George v. Surkamp

76 S.W.2d 368, 336 Mo. 1, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 327
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 16, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 368 (George v. Surkamp) 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
George v. Surkamp, 76 S.W.2d 368, 336 Mo. 1, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 327 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

The plaintiff Mary George recovered a judgment against defendant Louis Leitner on February 16, 1926, for $7,500 in a personal injury action in the Circuit Court of the City of St. *Page 6 Louis. Being unable to collect such judgment on ordinary execution, she brought the present action in July, 1926, in that court for the purpose of subjecting to the payment of her judgment a promissory note for $11,000 secured by a deed of trust on certain improved real estate in St. Louis which had been and which the plaintiff claims was yet in truth and in fact the property of the judgment defendant. This note and deed of trust, dated July 1, 1925, was executed by Esther Fine in favor of defendant Edward Leitner, a son of defendant Louis Leitner, on the property in controversy, which formerly belonged to Louis Leitner, the judgment defendant, and which was conveyed by him without any consideration, pending the personal injury action, to his said son for the purpose of defeating the collection of the anticipated injury judgment. In furtherance of this same purpose, the son, Edward Leitner, conveyed the property to Esther Fine, who on the same date executed the note and deed of trust in question representing the purchase price. The defendant Surkamp is the trustee in this deed of trust, Esther Fine acting as the mere conduit of the legal title which was conveyed to her, and after executing the note and deed of trust conveyed the legal title subject thereto to the defendants Joseph Gordon and wife, who claim to own the equity of redemption.

Going a little more into detail, plaintiff Mary George, a married woman, in May, 1922, suffered severe personal injuries in consequence of the negligence of the defendant Louis Leitner, who then and for some time previous had owned the improved real estate in question. Suspecting that he would be sued for the injuries, Louis Leitner informed Mary George that he was willing to pay her medical expenses but that if she employed a lawyer and brought suit for damages, he would convey all his property to his son, then just of age, and would see to it that she never collected a cent. Some seven months later, in September, 1922, plaintiff Mary George did bring such damage suit and while the same was yet pending and before a trial, Louis Leitner in June, 1924, made good his threat to convey his property to his son and by deed of that date he and his wife conveyed this St. Louis property to his son, Edward Leitner, for the recited consideration of "One Dollar and love and affection." The real property in question was then worth some $19,000 and it is conceded that this conveyance to the son was a deed of gift. Defendant Louis Leitner testified that he did not convey the property to beat the anticipated judgment in the pending $10,000 damage suit but merely to carry out his cherished design to give this property to his son on his reaching manhood. As a sidelight, it may be mentioned that there was also then pending a damage suit by the husband of Mary George growing out of the injury to her, which later resulted in a judgment for $3,000 against defendant Louis Leitner. Immediately on receiving conveyance of this property, the son, Edward *Page 7 Leitner, conveyed the same to Esther Fine, who gave back the note for $11,000 and the deed of trust on this property securing the same. These three conveyances of this property were practically of the same date and were one transaction and, it is claimed, were for the real benefit of defendant Louis Leitner and made to cover up his property against the anticipated judgments. In February, 1926, the damage suit came to trial and resulted in a judgment for this plaintiff for $7,500 against defendant Louis Leitner. Coincident with this judgment, defendant Louis Leitner conveyed to his said son the property he owned as a summer home at Minoqua, Wisconsin, so that when plaintiff's judgment for damages became effective the defendant Louis Leitner had divested himself of all his property and the legal title was vested in his son, Edward Leitner, who held the St. Louis property in controversy by means of the deed of trust and secured note for $11,000. That these conveyances from Louis Leitner to his son, Edward Leitner, were made for the purpose of defeating the collection of the anticipated judgment of plaintiff against him for damages is too plain for argument and the trial court so found.

In order to collect her said damage judgment by following defendant's property into the hands of the fraudulent grantee, Edward Leitner, plaintiff Mary George, some six months later, in July, 1926, brought the present action making Louis Leitner, defendant in the damage suit, Edward Leitner, the fraudulent grantee of his property and holder of the deed of trust and secured note on same, H.B. Surkamp, trustee in said deed of trust, and Joseph Gordon, the holder of the legal title to the St. Louis property subject to such deed of trust, parties defendant, the object being to subject the secured note and the security on the real estate to the payment of plaintiff's judgment. In aid of this suit and to prevent any further transfer of the secured note and deed of trust or of the property securing same into the hands of a possible innocent holder, plaintiff, on bringing the present action in July, 1926, also filed a lispendens in the office of the Recorder of Deeds in St. Louis. As a counter move the defendant Louis Leitner in September, 1926, filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy in the United States Court of Wisconsin, being at that time a resident there. He stated in his bankruptcy proceeding that he owned no property and named this plaintiff, Mary George, as being his only creditor and her damage judgment as being his only indebtedness. C.M. Whitmore was appointed and qualified as his trustee in bankruptcy. The referee in bankruptcy, on becoming informed as to the transfer of his property by the bankrupt to his son, as we have stated, ordered the trustee in bankruptcy to take any proper steps necessary to recover for the bankrupt estate any property fraudulently conveyed by the bankrupt. Thereupon such trustee in bankruptcy, C.M. Whitmore, applied for and was granted *Page 8 permission to intervene as a party plaintiff in the present action and by leave of court he filed an intervening petition based on much the same allegations as contained in the petition of Mary George and seeking much the same relief. The defendants Louis Leitner and Edward Leitner, while filing an answer and giving evidence in the case, seem to be somewhat indifferent as to the result of the present litigation and they are not represented in this court. The defendants Gordon and wife claim no more than that they own the real estate in controversy in good faith, subject, however, to the deed of trust for $11,000 and unpaid interest thereon, and indicate a willingness to pay same to whomsoever the court may direct.

The real controversy in the present suit was brought about by the action of Dr. Thomas G. Torpy of Minoqua, Wisconsin, the Lafayette South Side Bank Trust Company of St. Louis, and Benj. G. Brinkman, a director of such bank, in asking and being allowed without objection to intervene and become parties defendant in this action as claimants of full ownership or at least a substantial interest in the secured note for $11,000 and the deed of trust on the St. Louis property securing the same. By this intervening petition, or rather answer, it was alleged that in January, 1926, while the damage suit of plaintiff against defendant Louis Leitner was pending, but shortly before plaintiff secured her judgment in damages, Dr. Thomas G. Torpy, for value and in good faith, purchased from Edward Leitner, owner of the same, the said note for $11,000 secured by the deed of trust on the St.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.2d 368, 336 Mo. 1, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-surkamp-mo-1934.