Hershey v. Horton

15 S.W.2d 801, 322 Mo. 484, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 613
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 29, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 801 (Hershey v. Horton) 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
Hershey v. Horton, 15 S.W.2d 801, 322 Mo. 484, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 613 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to cancel two certain deeds conveying 160 acres of land in Chariton County, for mental incapacity of the grantor and undue influence practiced upon her by the grantee. The grantor was Amanda Hershey, deceased; the grantee is her daughter Olive Hershey Horton, the appellant. The petition also prayed cancellation of a third deed by which the appellant subsequently transferred about thirty-two acres of the land to her brother, the defendant James M. Hershey — with notice of the foregoing, it is alleged — and for partition. The circuit court found for the plaintiffs on all the issues tendered as aforesaid, cancelled the deeds, and ordered partition by a sale of the real estate and a division of the proceeds.

The deceased left five children, a son, Walter Hershey, and a daughter, May Yancey, who were the plaintiffs and are respondents here; the daughter Olive Hershey Horton, who is the appealing defendant; and a daughter Mollie Wheeler and the son James M. Hershey, who were impleaded as defendants, but defaulted.

The land in dispute all belonged originally to Ezra Hershey, the father. He died testate in 1906, leaving 240 acres of land and about $2100 in personalty to his widow, the said Amanda Hershey, who was then seventy-two years old. For some five years thereafter she continued to live on the family homestead on the land, but it finally became necessary to have some one look after her. All of the children were married and had families of their own except the appellant, who was separated from her husband and lived in Kansas City, where she was working as a professional housekeeper. A family arrangement was made by which the appellant moved to the mother's home to take care of her.

The contract was that the appellant should care for the mother for the rest of the latter's life, and as compensation for her services receive eighty acres of the 240 acres, which was worth about $35 per acre according to the evidence. It appears from the record that the plan was thoroughly discussed by the parties before it was entered *Page 488 into. The appellant wanted the eighty acres deeded to her at the time; the mother objected to parting with the title during her life. Finally she made a deed, but a provision was incorporated in it that the appellant should not sell the land before the mother's death. This transaction occurred in 1911, and is not one of those attacked in the suit.

Things ran along smoothly until about five years later in 1915 or 1916, when the mother suffered a stroke of paralysis, which very materially impaired her health and in course of time rendered her practically helpless. During the last three or four years of her life she was bedridden, and much of the time had to be cared for like an infant. She could not raise her hands, or feed herself. She spoke with difficulty and it was hard to understand her. She died on May 29, 1921, when eighty-seven or eighty-eight years old. The two deeds which are assailed in this proceeding were executed by her on June 17, 1919, and November 17, 1920, respectively, the former a little less than two years before her death, and the latter a little more than six months. The expressed consideration in the first deed was love and affection; in the second, love and affection and one dollar; in the deed from the appellant to Judge Hershey, one dollar.

For some eleven years after Mrs. Hershey acquired title to her deceased husband's property in 1906 through his will, her business affairs were looked after by her son, the defendant Judge James M. Hershey. He assisted in administering on the father's estate, and out of the $2100 in personalty paid two legacies of $300 or $400 each to two of the girls who had not received their allotment of a distribution made before the father's death. He also paid the burial expenses and for a monument. This left about $1100 in the bank to the mother's credit when Judge Hershey turned over the handling of her business matters to the appellant, as will be later explained.

During this eleven-year period the farm yielded sufficient income to maintain itself and support the mother. Judge Hershey looked after renting the parts that were rented, made the leases and collected the rent, kept up the fences, got in the firewood, etc. But he would consult the mother in regard to the selection of tenants and on other matters, and would abide by her wishes. The bank account was carried in her name; she kept the pass book in her possession, and when he put money in the bank he would return the book to her custody.

In 1917, not long after the mother suffered the paralytic stroke, the appellant took over the management of her mother's affairs. It appears that the defendant Mollie Wheeler also had a hand in it. Judge Hershey was asked on the witness stand "who wanted it that way?" and he answered, "Mrs. Horton" (the appellant), "and finally my mother agreed to it, she wanted it that way, and whatever *Page 489 she wanted went, as far as I was concerned." At that time, he said, the mother had reached a stage where she would communicate her wants to him through the appellant. The appellant was the first one who spoke to him about making the change, and the matter was discussed on a certain occasion at the mother's home, when he, Mrs. Wheeler, the appellant, and the mother all were present. They gave him no particular reason, but one reason really was that he had objected to the appellant's spending too much money, particularly in paying $100 in settlement of what he thought was an unfounded claim against the estate of their deceased brother out West. After the appellant assumed charge, for almost the last two years of the mother's life Judge Hershey did not go out to the mother's home. "My room was more desired than my company" by the appellant particularly, he testified.

Now, about the two deeds. The testimony for appellant was that in 1919, some eight years after the contract and deed to the eighty acres had been made in 1911, the mother began to reflect on the fact that the farm dwelling house was not located on the eighty acres. It was on another forty acres. The mother did not want the appellant "to be kicked out of a home when she passed on" — the appellant stated in a letter to her brother, the plaintiff Walter Hershey, which the latter introduced in evidence — so she became desirous of conveying the forty acres to the appellant.

The appellant's sister Mollie Wheeler also testified on this point. She said the matter was talked over several times in her presence by the appellant and the mother. Finally the appellant wrote Mrs. Wheeler, who lived in Keytesville, and asked her to see Judge Drace and the county surveyor, Mr. Arrington, about making the deed. Both went out to the Hershey farm. Mr. Arrington furnished the description, which ran by metes and bounds, and Judge Drace prepared the deed — before conferring with Mrs. Hershey. The defendant Mollie Wheeler and a Mr. Latham also were present. Mrs. Hershey signed by mark and Messrs. Arrington and Latham signed as witnesses. The acknowledgment was taken by Judge Drace as notary public, and the instrument was filed for record the next day.

About eighteen months later the second deed was executed. It conveyed to the appellant the mother's entire 160 acres remaining after the aforesaid eighty acres of the original 240 acres had been deeded to the appellant pursuant to contract in 1911. This included the forty acres covered by the deed made in June, 1919; that tract was in both deeds.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 801, 322 Mo. 484, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hershey-v-horton-mo-1929.