Holland Land & Loan Co. v. Holland

298 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 951, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 639
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 39 (Holland Land & Loan Co. v. Holland) 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
Holland Land & Loan Co. v. Holland, 298 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 951, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 639 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

This case is one which has been reassigned, and is a suit for money had and received by the defendant, upon a sale made by her of certain real estate which plaintiff claimed to own. The trial was before the court, without a jury. No declarations of law were asked or given.

The court gave judgment in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff's appeal went to the Springfield Court of Appeals, and was heard by that court. The case has been transferred to this court upon the request of one of the judges of the Court of Appeals, who was of the opinion that the holding of the majority, in affirmance of the judgment, was in conflict with certain decisions of this court. The facts and the issues made are treated at length in the opinions, of the majority upon the original hearing, and upon rehearing, and also in the dissenting opinion filed. The majority opinion epitomizes the issues made by the pleadings, and states the facts developed, as follows (274 S.W. 951):

"Plaintiff is a corporation and its cause of action is based on the alleged facts that on the ____ day of February, 1921, it was the legal owner and for a long time prior thereto had been the equitable owner of a one-third interest in a lot beginning on the south line of Olive Street, 123 feet east of the northwest corner of Lot 14, Block 7. Original Plat of Springfield. Missouri, at the northeast corner of a lot owned and occupied by McGregor-Noe Hardware Company; thence east 50 feet; thence south 117½ feet; thence west 50 feet to the east line of said McGregor-Noe lot: thence north to the beginning; otherwise described as an undivided one-third interest in the west 50 feet of the east 65½ feet of Lot 14, Block 7. Original Plat of Springfield, Missouri. That the title to this land had formerly been in C.B. Holland, but passed from him to the Holland Banking Company by quitclaim deed from him, December 13, 1900. That the bank conveyed to plaintiff March 5, 1921. That the deed to the bank was not recorded until March 2, 1921, and by reason of that deed not being of record, the defendant, who had asserted title to the one-third interest in the land owned by plaintiff, sold it to an innocent *Page 957 purchaser, and plaintiff thereby lost the property. This suit is to recover from defendant what she received for that property. There is also a count asking for an accounting as to rents received by defendant.

"Defendant denies plaintiff's title and asserts title in herself up to the time that she sold it, and pleads laches and estoppel as a bar to plaintiff's action. As to the rents received by defendant she pleads the five-year Statute of Limitations as to part of the account. Plaintiff moved to strike out nearly all of the answer, but its motion was overruled, and the cause then proceeded to trial.

"At the trial, it was admitted that C.B. Holland was the common source of title to the one-third interest in the property described in plaintiff's petition, and that he acquired title through the foreclosure of a deed of trust executed by A.B. Crawford. It was also conceded that the Townsend heirs owned the other two-thirds interest in the same land. The plaintiff then offered in evidence a quitclaim deed from C.B. Holland to the bank, dated December 13, 1900, recorded March 2, 1921, which conveyed the land in controversy here and several other tracts of land. It next offered a quitclaim deed from the bank to plaintiff for the land in controversy, dated March 5, 1921, and recorded March 7, 1921. It then offered a warranty deed from defendant to George H. Townsend for the same land, dated February 25, 1921, and recorded March 7, 1921. This deed recites that the grantor (defendant herein) is the `residuary legatee of T.B. Holland.' It also recites the receipt of $1200 as the consideration for the transfer.

"Plaintiff then offered the files and record in a suit tried in the Greene County Circuit Court at the May term, 1923, by this plaintiff against defendant and George H. Townsend to try title to this land. This record shows that the evidence was heard, the suit was then dismissed as to the defendant in this case, Bertonia A. Holland, and judgment was then rendered against plaintiff in favor of George H. Townsend. The court held in that case that Townsend was an innocent purchaser of the land for value and without any knowledge of the unrecorded deed from C.B. Holland to the bank, and refused to pass on any other questions in that suit. The plaintiff then rested.

"The defendant then offered the will of C.B. Holland, dated June 21, 1895, and probated March 25, 1901, in which he devised all his property to his son, T.B. Holland, in general terms, without particularly describing any property. Defendant next offered the will of T.B. Holland, dated June 17, 1913, and probated August 9, 1913. This will contains several clauses in which real estate was devised to different persons, and in these clauses each tract of land disposed of was described. He devised to his widow, this defendant, seven *Page 958 tracts. To Mrs. Charles Holland, a daughter-in-law, one tract; to Charles Holland, a son, two tracts; to Mrs. Jarrett, a daughter, five tracts in Springfield and some land in Taney County. One of these tracts devised to Mrs. Jarrett adjoins the land in controversy here on the east side, and is described as follows: `Beginning at a point 173 feet cast of the northwest corner of Lot 14 in Block 7, Original Plat of Springfield, thence east 94 feet, south 117½ feet, west 94 feet, north to beginning, being 79 feet of Lot 13, and 15 feet of Lot 14 in Block 7, Springfield, Missouri, situated on Olive Street, west of Cumberland Presbyterian Church, reserving off of said tract for an alley twenty feet adjoining the Townsend property, and running the full length north and south of the above-described tract.' To Bertha Simmons, a daughter, three tracts. To Grady Holland Sanford, a grandson, one tract. The eleventh clause in the will gives the rest and residue of his estate of whatever kind and wherever situated to his wife, Bertonia A. Holland, the defendant in this case. The defendant then offered several deeds, executed by T.B. Holland, to various parties for land described in the deed from C.B. Holland to the bank, to show that T.B. Holland conveyed these lands as his own after the death of his father, C.B. Holland, but did not convey the fifty feet involved in this suit.

"Defendant then offered a warranty deed from T.B. Holland and the Townsend heirs to Arch McGregor, dated April 8, 1905, for ninety-four feet on Olive Street adjoining the fifty-foot lot in controversy on the east, and also a quitclaim deed from Arch McGregor to T.B. Holland for this same land, dated May 24, 1905. The latter deed was excluded on objection of plaintiff, but was later offered by plaintiff and admitted.

"Defendant then offered a written contract between T.B. Holland and W.B. Sanford, dated August 26, 1911, as follows:

"`Whereas, I, T.B. Holland, have this day executed to W.B. Sanford an option to buy from me within thirty days from this date 940 shares of stock of the capital stock in Holland Banking Company of Springfield, Missouri, for the price and sum of $200 per share, or a total of $188,000 in cash.

"`Now, therefore, it is agreed and understood by both parties hereto that in the event said purchase price is paid within time specified, that said sale is to carry with it the good will of said banking business, and is to also include the use of the corporate name, and is to be full purchase price for capital, surplus, undivided profits, and profit and loss account, same to include all assets of every kind and nature belonging to said bank except the real estate. (Italics are ours.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 39, 317 Mo. 951, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-land-loan-co-v-holland-mo-1927.