Jacks Ex Rel. Jacks v. Link

236 S.W. 10, 291 Mo. 282, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 10 (Jacks Ex Rel. Jacks v. Link) 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
Jacks Ex Rel. Jacks v. Link, 236 S.W. 10, 291 Mo. 282, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 100 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

*286 WALKER, J.

This is a suit brought in the Circuit Court of Platte County to establish a resulting trust. There was a judgment below for the respondents, from which appellant has perfected an appeal to this court'.

The appellant—a minor—brought this action by her father as next friend against her grandfather, the respondent first named, joining therewith a number of others deemed necessary to a final determination of the matter at issue.

Appellant is the only child and heir of Mallie M. Jacks, deceased, daughter of the respondent John W. Link and his wife Ardelma Link, deceased. The latter was a daughter of James M. Payton, now deceased. This action was instituted in 1919, seventeen years after the death of James M. Payton. .

The petition, in equity, contains two counts and prays that one hundred and sixty acres of land in Platte County, the record title of which is in the respondent John W. Link, be impressed with a resulting trust in favor of the appellant as an heir of Ardelma Lijik, it being alleged that a portion of the purchase price of the land had been furnished by appellant’s grandmother, Ardelma Link, in that it had been advanced to John W. Link, her husband, to enable him to purchase the land, by James M. Payton, the father of said Ardelma.

The land was conveyed to the respondent John W. Link by two separate deeds: one, conveying one hundred and forty acres; the other, twenty acres, at different times, and hence the two counts in the petition. It is claimed that of the purchase price of the one hundred and forty acre tract, seven hundred dollars of same was advanced by James. M. Payton to his daughter Ardelma Link and that nine hundred and fifty dollars, advanced in like manner, was used in the payment for the twenty acres. .

The relevant facts will be stated in their order in the discussion of the assignments of error.

*287 It is contended that error was committed in the admission of the testimony of John W. Link as to the ownership of the purchase money of the land Incompetent Evidence. and in permitting him to testify that he borrowed it from his father-in-law, James W. Payton. This contention may he disposed of under the general rule that where improper testimony has been admitted in an equitable proceeding in which wre are required to review the entire record, the judgment will not be reversed on that ground, but the incompetent testimony will be disregarded and such a judgment rendered as in equity and good conscience the pleadings and evidence may authorize. [Bryant v. Shinnabarger, 227 S. W. (Mo.) 54 and cases p. 57; McKee v. Downing, 224 Mo. 115; McCormick v. Parsons, 195 Mo. l. c. 100 and cases; Rice v. Shipley, 159 Mo. l. c. 407; Miller v. Slupsky, 158 (Mo. 643.]

Begardless, therefore, of the errors that may have been committed by the trial court in its rulings upon the admissibility of the testimony, the case is before us for review and determination upon Avhatever evidence of probative force appears in the record.

Lewis Jacks, the father of the appellant, testified that John W. Link came to his (witness’s) home in 1901, while James M. Payton was staying there and said to the latter that he wanted to get seven hundred dollars to pay on the Bnrkhead land (in controversy), which he, Link, was about to purchase.

There was testimony that this amount of money was soon thereafter obtained by John W. Link from James M. Payton, and that the former gave his note to the latter for the amount stated. . .

George W. Day, counsel for the appellant, testified that sometime before this suit was brought he wrote to John W. Link, who came to his office and they had a talk about the matter involved in this controversy. Witness ⅛ testimony is substantially as follows: ‘ £I can’t repeat all the conversation we had there, but Mr. Link told me that I should go and see Judge Coots” (the Probate Judge *288 of Platte County) ‘ ‘ and whatever he said was right for him to do, he would do. Further than that, we discussed the merits of the matter in a general way, and Mr. Link denied that there was any obligation on his part to the young- lady, Prances Miarie Jacks, the plaintiff. Sometime after that I saw Judge Coots and had a talk with him about the matter; I can’t state all or perhaps even the substance of what was said. Mr. Link was not present during that conversation. The conversation with Mr. Link was in connection with settling this controversy. Judge Coots told me that as he viewed the matter there was a resulting trust in favor of this plaintiff, growing out of the fact that Mrs. Link’s money had gone into this land, and he asked me to write a letter to Mr. Link, asking him to call upon him (Judge Coots), and that he would let me hear from him after he had seen Mr. Link. He asked me to write Mr. Link instead of writing him,, because he said that whatever he was doing there he was doing as a friend of Mr. Link, and not as an attorney. Possibly this is an inference of mine, but I think Judge Coots said that it was as a friend and not as an attorney that he was acting. I wrote a letter to Mr. Link in April, 1918, and asked him to call upon Judge Coots, and in the same month I received a letter from Judge Coots, dated April 13, 1918.”

This letter was introduced in evidence on the theory, we presume, that Judge Coots was acting as the agent of John "W. Link. The portion of same relevant to the matter at issue, omitting the signature of the writer, is as follows:

‘‘ Mr. J. "W. Link came in to see me to-day, and I had quite a talk with him. He says that his wife’s father advanced him enough money to make a payment on the land he owns and he gave a deed of trust for the balance. He cannot now give the exact amount advanced, but thinks it was in the neighborhood of $2,000. His wife received about a thousand dollars at her father’s death, but she spent most of this, very little of it being paid on the *289 mortgage. He thinks he can get the figures for the exact amounts.
“It seems that probably- the facts in the case would create a resulting trust in favor of the wife or her heirs, but in any event, he would be entitled to hold the land as tenant by the curtesy for life. I told him that I thought all parties would be satisfied if he would execute some kind of a trust against the land for the use and benefit of his grandchildren, so that they might feel that no matter what turn his affairs might take, they would at least have secured the amount that came to his wife, to be paid them at his death. He seems willing to execute such a trust if it will be satisfactory to the grandchildren. I am sure he is willing to do what is right in the matter.”

On August 26, 1918, witness received from Judge Coots a letter, the subject-matter of which is as follows:

“Mr. John W. Link came in to see me last Saturday, and agreed to.secure all of the funds coming to his grandchildren from his first wife’s estate by deed of trust on the 80 acres west of Linkville, worth at least $16,000'.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 10, 291 Mo. 282, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacks-ex-rel-jacks-v-link-mo-1921.