Jacobs v. Jacobs

99 Mo. 427
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 99 Mo. 427 (Jacobs v. Jacobs) 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
Jacobs v. Jacobs, 99 Mo. 427 (Mo. 1889).

Opinion

Brace, J.

At the November term, 1883, of the probate court of Boone county, the respondent, executrix of George R. Jacobs, deceased, filed in said court her account for final settlement, to which the appellants took exceptions, and thereafter filed nineteen objections to the approval of such final settlement, all of which were either abandoned on trial, 'or overruled by the court, except 18 and 19, which were partially sustained, and both parties appealed to the circuit court. The case coming on for trial in the circuit court, the plaintiffs stated “that they abandoned all their exceptions except those numbered 2, the item of $1,302.86, mentioned in exception' 17, and the items in exceptions 18 and 19, relating to commissioners for the sale of real estate, and taxes paid by defendant' on the John P. Jacobs real estate, and penalties on delinquent taxes; and all attorneys’ fees in final settlement, and the Caulfield note, mentioned in exception 2;” and, in connection with this statement, read exceptions 2, 17, 18 and 19, there: tofore filed in the probate court.

The circuit court overruled plaintiffs’ exception number 2, their objections to the credit item of $1,302.86 in the executrix’s first annual settlement, objected to in exception 17; sustained exceptions 18 and 19, as to the items of credit for taxes paid by the executrix on the [430]*430John P. Jacobs land, and for penalties on delinquent taxes; overruled them as to the items of credit for commissions paid agents for the sale of real estate and for attorney’s fees on final settlement, and in the matter of the Caulfield note. Stated an account between the executrix and the estate, upon the basis of the balance .of §168.33 due the estate, as shown by her settlement, filed in the probate court, by adding to such balance the amount of the credits taken for penalties on tax bills and interest, amounting to the sum of $30.93, the credits taken for taxes paid on the John P. Jacobs land .and interest, amounting to $463.10, making the aggregate debits $662.36; allowing the executrix a credit of twenty-five dollars for attorney’s fee in defending the settlement in the probate court, and three hundred dollars in the circuit court, showing a balance due the estate of $337.36- at the date of the judgment in the circuit court; rendered judgment therefor and ordered same certified to the probate court for distribution under the will; and that the costs of the appeal from the probate court and all other costs, under objections not sustained, be paid by the objectors, who now appeal from that judgment.

I. Plaintiff ’ s exception number 2 to the executrix’s account for final settlement is as follows: “2. Befend.ant has failed to account for a balance of the inventoried note of G. B. Caulfield and Panny Beaver, with interest thereon, — the said balance being, as shown by inventory and the collection reported on said note in defendant’s first settlement, twelve thousand, four hundred and fifty seven dollars, which sum should be charged to defendant, with interest thereon, at ten per cent., compound, from April 16, 1878.”

The note of B. G. Caulfield and Panny Beaver, referred to in this exception was dated August 1, 1867, for twenty thousand dollars, payable to the testator, George R. Jacobs, three years after date, with interest [431]*431from maturity at the rate of eight per cent, per annum. ‘To secure this note and six interest notes for eight hundred dollars each, payable in six, twelve, eighteen, twenty-four, thirty and thirty-six months, of same date, a deed of trust of the same date was executed by B. G. Caulfield, his wife Laura Caulfield and Fanny Beaver, upon certain real estate in the city of St. Louis, belonging to Mrs. Beaver and Mrs. Caulfield. The interest notes were paid as they became due, and, shortly after the principal note became due, the time of its payment was extended by an agreement endorsed on the note, signed by Mrs. Beaver, B. Gf. Caulfield and the testator, Br. Jacobs, in consideration of the payment of ten, instead of eight, per cent., as specified in the note. Interest at ten per cent, was thereafter paid ■on the note to August 1, 1876, and, on the fifth of April, 1877, it was inventoried and came into the hands of the ■ executors at $21,361.10, the amount of the principal and interest at ten per cent., from August 1, 1876, to April .5, 1877, the date of the inventory. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the real estate owned by Mrs. Beaver, in the years 1877 and 1878, -was worth an amount largely in excess of the amount of said note. The executrix introduced evidence tending to show that Mrs. Beaver, during those years, although the owner of valuable real estate, was in embarrassed •circumstances, that she was largely in debt, and that her real estate was heavily encumbered; to use her own language, that in 1878 “her financial condition was very bad.” “ If the Jacobs’ debt had been forced upon me, it could not possibly have been made.” The action of the executrix, in regard to this note, as well as the -considerations which induced such an action, will appear from the following extracts from the evidence of R. B. Price, who, at the inception of the administration, was the co-executor of Gen. Guitar, who was the attorney for the estate; and of Francis -F. Hay del, of the firm of [432]*432John Byrne, Jr., & Co., real-estate agents, who negotiated this loan, and who, for many years, had been the agents of Dr. Jacobs, the testator, in the management of his interests in St. Lonis, and who continued in the same relation to his executors.

Mr. Price testified: “We employed Gen. Odon G. Guitar to act as counsel for us in the administration of the estate, and he and I both made a careful examination as to the nature, character and value of the real estate included in the deed of trust, and the solvency of the makers of this note. I thought it best, and Gen. Guitar, as our attorney, advised us to compromise and settle this debt, by releasing Mrs. Fanny Deaver and her property from all liability on the note, upon her paying to us eleven thousand dollars, being the one-half then due on the note, and taking a new note, executed by Mrs. Laura Caulfield and. B. G. Caulfield, for the balance, with a new deed of trust on the same property, belonging to Mrs. Caulfield, embraced in the first deed of trust; this we did, and the property was afterward sold under the new deed of trust, and the proceeds accounted for. We had John Byrne, Jr., & Co., one of the best real-estate firms in St. Louis, to assist us in making the compromise and settlement with Mrs. Deaver; I was in St. Louis three or four days looking into this matter.”

Cross-examination: “I did not make any personal examination of this matter myself, but had confidence i'n John Byrne, Jr., & Co., and the man they employed to examine the title and condition of Mrs. Leaver’s real estate; I consulted with and acted under the advice of John Byrne, Jr., & Co., and Gen. Guitar.”

Mr. Hay del testified: “At the time the compromise-was effected by which Mrs. Deaver was released from her indebtedness to Dr. Jacobs, I was acquainted with her financial condition, having examined into her affairs with a view to this settlement, and from this, [433]

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99 Mo. 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-jacobs-mo-1889.