Holtgreve v. Sobolewski

31 S.W.2d 993, 326 Mo. 412, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 660
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 13, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 S.W.2d 993 (Holtgreve v. Sobolewski) 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
Holtgreve v. Sobolewski, 31 S.W.2d 993, 326 Mo. 412, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 660 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

Plaintiffs filed their petition in two counts, alleging, in the first count, a cause of action in ejectment, and, in the second count, grounds for an order restraining defendants from interfering with the cultivation of the land described in their petition and from removing from said land the dwelling house located thereon. A temporary restraining order was issued. In their answer, defendants deny the allegations contained in both counts of the petition, and, as grounds for affirmative relief, allege that, in March, 1923, the defendant Helena Boehm Sobolewski, then Helena Boehm, a widow, owned the land described in plaintiffs' petition; that, on March 6, 1923, she executed and delivered to Robert P. Price, as trustee, a deed of trust on said land, to secure the payment of her promissory notes payable to the order of the O'Hara Farm Mortgage Company; that, in 1924, she and the defendant R.E. Sobolewski were married; that, shortly after their marriage, the defendant R.E. Sobolewski built the dwelling house on said land, and paid for the same out of his own funds, in pursuance of a contract between the defendants whereby it was agreed that said dwelling house should remain, at all times, the personal property of the defendant *Page 415 R.E. Sobolewski, and that he should have the right, at any time, to remove said dwelling house from said land, free from any claim to the title to said dwelling house on her part or on the part of any person or persons claiming under or through her; that, on February 5, 1927, plaintiffs, as the holders of said promissory notes, caused said land to be sold under the terms of said deed of trust, and became the purchasers of said land at said sale; that, prior to said sale, plaintiffs were given due notice of the rights of the defendant R.E. Sobolewski in said dwelling house, and, at the time of said sale, knew of his claim to the title thereto; and that, after said sale, plaintiffs, by claiming the title to said dwelling house, obtained the temporary order restraining defendants from removing said dwelling house from said land; and defendants pray that said temporary restraining order be dissolved; that the title to said dwelling house be adjudged to be in the defendant R.E. Sobolewski; and that he be given the right to remove said dwelling house from said land. Plaintiffs reply is a general denial.

After hearing the case on the merits, the trial court found for plaintiffs on both counts of their petition, and against defendants on the affirmative defense pleaded in their answer; that plaintiffs are entitled to the possession of the land described in their petition, and damages in the sum of one cent for the wrongful detention thereof, and twenty-five dollars per month as the reasonable rental value thereof; and, in accordance with said findings, adjudged that plaintiffs have and recover the possession of said land, and damages in the sum of one cent, and twenty-five dollars per month from the ____ day of March, 1927, to the day possession of said land is given to them; and that a writ of possession issue; and that the temporary restraining order issued against defendants remain in force until the execution of the writ of possession. Defendants have, in due course, perfected an appeal to this court.

In their case in chief, plaintiffs put in evidence certain pages of the deed records of Audrain County, showing the trustee's deed under which the defendant Helena Boehm Sobolewski, then Helena Boehm, acquired the title to the land described in plaintiffs' petition, in 1913, and the deed of trust on said land which she executed and delivered to Robert P. Price, as trustee, in March, 1923, and the trustee's deed executed by Robert P. Price on February 5, 1927, under which plaintiffs acquired the title to said land.

J.R. Van Vacter, a neighbor of the Sobolewskis, testified: The fair monthly value of Mrs. Sobolewski's farm, including the dwelling house and other improvements, is three dollars per acre. About the first of February, 1927, shortly before the foreclosure sale, Mrs. Sobolewski wanted to buy an acre of his land, "just across the road from their house." She said "they were afraid they might lose the house when the land was sold." *Page 416

Ralph Luton testified: He lived about three quarters of a mile from Mrs. Sobolewski's farm. After the foreclosure sale, the Sobolewskis wanted to buy an acre of his land. They said they wanted "to move the house on it."

K.G. Kennen, one of plaintiffs' attorneys, testified: After being retained by plaintiffs, and a day or two before the filing of this suit, he went to Mrs. Sobolewski's farm, and "demanded of her in the name of and for the plaintiffs immediate possession of the farm." She refused to give possession. On cross-examination, he said: "Mrs. Sobolewski has never intimated to me in any way that the house belonged to Mr. Sobolewski. She never in any way intimated that Mr. Sobolewski had any separate personal interest in the house." He further said that his only conversation with Mrs. Sobolewski concerning this matter occurred on the day he demanded possession of the farm; that he did not talk to Mr. Sobolewski on that day; and that he "made no demand on Mr. Sobolewski for delivery of possession of the house."

The evidence adduced by defendants is substantially as follows: In 1913, the defendant Helena Boehm Sobolewski, then Helena Boehm, a widow, acquired title to 140 acres of land in Audrain County, the same being the land described in plaintiffs' petition, In March, 1923, she executed and delivered to Robert P. Price, as trustee, a deed of trust on said land, to secure the payment of her promissory notes payable to the O'Hara Farm Mortgage Company. In August, 1924, she was married to the defendant R.E. Sobolewski. She was then living in the granary located on said land, there being no dwelling house thereon. At the time of their marriage, Mr. Sobolewski had about $2,000 in cash and owned a farm of 90 acres near Vandalia, in Audrain County. After she and Mr. Sobolewski had discussed the matter of building a dwelling house on said land for sometime, he made a written offer to her which reads as follows:

"Laddonia, Mo., Oct. 27, 1924.

"MRS. HELENA L. BOEHM now SOBOLEWSKI:

"I will build the House on ground or Farm or land this agreement, that the House Will and must remain at all times as my Personal property and at no time let it Ever Enter In your mind that the House is yours, under these conditions my Dear I will Erect the House or Build It, to this agreement.

"And you will have no right In anny way to object to my plans, none, what ever.

"Should I wont to move or sell or dispose of the House. In any waye Shape or form. In order to retain my loss, you shall have only this right my dear to live in It. *Page 417

"Providing we get alon nicely together. Now if you see fit to sing up to this agreement, I will build House, than sign here.

"MRS. HELENA L. BOEHM now SOBOLEWSKI."

She accepted his offer by signing her name thereto, and thereafter, the contract was kept in a tin box in the writing desk at their home. After she signed the contract, Mr. Sobolewski built the frame dwelling house on said land, of eight rooms and one and one-half stories in height, with a concrete basement, and paid for the construction of the house and the materials used therein with the $2,000 which he had in cash at the time of their marriage and with the $2,200 which he obtained as a loan on his farm. Before the house was built, plaintiffs purchased the promissory notes which were secured by the deed of trust on Mrs. Sobolewski's land. Sometime after the house was built, William Rankin, one of the plaintiffs, wrote a letter to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W.2d 993, 326 Mo. 412, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holtgreve-v-sobolewski-mo-1930.