Hamilton v. Armstrong

25 S.W. 545, 120 Mo. 597, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 146
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 545 (Hamilton v. Armstrong) 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
Hamilton v. Armstrong, 25 S.W. 545, 120 Mo. 597, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 146 (Mo. 1894).

Opinions

Gantt, J.

This is a suit for the partition of certain real estate, which prior to his death John Hamilton owned in the city of St. Joseph as a tenant in common with Edward W. Hamilton, his brother, the plaintiff herein. The petition charges that the defendant, Eliza Armstrong, a sister, and the plaintiff, Edward Hamilton, are the sole heirs at law of John L. Hamilton, deceased; that plaintiff is seized of the "undivided three-fourths of the lands in controversy, and Mrs. Armstrong, of an undivided one-fourth therein. It then makes this averment:

“And plaintiff further states that the said defendant Susan Jane McLean and Finis R. McLean are husband and wife; that the said Susan J. McLean and Isabell Bates pretend to have some claim or interest in the partition of said above described premises, which in his lifetime belonged to the said John L. Hamilton, and claim to be in possession of certain conveyances ■alleged to have been executed by the said John, and which the plaintiff alleges were not the acts and deeds of said John L. Hamilton, and were and are null and void. Wherefore the plaintiff prays the order and ■decree of this court requiring the said defendants McLean and Bates to surrender, cancel and deliver up, as this court shall direct and appoint, the alleged deeds or conveyances so claimed by them from said John L. Hamilton; that the plaintiff and the defendant Eliza be declared to be tenants in common and seized in fee of said premises in the proportion above set forth; and that partition thereof be made between them, and that an undivided three-fourths of said premises be allotted and conveyed to the plaintiff, and an undivided one-fourth thereof allotted and conveyed to the defendant Eliza, and that commissioners be appointed to divide and allot said premises in shares above státed, so that [607]*607the plaintiff may severally hold and enjoy his allotment of said premises, and for all proper relief.”

To this petition the defendants filed a joint answer, in which they admitted that during the lifetime of John L. Hamilton, the plaintiff Edward and said John Hamilton were the owners of and tenants in common in equal shares of the real estate sought to be partitioned. They admit that plaintiff and Mrs. Eliza Armstrong, one of defendants, are the sole heirs at law of said John L. Hamilton, who died on the second day of August, 1889, leaving no wife, and no children or other descendants or father or mother. They admit that Susan J. McLean and Finis McLean, defendants, are husband and wife, and that Mrs. McLean and Mrs. Bates claim to own and are in possession of that portion of the real estate in suit, formerly owned by John L. Hamilton, by virtue of deeds of conveyance thereto by said John L. Hamilton to them in his lifetime and deny all other allegations in the petition.

Defendants then aver that “prior to the death of said John L. Hamilton, and on the twenty-ninth day of July, 1889, the said Hamilton made and executed his warranty deed wherein and whereby, for a good and valuable consideration therein named, he conveyed his said undivided one-half interest in and to the land in the petition described to the defendants, Susan J. McLean and Isabell A. Bates, and then and there delivered the same to said grantees, who thereafter and on the second day of August, 1889, and prior to the death of said John L. Hamilton, duly recorded the same in the office of the recorder of deeds of Buchanan county, Missouri, and the same now appears of record in said office in book 167, page 576; that in and by said deed all the undivided right, title and interest theretofore owned by said John L; Hamilton was conveyed to these defendants, Susan J. McLean and [608]*608Isabella A. Rates,” and conclude with a prayer that the said half may be allotted and set off to them.

To tbis answer the plaintiff, on September 23, 1890, filed a reply, which, omitting the captions and signatures thereto, is as follows: “Plaintiff, for reply to the new matter set forth in the answer of defendants, denies each and every allegation therein contained; and further answering, plaintiff reiterates and. charges as in his petition that the pretended deed referred to in the petition and set up in said answer, is not, and never' was, the act and deed of said John L. Hamilton, but the- semblance and pretense of such conveyance was procured by the solicitation and influence of defendants, unduly and fraudulently exerted over the said John L. Hamilton and at a time when the said JohnL. Hamilton was suffering and enfeebled from a severe illness, which, in a very short time, terminated his life, and when he was in the care and charge of said defendants as his nurses and attendants, and when he was incapable, by reason of such illness, to transact any business.”

The cause was tried at the September term, 1890, and resulted in a decree for plaintiff, awarding him his own undivided half of 'the real estate and one-half of the half formerly owned by John Hamilton and the other half of that half to Mrs. Armstrong, and canceling the deeds of John Hamilton to Mrs. Bates and Mrs. McLean, of date July 29, 1889, because “procured from him by said defendants by fraud and undue influence; and that said deed was null and void.”

This decree was rendered on the first day of December, 1890. On the next day the motion for new trial was filed. On the fifth of December, 1890, the motion for new trial was overruled. On the eighth of December the defendants filed their bill of exceptions, which were allowed, and the court on the same day [609]*609filed its findings of facts and conclusions of law, after the signing of the hill of exceptions. The defendants saved no exceptions to these findings and conclusions, and did not assign them as errors in their motion for á new trial, and it is now insisted that having failed tó do so, there is nothing here for review.

The facts covered by the testimony are few and not complicated, but the amount involved is considerable, and it has resulted in a legal struggle characterized by great" ability on both sides. The cause was heard in division one and the judgment of the circuit court was reversed with directions, but owing to a dissent of one of the members of that division, it was transferred to the court .in 'bcmc, where it has again been argued both orally and in brief.

The facts developed are substantially these: Edward Hamilton, the plaintiff, John Hamilton, the deceased and Mrs. Eliza Armstrong, one of the defendants, were brothers and sister. They each inherited from their father a considerable estate. John and Edwai’d, it seems, continued their father’s business and held the real estate involved in this suit as tenants in common. They both .resided in the old homestead in St. Joseph. Edward married, but John remained a bachelor until his death. In the year 1885, John L. Hamilton built two dwelling houses upon property owned exclusively by himself. These houses were very similar in structure and about the same cost. In 1886, John Hamilton ceased to live with his brother Edward and took up his abode in one of the houses he had built the year before. He invited his widowed and only sister, Mrs. Eliza Armstrong and her widowed daughter, Mrs. Isabell Bates and her child, a little girl, Lena, to become members of his household, and they resided with him as such, until his death in 1889. Mrs. McLean, the other niece, and her husband Finis [610]*610McLean lived in another portion of the city of St. Joseph.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 545, 120 Mo. 597, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-armstrong-mo-1894.