Gloeckner v. Kittlaus

91 S.W. 126, 192 Mo. 477
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 126 (Gloeckner v. Kittlaus) 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
Gloeckner v. Kittlaus, 91 S.W. 126, 192 Mo. 477 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a proceeding in equity to set aside a conveyance of fourteen and fifteen one-hundredths acres of land in St. Louis county, from the defendant Kittlaus to the defendant Wittich; and to declare the defendant Kittlaus a trustee for the plaintiff for an undivided five-sevenths interest in the land; and to charge the two-sevenths interest remaining .in Kittlaus with a lien for five-sevenths of $165, received by Kittlaus for the condemnation of one and fifteen one-[482]*482hundredths acres for a railroad right of way, and for a partition, and sale of the land, and a division of the proceeds among the parties, in the proportions stated. The trial court rendered a judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed.

the issues.

The petition alleges that in April, 1897, the plaintiff became the purchaser of the undivided interest of one Ponath, amounting to 17.382 acres in a larger tract of land in St. Louis county; that a partition suit was then pending against Ponath for the land, and that the plaintiff, on his own motion, was made a party to the suit; that by the decree in partition the plaintiff was awarded seventeen and three hundred and eighty-two one-thousandths acres, and the same was charged with the plaintiff’s portion of the costs in partition, amounting to $329.50; that the plaintiff was unable to pay said costs, and that the land was about to be sold to satisfy said costs; that desiring to save the land, the plaintiff induced the defendant Kittlaus to advance or loan him a sum of money sufficient to bid in the land, and in pursuance to that arrangement, entered into a written contract with the defendant on the 15th of April, 1898, which provides as follows:

“First. That at a certain sheriff’s sale, to take place on the 18th day of April, 1898, in the county of St. Louis, Missouri, of 17.382 acres, more or less, of land in said county under an execution against one Edward H. Ponath and others, the said Louis Kittlaus will put up and pay, if a joint bid hereinafter mentioned is successful, upon a joint bid by said Louis Gloeckner and said Kittlaus for such property so to be sold, the sum of $500 and no more; and that said Gloeckner will put up and pay the additional sum, if any, upon each joint bid.
‘ ‘ Second. That said Louis Gloeckner shall be the party to make such joint bid, and shall exercise his own [483]*483discretion in making and continuing such hid, but said Gloeckner shall make no bid at said sale for or with any person other than the said Kittlaus, or enter into any agreement providing for or effecting the same. .....t
‘ ‘ Third. If the j oint bid of said Gloeckner and said Kittlaus at said sale is successful, then the title to said property is to be transferred to them in the following proportions, to-wit, to Louis Gloeckner an undivided five-sevenths interest; to Louis Kittlaus an undivided two-sevenths interest.
“Fourth. Nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent said Louis Kittlaus from bidding at said sale, on and for his own and sole account, so long as any bidder or bidders other than or besides said Louis Gloeckner shall continue to make or offer any bid or bids.”

That thereafter on the 18th of April, 1898, said Kittlaus and plaintiff entered into a further agreement as follows:

“It is hereby agreed that if Louis Kittlaus buys at sheriff’s sale 17.382 acres on the 18th day of April, 1898, in the county of St. Louis, State of Missouri, for a sum of money exceeding five hundred dollars, he is to share with Louis Gloeckner as follows: If the land is bought by Louis Kittlaus for a sum between $501 to $700, he agrees to give Louis Gloeckner eight hundred dollars’ worth of same property. If land is bought for $701 to $1,000, he agrees to give Louis Gloeckner six hundred dollars ’ worth of property in land. ’ ’

The petition then alleges that under the agreement and modification of the agreement, aforesaid, it was agreed and mutually understood that Kittlaus should do all the bidding at said sale on the joint account of Kittlaus and the plaintiff, and that an undivided two-sevenths should be conveyed to Kittlaus as compensation for his advancement of such money, on any successful bid that he might make at said sale up to the sum of $500, and’ that the remaining five-sevenths [484]*484'should be conveyed to the plaintiff as representing his interest in the land exclusive of the $500 to be advanced by Kittlaus, and that in the event competitive bids should run over $500, or a minor part or portion of such land should be sold to any other bidder, then in such event said agreements between plaintiff and defendant were understood to preserve plaintiff’s title and interest in the land; that at said sale plaintiff and defendant were present; that plaintiff refrained from bidding on the land in pursuance to the said agreement with Kittlaus, and that Kittlaus bid in 15.30 acres of the land for the sum of $450, and was entitled to receive a deed for two-sevenths thereof, and the remaining five-sevenths were to be deeded to the plaintiff; that in violation of the agreements and understandings aforesaid, and with intent to cheat and defraud plaintiff, the defendant caused a deed to the whole of the 15.30' acres to be made to him, and has refused to* convey any part thereof to the plaintiff; that on the 22nd of January, 1900, Kittlaus received $165 from the condemnation proceeding of 1.15 acres of the land taken for a railroad right of way; that on the 14th of March, 1902, Kittlaus conveyed the land to the defendant Wittich for a pretended consideration of $1,200, but that said conveyance was actually without consideration, and was made pursuant to a conspiracy between Kittlaus and Wittich to defraud plaintiff, and that Wittich had knowledge of plaintiff’s rights in the premises.

The answer is a general denial, except as otherwise admitted in the special pleas. The special pleas admit the setting aside of the land to the plaintiff in the partition suit and the charging thereon of the costs stated, but allege that the interest so set apart to the plaintiff was subject to the interest of Ponath and Brueggemann in the land, and that said partnership* estate was insolvent, and that “the demands against the same entirely exhausted said interest and land; ’ ’ admit the execution of the first agreement of the 15th of April, but aver [485]

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 126, 192 Mo. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gloeckner-v-kittlaus-mo-1905.