Funk, 92 S.W.2d 587, 338 Mo. 508, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 516 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

This is an equity suit in two counts. The first count is a suit to try and determine title to an undivided one-sixth interest in a tract of approximately 134 acres of land in Jefferson County. The second count seeks a partition of the land. The issue of title on the first count is between plaintiff and defendant Katherine Funk, the title and ownership of the other five-sixth interest in the land not being in dispute. Defendant Katherine Funk alone answered. The cause went on a change of venue to the Circuit Court of Franklin County and the trial chancellor found the issues for defendant *Page 511 Katherine Funk and entered a decree declaring that plaintiff "has no right, title, interest or claim in the real estate described in" the petition, and that defendant Katherine Funk "is . . . the owner" of the undivided one-sixth interest therein in dispute. Plaintiff has appealed.

We first state the situation as shown by the uncontroverted facts. The tract of 134.84 acres of land is a farm known as the "Funk farm." It was owned by defendants, William A. Funk, Anna L. Brands, J.R. Funk, Katherine Funk, Nellie Funk, and Daisy Funk, brothers and sisters and the children and heirs of Christian Funk, deceased, who owned the land at the time of his death intestate. They owned the land as tenants in common, each having title to an undivided one-sixth interest therein. William A. Funk was indebted to plaintiff bank on notes aggregating $3500 secured by deeds of trust on certain real estate, which he owned, in the city of Festus. The undivided one-sixth interest in the "Funk farm" was the only real estate other than this property in Festus that William A. Funk owned. It seems the major part of his indebtedness to plaintiff bank secured by deeds of trust on the "city property" (so referred to in the evidence) was incurred in 1922. In addition to the indebtedness to the bank secured by the deeds of trust on the "city property" he was indebted to it on two unsecured notes in the principal amount respectively of $300 and $275. William A. Funk was called before a meeting of the board of directors of plaintiff bank on "the second Tuesday in May, 1932," and advised that it was the opinion of the directors that the "loan on the city property was not properly secured" and he was "asked to give additional security" and to give the bank a mortgage or deed of trust on his undivided one-sixth interest in the "Funk farm," which he refused to do stating that he "thought" the bank "had ample security." At this time William A. Funk was indebted to other creditors and one unsatisfied transcript judgment was outstanding against him. Shortly thereafter the plaintiff bank caused notice of foreclosure sale on the first deed of trust against the city property to be published. The notice fixed June 4, 1932, as the date of the foreclosure sale. On June 2, 1932, William A. Funk and wife, by quitclaim deed, executed and delivered of that date, conveyed his undivided one-sixth interest in the "Funk farm" to his sister, the defendant herein, Katherine Funk. The consideration was stated therein as: "One hundred dollars and other valuable considerations." This deed was filed for record on the next day, June 3, 1932. The foreclosure sale of the city property did not satisfy the debt, interests and costs, and on August 18, 1932, the bank commenced an action, in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, against William A. Funk seeking a deficiency judgment. A default judgment for $1043.83 was entered *Page 512 therein on September 15, 1932, and execution issued thereon April 18, 1933. The sheriff levied the execution upon an undivided one-sixth interest in the "Funk farm" as the property of William A. Funk. Such interest was offered for sale at the execution sale on May 13, 1933, and conveyed by sheriff's deed under execution to plaintiff bank upon its bid of $200. Thus the issue in the present suit arose. The plaintiff bank claims title to and ownership of the undivided one-sixth interest of William A. Funk in the land under the sheriff's deed to it and defendant Katherine Funk claims to be the owner of the same undivided one-sixth interest under the quitclaim deed of June 2, 1932, to her.

The object and purpose of this suit is to set aside and cancel the quitclaim deed of June 2, from William A. Funk and wife to his sister, defendant Katherine Funk. It is alleged in the first count of the petition that the deed "was executed . . . without consideration and in order to defraud the creditors of the said William A. Funk, particularly this plaintiff, . . . and was accepted by said defendant Katherine Funk to enable said defendant William A. Funk to defraud his said creditors and . . . said deed is therefore null, void and of no effect." This excerpt from the petition presents the issue — that of fraud or a fraudulent conveyance. The answer of defendant Katherine Funk is conventional. She claims to be the owner of an undivided one-sixth interest in the land "by reason of the quitclaim deed," etc., "and also another one-sixth interest by reason of having inherited the same from Christian Funk" and denies that plaintiff "has any right, title, interest or claim in and to said property."

[1] Plaintiff having charged fraud in the transaction rendering the quitclaim deed void the burden rested upon it to prove it. [Stahlhuth v. Nagle, 229 Mo. 570, 129 S.W. 687; Mansur-Tebbetts Imp. Co. v. Ritchie, 143 Mo. 587, 45 S.W. 634; Jones v. Nichols,280 Mo. 653, 216 S.W. 962; Gockel v. Gockel (Mo.), 66 S.W.2d 867; Gittings v. Jeffords, 292 Mo. 678, 239 S.W. 84.] And in such cases the plaintiff is required to make out his case by clear and convincing evidence. "While fraud may be inferred from facts and circumstances, it is never to be presumed without or against the evidence. And where the transaction under consideration may as well consist with honesty and fair dealing, as with a fraudulent purpose, it is to be referred to the better motive." [Jones v. Nichols, supra; Gittings v. Jeffords, supra.]

We come now to the evidence adduced on the part of plaintiff to sustain its charge that the quitclaim deed from William A. Funk to Katherine Funk was a voluntary conveyance, "without consideration," made with the intent "and in order to defraud the creditors" of William A. Funk and "accepted by defendant Katherine *Page 513 Funk" in furtherance of that purpose and intent. Plaintiff put in evidence, the quitclaim deed from William A. Funk to Katherine Funk; the files and judgment in its action for a deficiency judgment; the execution issued on the judgment with sheriff's return; and the notice of levy and the sheriff's deed under execution purporting to convey the undivided one-sixth interest of William A. Funk to plaintiff. Next plaintiff called as witnesses three of its officers and directors who testified, that William A. Funk was called before a meeting of the board of directors held the "second Tuesday in May, 1932;" that they demanded that he execute a deed of trust or mortgage to the bank on his undivided one-sixth interest in the "Funk farm" as additional security for the loan then secured by deeds of trust on his "`city property;" and that he refused to do so on the ground that he thought the bank had "ample security" for that indebtedness, as related, supra. These witnesses estimated the reasonable value of an undivided one-sixth interest in the land to be $1000. We note here that it appeared in evidence that William A. Funk's two unsecured notes to the bank, one for $300 and one for $275 were paid, apparently before he made the quitclaim deed to his sister Katherine.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 587, 338 Mo. 508, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-bank-v-funk-mo-1936.