Gilsey v. Gilsey

201 S.W. 588, 198 Mo. App. 505, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 26
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 588 (Gilsey v. Gilsey) 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
Gilsey v. Gilsey, 201 S.W. 588, 198 Mo. App. 505, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 26 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

Plaintiff and defendant were married in October, 1905, by, common-law contract. Finding that they could not live together they, on the 5th of March, 1914, entered into an agreement of separation and settlement, wherein it was recited that as it was “impossible for them to continue to live together as man and wife,” it was agreed therein they would. separate, and that plaintiff would “accept the sum of five thousand dollars in full settlement of all property rights and dower interest in and to all sums of money and interests' in any and all personal properties, real estate, stocks and bonds that may be due” from defendant to plaintiff “by law or contract, is hereby settled in full.”

On the 23rd of December, 1914, plaintiff filed the present action for divorce and alimony. Defendant made answer in which he pleaded the contract, claiming that he had complied therewith and that he was thereby released from any obligation for alimony. Plaintiff filed a reply [507]*507to such answer in which she charged that the contract was procured from her by fraud and duress and that she was therefore not bound by its terms; but she did not plead a return, or offer to return, what she received from 'defendant.

The trial court granted plaintiff a decree of divorce in which it allowed plaintiff three thousand dollars alimony and two hundred dollars attorney’s fee, and refused to consider the contract aforesaid, on the ground that defendant had not properly pleaded it; and held that even if the contract were properly pleaded, it did not relieve defendant from his obligation to pay alimony.

Defendant acquiesed in the decree for divorce but appealed from the allowance of alimony and attorney’s fee, on the ground that the contract should be considered and held to bar alimony. The ease will be found reported in 195 Mo. App. 407.

We there held; in an opinion by Bland, J., that considering that the reply to defendant’s answer took issue on the contract and pleaded that it was procured by. fraud and duress, it was not correct to say that it was out of the case as not being properly pleaded. It was further held, contrary to the view of the trial court, that if the contract had not been procured by fraud and duress, it was a bar to alimony. The judgment was therefore reversed and the cause remanded that the issue made on the procurement of the contract might* be tried, and if found to have been fraudulently obtained, alimony was to be allowed, but if there had been no fraud or duress, then alimony was barred.

The case came on again in the trial court when defendant filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings ; that is, for judgment against alimony and attorney’s fee. The motion was sustained on the ground that plaintiff had not pleaded in the reply that she had returned, or offered to return, the five thousand dollars received under the contract she sought to repudiate for fraud. Plaintiff thereupon appealed to this court.

Plaintiff has assigned two principal grounds for reversal of the judgment. First: That this court in re[508]*508versing the judgment and remanding the cause, ordered a new trial on the issue of fraud and duress in procuring the contract, and therefore the trial court had no other power or jurisdiction and should not have entertained defendant’s motion for judgment further than to have overruled it.

Second: That if the' contract was procured by defendant through fraud and duress, plaintiff was not required to tender back the sums received under the contract, for the reason that a “fiduciary relationship” existed between the parties. And that it is not necessary to tender hack the amount received under a contract where the party committing the’ fraud owed the other party more than the amount which could be tendered. And that the rule requiring tender does not apply to equity eases, where the prayer offers to do equity, or submit to such orders as the court might make. ■

And, lastly, that the question, of tender had nothing to do with attorney’s fees, an issue said to be left in the case regardless of alimony.

It is true, as stated by plaintiff, that where an appelate court reverses a judgment and remands the cause, with specific directions, those directions must be complied with, and if such directions dispose of the case, that ends the matter in controversy. [Rees v. McDaniel, 131 Mo. 681.]

But we think the opinion on the hearing when the the case was here before does not give any directions. It is true that'we referred to another trial on the question of fraud by merely assuming it would be necessary, in the state of the case as made by our opinion, to have another trial. But it was not intended, nor did we cut off any right which the • defendant might have arising out of the state of the pleadings. Nothing of that nature was suggested.

Nor do we think that there was any such “fiduciary” relation existing between these parties at the date of the contract that would relieve either, in an action át law, of the performance of any duty which is requisite to the right to assert a cause of action. It was said by the [509]*509Court of Errors and Appeals of New Jersey in deciding a case involving an antenuptial contract that the “husband, by his will, devised to the trustee named in the marriage settlement, and for her benefit, the sum of $5000 provided in that instrument. Of that amount it was proved that the trustee has paid over to the appellant $500. This $500 she accepted from him, and still, retains. It is entirely settled that a party to a contract cannot, at. one and the same time, repudiate it and retain a benefit • from its partial execution. In order to entitle him to rescind he must first restore what he has received under the contract, and thus put the other party to the agreement in his original position. [Trenton Passenger Railway Co. v. Wilson, 11 Dick. Ch. Rep. 783; Byard v. Holmes, 4 Vr. 119; Behring v. Somerville, 34 Vr. 572.] This the appellant has not done, and consequently does not stand in a position which entitles her to an annullment of the contract, even if .it be true, as she alleges, that she was induced to enter into it by fraud on the part of her husband.” [Russell v. Russell, 63 N. J. Eq. 282, 284.]

Nor do we think the rule which exempts one from the duty of tender where the party to whom the tender is to be made already owes the other more than the amount claimed shpuld be tendered (Girard v. Wheel Co., 123 Mo. 358; Goodson v. Masonic Assn., 91 Mo. App. 339, 352; Kingman-Moore Implement Co. v. Ellis, 125 Mo. App. 692) has application to this case; since here it is not known ’that defendant owed plaintiff more alimony (an unliquidated sum) than she got on the contract of settlement.

The point made that this is a case in equity would more seriously affect the defendant than those we have referred to if we believed it belonged to that branch of jurisprudence. For it seems in a case in equity where the party offers to do equity and submit to, and perform, such orders as the court might make as a condition to the relief he seeks, he need'not make a tender before, or along with the bringing of the action. [Whelan v. Reilley, 61 Mo. 565, 569; Paquin v. Milliken, 163 Mo. [510]*51079; Haydon v. Railroad, 222 Mo. 126.] In other words, in a law ease, tender on the face of the case made, is a requisite to its maintenance; hut in equity if. relief is ashed on any conditions which the court may prescribe, thus putting it in the power of the chancellor to restore the status quo

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201 S.W. 588, 198 Mo. App. 505, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilsey-v-gilsey-moctapp-1918.