Heath v. Heath

222 S.W.2d 778, 359 Mo. 590, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 650
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1949
DocketNo. 41135.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 778 (Heath v. Heath) 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
Heath v. Heath, 222 S.W.2d 778, 359 Mo. 590, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 650 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Action in equity to set aside four warranty deeds to lot 40, Munroe Heights Addition, Kansas City; the trial chancellor denied the relief sought; dismissed plaintiff's petition; she appealed.

Appellant signed three of these deeds under the impression that they were, in effect, mortgages. Appellant is a widow, about 60 years old; not related to the Heath respondents. Prior to her present troubles she owned the house and lot in question; she and her deceased husband acquired the place about 1926. Her home was in Kansas City, but she had resided in Tucson, Arizona, where her husband died, and she owned a small place there; her mother lived in Mena, Polk County, Arkansas, and she was at Mena, taking care of her mother, when these troubles commenced. Respondent Simon N. Heath resided in Kansas City; he had a sister, Ova Standridge, who operated a beauty shop in Mena, Arkansas. Simon, his wife *Page 592 Cannie, and his sister Ova, owned some cosmetic formulas and, at Kansas City, toyed at least with the manufacture of cosmetics, and Ova did likewise at Mena. Appellant became acquainted with Ova at Mena; was at the beauty shop on occasions; finally decided that she wanted to get into the cosmetic business, and three of the deeds involved were executed by her in getting into this business.

The three deeds were executed at Mena, the first on an Arkansas printed form, June 1, 1944; this one was prepared by J.S. Kelly, a notary and abstracter at Mena. By this deed appellant, for the recited consideration of "one dollar and other valuable considerations", conveyed her house and lot to "S.N. Heath Products." Simon testified that appellant executed this deed "for the purpose of becoming a partner in the S.N. Heath Products"; that the S.N. Heath Products was "a label we were using that was made in Kansas City"; that S.N. Heath Products was owned by himself, his wife, his sister Ova, and appellant after the execution of this deed. He also testified that Ova had no interest in S.N. Heath Products. Simon ascertained that he could not borrow money on the house and lot with the title in S.N. Heath Products, so at his direction, appellant executed the second deed, dated June 24, 1944, on a Missouri printed form, signed and acknowledged before Notary Kelly in Mena, June 26, 1944; the consideration recited was "one dollar and other valuable consideration"; the grantees were Simon N. Heath and Birdie Heath, the appellant. In other words, appellant, by the second deed, conveyed the lot to Simon and herself. The second deed recites that it was "made to correct and supplement a previous deed by grantor herein dated June 1, 1944, to S.N. Heath Products; said S.N. Heath Products is a partnership comprising the grantees herein as sole partners". It will be noted that Simon testified that S.N. Heath Products, after appellant got in, was a partnership composed of himself, his wife, his sister, and appellant.

The second deed was unsatisfactory to Simon, so the third deed was executed. The third deed was on a Missouri printed form; dated June 24, 1944, same date as the second; the grantors were "Simon N. Heath and Cannie Heath, his wife, of Jackson County, Missouri, and Birdie Heath, a single woman, of Polk County, Arkansas, individually and as partners doing business as S.N. Heath Products" It will be noted that the personnel of the "S.N. Heath Products" changed again. The second and third deeds were prepared in Kansas City by Simon, or at his direction, and mailed to Mena; no grantee was named in the third deed when appellant signed and acknowledged it; Simon inserted, or caused to be inserted, after the deed was returned to him, the name of "Joseph L. Leone, a single man". The third deed was acknowledged by appellant before Notary Kelly in Mena on June 29th, and by Simon and his [780] wife in Kansas City on June 30th. On same day, June 30th, Leone conveyed the *Page 593 house and lot to Simon N. Heath. It is conceded that Leone was a strawman. Simon's explanation to appellant for wanting the second and third deeds was that the first deed on an Arkansas printed form was illegal. He testified: "I wrote and told her if she wanted to go into the business to make me a Missouri deed so it would be legal." The four deeds above mentioned are involved, but plaintiff in the prayer of her petition asked only that the "transfers to the said Simon N. Heath be vacated, set aside and held for nought". But the case was tried as if appellant were seeking to set aside the four deeds, and when the deeds were introduced in evidence it was stated by counsel, "We would like to offer in evidence the deeds which we seek to set aside".

Shortly after Simon got title to the house and lot by the deed from Leone he obtained a loan thereon for $2,000.00 from a building and Loan association in Kansas City; paid off a small loan that appellant had on the place; had $1665.35 remaining. After the loan was obtained Simon, his wife Cannie, his sister Ova, and appellant, under the partnership name of "Heath-R. Cosmetic Mfg. Co." opened for business in Mena in a building owned by the sister Ova. July 20, 1944, appellant and Simon and his wife signed, in Mena, a paper which we may term the stockexchange agreement, which agreement recited that appellant had "sold and traded her equity and part interest of the S.N. Heath Products property in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, which consisted of five shares valued at $5,000.00, for five shares in the Heath-R. Cosmetic Mfg. Co., valued at $5,000.00, located in Mena, Polk County, Arkansas". Simon testified in the Arkansas case (see infra) that appellant had an interest in her house and lot until the execution of the stock exchange agreement which was nearly a month after all the deeds were executed.

December 16, 1944, Simon, his wife, his sister, and appellant signed what was termed a "partnership agreement". The partnership name used was "The Heath Cosmetic Manufacturing Company". Simon testified that the Heath Cosmetic Manufacturing Company was the same partnership as the Heath-R. Cosmetic Mfg. Co. Ova and appellant did not get along too well, and the business, shortly before the execution of the written partnership agreement, was moved from Ova's building at 606 Mena Street to 715 Mena Street; the new location was small and only "one batch" of cosmetics was manufactured at the new location. In the written agreement Simon was named president, his wife secretary, Ova, the sister, treasurer, and appellant was to be factory manager. The interests of the partners were: Simon, 25 shares; his wife, 25 shares; the sister Ova, 25 shares; appellant, 5 shares; the same interests were held by the partners prior to the written agreement. The agreement recited that "there shall be 20 shares of the stock for sale to anyone who may desire to *Page 594 purchase the same". So far as appears no other "Birdie" appeared to purchase.

The Heath Cosmetic Manufacturing Company, in addition to "the manufacture, sale and distribution of cosmetics", handled women's ready to wear; Simon said that he invested the amount realized from the loan on the house and lot in question in women's ready to wear merchandise for the store in Mena; that the merchandise he purchased and shipped to the store in Mena amounted to $2143.75. It appears that in July, 1944, Simon purchased, for the Mena store, from a women's ready to wear company in Kansas City merchandise amounting to $1143.75, and it also appears that on July 22, 1944, Simon, his wife, and Ova, the sister, borrowed $1000.00 from a bank in Mena. It also appears that the store in Mena, sometime prior to December, 1944, sustained a fire loss and that Simon collected the insurance amounting to $1028.19.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 778, 359 Mo. 590, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-heath-mo-1949.