Hohenstreet v. Segelhorst

227 S.W. 80, 285 Mo. 507, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 20, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 80 (Hohenstreet v. Segelhorst) 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
Hohenstreet v. Segelhorst, 227 S.W. 80, 285 Mo. 507, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 183 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This is a suit to set aside two deeds to different tracts of land in Franklin County. The first deed is from Herman H. Hohenstreet and wife to August Segelhorst, the defendant. It was executed March 16, 1905, and purported, for a consideration of $100, to convey 160 acres therein described and all of the personal property of the grantor. The second deed is to Segelhorst from Hohenstreet, then a widower, his wife having died in the meantime. This deed was executed March 2, 1917, and purported to convey 120 acres therein described. There, was a judgment below for plaintiffs, from which defendant has appealed. The portions of these deeds varying from the conventional forms of conveyances and necessary to an understanding and determination of the matters at issue, will appear in the abstract of the pleadings or the statement of the facts following.

The petition was in two counts. After a general allegation as to the ownership in fee by Hohenstreet of the land described in each count and that he died intestate and that the plaintiffs aré Ms sole heirs at law, the first count alleges the invalidity of the deed of March 16, 1905, in that it is' testamentary in character and is not so foamed and executed as to effect a conveyance of real estate, in that it provides that for the care to be given the grantor and his wife during their lives and the payment of their burial expenses, but is not to take effect until after the death of the grantors.; that it is to be placed in the Recorder’s office at Union for safekeeping until after the death of the grantors; that it was never , delivered to the grantee and that he, without *513 the knowledge and consent of the grantors, cansed.it to be filed and recorded; that it was executed without consideration and was procured from the grantors by the grantee through fraud, covin and undue influence exercised by the latter upon the minds of the former; that during the years that have elapsed since the making of said deed the grantee has been collecting the rents and profits from said lands, amounting to many hundreds of dollars, and has converted the same to his own use, without in any manner accounting for same. The usual prayer follows that the deed be set aside and declared void, that defendant grantee be required to account for the rents, and for costs.

The second count alleges that at the time of the execution of the deed of March 2, 1917, to Segelhorst by Hohenstreet, who was then a widower, his wife having died after the execution of the first deed, the grantor did not have sufficient mental capacity to make a deed; that same was obtained from him through fraud and undue influence exercised over his mind by the grantee; that the grantor was at the time an old and infirm man, in his dotag’e and without sufficient mind to make and execute a deed and was then under the influence, control and domination of the grantee; that there was no adequate consideration for same, and that it was without consideration and void; that for several years the grantee has collected and converted to his own use the rents and profits from said land, amounting to hundreds of dollars, and has cut and caused to be cut from said land a large amount of valuable timber, without accounting to anyone therefor. It is prayed that said deed be, set aside and for naught held, and that the grantee be required to account for the rents and profits and for the timber taken from the land, for costs and for other and proper relief.

The answer admits the execution of the deeds and avers their validity. Adverse, continuous, etc., possession of the lands described in each of the counts of the *514 petition for more than ten years next before the commencement of this action and the consequent bar of the Statute of Limitations is pleaded, as well as the agreement for support of the grantor by the grantee as a consideration for the transfer.

Affirmative relief is asked in the answer to each count in the correction of errors in the description of the land in each deed and that the phraseology of the first deed, that “this deed and writing shall not take any effect until after the death of the said parties of the first part” be changed so as to read as follows: “And this deed and writing shall not be fully performed on the part of said party of the second part until after the death .of the said parties of the first part.” That the changes in descriptions of the land and the conditions under which the grantee was to take the property, as defined in the first deed, are alleged to be’ necessary to correctly present the true purpose and intention of the partios, and that the failure of the deeds so to do was through a mutual mistake of fact. The grantee alleges that he has fully performed his part of the agreement, risks a reformation of the deeds in the manner pleaded, and for other and further relief. The reply is á general denial. .

The court found that Hohenstreet died intestate in Franklin Count)", March 23, 1917, leaving as his sole heirs at law the plaintiffs herein. That on March 16, 1905, Hohenstreet and his wife were seized in fee as tenants by the entirety of the land described in the first deed, and that Hohenstreet was seized in fee of the land described in the second deed; that about twelve years ago the wife departed this life. After reciting the agreement pleaded by the grantee, the court further found that the first deed was testamentary in character, and that at the time it was made the grantor was an old man easily influenced and of weak mind and that the grantee at all times enjoyed, possessed, used and exercised domination and control over his mind and will; *515 that there was no consideration for the first, deed, and that the purported consideration of $100 was wholly false, and that the grantor made said deed by and through the covin, fraud and undue influence of the grantee exercised over the mind of the grantor at the time; that the grantee has not been in the open, notorious and adverse possession of .the land for ten years next before the commencement of this action. That the rents and profits, of said land received by the grantee are equal to or greater than the value of the services mentioned in the answer as having been rendered by the grantee to the grantor. Wherefore the deed is adjudged and decreed to be -void and is set aside and for naught held.

As to the seeoud cause of action, the court found, that Hohenstreet was the owner in fee of the land described in the deed made by him to Segelhorst on March 2, 1917; that at the time of said conveyance and for many years prior thereto, the grantor was an old man, infirm, weak of mind and mentally incapable, and was under the care and custody of the grantee, who during all of said time was the trusted agent and advisor of the grantor in and concerning his business affairs, and at all times looked after or pretended to look after and guard the business interests of the. grantor; that the.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 80, 285 Mo. 507, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hohenstreet-v-segelhorst-mo-1920.