Glascock v. Glascock

117 S.W. 67, 217 Mo. 362, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 67 (Glascock v. Glascock) 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
Glascock v. Glascock, 117 S.W. 67, 217 Mo. 362, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 282 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is a suit in equity by the widow and minor son of Dr. L. O. Glascock, deceased, against Melvin Glascock and G. M. Glascock, his brothers, to have certain deeds and conveyances executed by her deceased husband and herself declared fraudulent and void on account of the alleged fraudulent acts of the defendants and on account of duress by threats, and to divest the title out of the defendant Melvin Glas-cock in and to certain real estate and vest the same in plaintiffs.

The petition alleges that said L. O. Glascock and plaintiff Gillie were at the time of his death husband and wife and the plaintiff Emmet their only son, and [366]*366that at that time Doctor Glascock and the plaintiff Gillie were the owners in fee of all of lots numbered 1, 4 and 6 and out-lot 3 in block 26, and of lot numbered 10' in block 2 of Deal & Boughton’s addition to the city of Dexter, and lot numbered 1 of the northwest quarter of section 4, and all of the land west of Bess Slough in the northwest corner of section 3, all in township' 24, range 11, and all in Stoddard county, Missouri. That the plaintiff, Gillie Glascock, was the owner in her own right of all of lots one, four and six in block 26, in the city of Dexter, and that plaintiff earned money by her separate labor and from time to time furnished her said husband sums of money; that the said L. O. Glascock was a practicing physician and earned good money, and that their joint means purchased their property; that the above real estate of the plaintiffs and the property purchased by the said L. O. Glascock by and with the means aforesaid was of the value of $4,500, and that the same was fully paid for and free of all incumbrances; that about and prior to 1895, Doctor Glascock began do lose his mind and was finally adjudged insane and incapable of transacting business and confined' in the insane asylum at Pulton on the 17th of November, 1901, where he died on June 17th, 1903. It is further alleged that when Doctor Glascock began to lose his mind, he became dangerous and threatening towards the plaintiff Gillie, and he seemed to be seized with an unnatural design to strip the plaintiffs of their property, and bestow it upon the brother, Melvin Glascock, and when his wife remonstrated with him, he said to her, “You will sign all papers I want you to or I will kill you. ” It is then alleged that Doctor Glascock colluded with the defendant Melvin to enable the latter to obtain deeds of conveyance of all the property of the plaintiff Gillie and the doctor. The petition then alleges specifically that in pursuance of the said collusion and design on November 27, 1895, Melvin Glascock came from [367]*367Tennessee to Missouri, and soon after a conference with Doctor Glascock, Doctor Glascock executed a warranty deed conveying lot ten in block 2 of Deal & Boughton’s addition to the city of Dexter to the defendant Melvin for the alleged consideration of three hundred dollars, and represented the same to be a mortgage to secure a certain sum of money; that plaintiff Gillie refused to sign and execute the same and thereupon the doctor declared and threatened that if she did not sign and execute the same he’ would kill her; that under fear of this threat she executed the said deed, which she afterwards learned was a warranty deed', for which she received no consideration, and that the same was procured by duress for the purpose of investing the title in Melvin.

It is then alleged that on November 27, 1895, by like fraudulent representations and by like means and the same threats and without consideration another warranty deed was procured from Doctor Glascock and plaintiff Gillie to Melvin conveying lot numberéd 1 of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 24, range 11, for the pretended consideration of five hundred dollars.

That on July 8, 1897, by the same means of duress, a warranty deed was obtained from the plaintiff Gillie directly to her husband, Dr. L. O. Glascock, for the pretended consideration of one dollar, "which was never paid, purporting to convey all of lots numbered 1, 4 and 6 in block 26, in the city of Dexter.

For practically the same causes the following other conveyances were assailed in the bill: A deed of trust from plaintiff Gillie to L. O. Glascock to Melvin Glascock dated November 8, 1897 conveying lots one, four and six and out-lot three in Dexter, and purporting to be given to secure a note of $725 due two years after date; a warranty deed from plaintiff Gillie and her husband to defendant G. M. Glascock of date December 10, 1900, and a deed of the same date from [368]*368G. M. Glascock to L. O. Glascock to lots one, four and six and out-lot three in block 26 in Dexter.

It is then alleged that at the time of Doctor Glascock’s death the premises including all west of Bess Slough in the northwest corner of lot two of the northwest quarter of section 3, township 24, range 11, and known as Mill property, was incumbered by a deed of trust of $125 and plaintiff Gillie desiring that the same should be sold, the defendant Melvin agreed to have it advertised and sold under the deed of trust and to buy it in for her, but instead of so doing, Melvin bought in the property in his own name for $25, and afterwards sold the same for f200, and never accounted for the overplus and appropriated to his own use the rents of the property after June 8, 1902.

It is then alleged that Doctor Glascock’s office, situated on lot one in Dexter, was insured and the premiums on this insurance were paid out of plaintiff Gillie’s money, and that this office has since burned and that the defendant Melvin was about to collect the.insurance. There is also a charge that the defendant Melvin has collected all the rents on lot one of the northwest quarter of section four and has never accounted for the same.

The answer of G. M. Glascock was a general denial.

Defendant Melvin admitted that he obtained the title to lot ten, block two, Deal & Boughton’s addition to Dexter, and to lot number one of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 24, range 11, by the deeds set out in plaintiff’s bill, and that on November 8, 1897, Dr. L. O. Glascock and plaintiff Gillie executed their joint promissory note to defendant for $725 and secured the same by their deed of trust on lots one, four and six and out-lot three, block 26, in Dexter. Further answering defendant Melvin stated that his dealings with the said L. O. and Gillie Glas-' cock in and about the property mentioned in the bill [369]*369were all in the utmost good faith on the part of the defendant and at the urgent request and solicitation of said L. O. and Gillie Glascock, and defendant paid the $800 mentioned in the two deeds of November 27, 1895, and also the $725 mentioned in the said deed of trust of November 8, 1897, and that since the execution of the deeds of November 27,1895, L. O. and Gillie Glascock have had possession of and collected all the rents on said lot in Dexter under an agreement that they would pay the taxes and keep up the insurance, which they failed to pay, and defendant was forced to pay the same, amounting to $53.18, and there was the same agreement as to lot one of the northwest quarter of section four, township 24, range 11, which they also failed to observe, whereby defendant was 'Compelled to pay $16.67 taxes on said land.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gordon and Vail v. Raymond
186 S.W.2d 849 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1945)
Coleman v. Crescent Insulated Wire & Cable Co.
168 S.W.2d 1060 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1943)
Thompson v. McCune
63 S.W.2d 41 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1933)
Evans v. Morris
136 S.W. 408 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 67, 217 Mo. 362, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glascock-v-glascock-mo-1909.