Jamison v. Bagot

106 Mo. 240
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 106 Mo. 240 (Jamison v. Bagot) 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
Jamison v. Bagot, 106 Mo. 240 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Thomas, J.

The petition in this case is in the nature of a creditor’s bill, and it seeks to set aside and [245]*245cancel certain conveyances mentioned therein, and to subject the land described in them, situated in the city of St. Louis, to the payment of a judgment in favor of plaintiffs against Charles Bobb,' one of the defendants, for the sum of $82,185.16, rendered June .15, 1878. In substance, the petition avers that the debt for which said judgment was rendered by the circuit court of the city of St. Louis accrued during the years 1848 to 1869, inclusive; that John S. Miller held a deed of trust on the lands described, dated the twenty-third day of September 1865, for $8,000 principal; that defendant, Charles Bobb, bought this deed of trust some time after its execution; that on the sixth day of February, 1879, said Charles Bobb caused the land described in this deed of trust, and which is the land involved in this suit, consisting of two tracts, to be sold by the trustee named in the deed of trust, and at the sale said Charles Bobb had Henry C. Bagot, who is also made a defendant herein, to buy said land and take a deed to himself therefor; that no money was paid for the bid made at this sale, and that said Charles Bobb had the title placed in said Bagot for his own benefit, said Bagot not having any beneficial interest therein, nor having paid any thing for it; that Bagot, at the instance and request of said Charles Bobb, conveyed said land to John Letcher, without consideration, but that the latter had not then placed his deed on record. The petition then avers that the said defendant, “ Charles Bobb, so caused said real estate to be conveyed, first, to said Bagot, and afterwards to said Letcher, and also caused said conveyance to be withheld from record, with the fraudulent purpose and design of hindering and delaying his said creditors, and to prevent said property from being subjected to the payment of said judgments; that neither said Bagot nor said Letcher has, or ever had, an interest in said property, nor have they, or either of them, ever paid anything therefor, but said property in fact belongs to said defendant, Charles Bobb, who has [246]*246caused the title thereof to be placed successively in said Bagot and Letcher, with the fraudulent design aforesaid; that the defendant, Martha E. Bobb, is the wife of the defendant, Charles Bobb ; that as plaintiffs are informed and believe, and . therefore state, the said defendant, Martha E. Bobb, now claims and asserts that she is in truth and in fact the owner of the real estate hereinbefore described, and that she was in truth and in fact the owner of the notes secured by deed of trust under which said real estate was sold, as hereinbefore set forth, and that the said real estate was bought in for her, and that she is now the equitable owner of the same, although said real estate now stands in the name of the said John Letcher : wherefore the plaintiffs make the said Martha E. Bobb a party defendant to this action; that nothing has ever been collected on said judgment excepting the sum of $6, and that, as to the balance of said judgment, returns of nulla bona have been made on the executions issued thereon to the sheriff of the said city of St. Louis; wherefore the plaintiffs pray the court that said real estate be decreed to be the property of defendant, Charles Bobb, and, as such, to be subject to the lien of said judgments and decree so rendered as aforesaid against said Charles Bobb, and in favor of said John H. Bobb and Lucy Gr. Taylor, and the said estate of the said Charles L. Bobb, and that said real estate be decreed to be sold as the property of. said Charles Bobb, in order that the same may be applied as far as it will go towards the payment of said judgments, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet, and as in equity belongs.”

This petition was filed April 4, 1881. Defendants filed a general denial June 8,1881. On the fifteenth day of October, 1887, defendant, Martha E. Bobb, who alone actively defended the suit in the court below, filed her separate answer to the petition, as follows: “Now comes the defendant, Martha E. Bobb, and by leave of [247]*247court files this, her separate answer to plaintiff’s petition, and admits that she does claim the property described in plaintiff’s petition, and says that she is the true and sole owner thereof, and that neither defendants Bagot nor Letcher ever had any beneficial interest in said property, but merely held the legal title for short periods, as trustees of and for the sole use and benefit of this defendant, and this defendant states that she has no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the truth of the facts stated in said petition.”

Upon the issues thus made, the case came on for trial, and was determined. The plaintiff offered documentary evidence, whereupon defendant, Martha E. Bobb, objected to the introduction of any evidence against her, because no allegations sufficient to charge her property were made in the petition. The court overruled the objection, and defendant, Martha E. Bobb, excepted to the ruling; and this presents the first question for decision.

I. Defendants’ counsel contend that on the trial the plaintiffs abandoned the case stated in the petition, and, without warning, sprung a new case of fraud, affecting Mrs. Bobb’s title to the property, which was not alluded to in their petition, based on an entirely new theory. We do not concur in this view of the issues tendered by the petition. The averment is that Charles Bobb. bought the land and paid for it, and had the title placed in Bagot and Letcher for the purpose of hindering and delaying his creditors, and to prevent the property from being subjected to the payment of the judgment in favor of plaintiffs ; and then adds that plaintiffs are informed and believe, and so state, that Martha E. Bobb claims to be the equitable owner of the property, and to have paid for it, although the title stood in John Letcher; and it is prayed that she be made a party defendant. It is conceded in the argument that the allegations of the petition make out a [248]*248good case against Bagot and Letcher; but, as there are no allegations that Mrs. Bobb was guilty of any fraud, it was error, it is claimed, to admit evidence affecting her title. This argument proceeds upon the theory that the pleadings admit the title to the property in controversy to be in Mrs. Bobb. This is an error. The petition positively asserts that the legal title is in John Letcher, and it was put there by Charles Bobb to cover up the property from his creditors. Mrs. Bobb, it is alleged, claims she was the owner of the property, in equity, and had paid for it. This claim of hers, which is alleged in the petition, cannot be held to nullify the previous statements of the petition that Charles Bobb was. in fact the owner of the property, had paid for it, and had it conveyed to Letcher to defraud his creditors. Take the petition altogether, there is but one conclusion that can fairly be reached, and that is that whatever claim to the property Mrs. Bobb might interpose was subject to the'conditions on which Letcher held it. When the trial began, the court did not know, and could not know, from the pleadings, where the legal title to the property was. Plaintiffs alleged it to be in Letcher, while Mrs. Bobb set up that she had it. The evidence showed that Letcher conveyed the property to Mrs. Bobb by deed dated May 1, and acknowledged May 17, 1881, and recorded March 16, 1882. Hence, at the time the petition was filed Letcher did hold the legal title.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Mo. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamison-v-bagot-mo-1891.