Keen v. Watson

39 Mo. App. 165, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 52
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Mo. App. 165 (Keen v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keen v. Watson, 39 Mo. App. 165, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 52 (Mo. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. In July, 1877, Samuel S. Watson and the defendant Mary A. Watson, his wife, conveyed to the plaintiff by warranty deed a tract of land for the consideration of six thousand dollars. Of this amount the plaintiff paid, at the date of the purchase, five hundred dollars in cash; and. he executed and delivered to Watson, for the residue of the purchase money, his eleven promissory notes for the sum of five hundred dollars each, the note first maturing being payable March 1, 3878, and the others respectively on the same day in succeeding years, so that the note last maturing became due and payable on March 1, 1888. All these notes bore interest from date at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and their payment was secured by deed of trust [168]*168upon tb'e property conveyed. Samuel Watson died, June 5, 1878, leaving a will, whereby the defendant Mary A. Watson and one Alderson were appointed executors. The executors made their final settlement in August, 1882, and all the notes above mentioned, remaining unpaid at said date, were turned over to the defendant Mary A. Watson as residuary legatee under the will.

The present action was instituted in May, 1887, and isa suit in equity against Mary A. Watson, and the trustee named in the deed of trust above mentioned, the object of such suit being the cancellation of said deed of trust and of the two notes last maturing, on the ground that all the notes secured had been fully paid by the plaintiff, partly to Samuel Watson, partly to his executors, and partly to Mary A. Watson, the residuary legatee and present holder, and on the further ground that the title to three acres and a half, of the aggregate value of two hundred and ten dollars, was not in the grantors at the date of the conveyance, and no title thereto passed to the plaintiff, and he was entitled to have the value of said three and a half acres credited on the deferred payments as of July 19, 1877, the date of the conveyance to him.

The court upon the trial of the issues found that the plaintiff’s claim was made out in regard to a failure of title of two acres and fifty-hundreths of an acre, worth at the date of the conveyance one hundred and fifty-one dollars and twenty-five cents, and decreed that the plaintiff was entitled to a credit upon the two notes still in the defendant’s hands equal to one hundred and fifty-one dollars and twenty-five cents with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from July 19, 1877. The court further found and decreed that the residue of such notes, to-wit, eight hundred and thirty-one dollars and sixty cents with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, per annum remained unpaid, and [169]*169rendered judgment in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff for that amount. Prom this decree and judgment the plaintiff appeals.

The errors assigned are that the court excluded proper evidence offered by the plaintiff, and erred in its judgment, as, under the evidence, the plaintiff was entitled to the relief sought.

We will state, at the outset, that there is no controversy between the parties' touching any of the payments made by the plaintiff on account of the purchase money, except one, which is the payment made by him on the second day of March, 1878. The plaintiff claims that, at that date, he paid to the cashier of the First National Bank of St. Charles, as agent of Samuel Watson, then living, the sum of one thousand dollars, and that five hundred dollars' of said sum was applied by the cashier to the payment of plaintiff’s note, due March 1, 1878, which was the only note then in the hands of the cashier, but that the other five hundred dollars was not applied either then or thereafter, when the other notes came to the cashier’s hands, to any of said notes. The plaintiff claims that, if this were proven, it would conclusively show that all the notes had been paid, because it would entitle him to an additional credit of - five hundred dollars, with compound interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from March 1, 1878, and such amount with the value of the three and one-half acres of land, with similar compound interest from the date of the purchase, would more than extinguish the entire debt, which Mrs. Watson as residuary legatee still claims.

It appears from the record that the court heard evidence touching the alleged payment of one thousand dollars, the only competent witness to the transaction, now living, being the cashier of the bank. He, as such cashier, collected all the payments that were made on the notes, first as agent for Samuel Watson, then as [170]*170agent for the executors, and then as agent for Mrs. Watson, the residuary legatee. He testified, in substance, that on the second day of .March, 1878, one thousand dollars were paid to the bank for Mr. Watson, and two deposit tickets were made out by him for five hundred dollars each. The books of the bank showed that one of these five-hundred-dollar deposits was made by the plaintiff; touching the other the books of the bank were silent. It may have been made either by Watson himself, by Keen for Watson, or by some third party for Watson. It further appeared by the testimony of the same witness, that Samuel Watson kept a current deposit account with the bank, and that the following deposits were made to his credit the preceding month : February 6, one hundred and fifty dollars; February 28, five hundred dollars, showing that deposits, of the exact sum of five hundred dollars to Watson’s account, may have come from other sources, as it stands admitted that the deposit of five hundred dollars, made on February 28, was not made by the plaintiff.

The court excluded the evidence of the plaintiff, who offered to prove, by his own evidence, what transpired between him and the cashier of the bank, acting as agent for the executors, after the decease of Samuel Watson, and also excluded the evidence of the cashier, as to what the plaintiff had always claimed in making payments at subsequent dates. In view of the fact that the plaintiff, under the statute, was a competent witness as to any fact transpiring after the probate of the will (R. S. 1879, sec. 4010), the exclusion of this evidence was error, all the more so, as the plaintiff was entitled to show, to rebut any inference of laches arising from silence and acquiescence, that he was neither silent nor acquiescent, but always insisted that he was entitled to this additional credit. But we cannot see how the admission of this evidence could have possibly changed the result, since it was not admissible for the purpose of establishing the validity of the claim, but merely for [171]*171the purpose of rebutting inferences of its invalidity arising from the plaintiff ’ s own laches.

Treating the case as if all of this evidence had been admitted, and considering it as established, that the plaintiff always asserted, and the defendant and her agent always denied, that he was entitled to this additional credit, yet we must conclude that the plaintiff has failed to prove his case. The mere fact that, on a certain day more than ten years ago, five hundred dollars was deposited to the credit of Samuel Watson, under the circumstances above detailed, is at best inferential evidence of the fact that it may have been deposited by the plaintiff for Watson, but not at all ■evidence, of any persuasive force, that it was so deposited to be applied in payment of a note which was not then in the possession of the bank.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Metcalf v. Larned
40 Mo. 572 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1867)
Sauer v. Griffin
67 Mo. 654 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1878)
Walker's Administrator v. Deaver
79 Mo. 664 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Mo. App. 165, 1890 Mo. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keen-v-watson-moctapp-1890.