Lambert v. Clark

275 S.W.2d 240, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 10, 1955
DocketNo. 44030
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 275 S.W.2d 240 (Lambert v. Clark) 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
Lambert v. Clark, 275 S.W.2d 240, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 680 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner.

Loretta K. Lambert, respondent (herein sometimes called plaintiff) brought an action to cancel a deed and quiet title to real estate in St. Louis. She is the widow and sole taker (heir) under the statute of descent and distribution,. Section 468.010, RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., of her husband, Charles M. Lambert, who died intestate on June 4, 1951.

Ruby M. Clark, appellant (herein sometimes called defendant) claimed title to the real estate by virtue of a fact that she was the record title holder at the time of the death of Charles M. Lambert and claimed to have purchased the property. Subsequent to Lambert’s death, defendant conveyed the property to her daughter and son-in-law (Mr. and Mrs. Day), who were joined as defendants below and who defaulted. Defendant admitted at the trial that the conveyance to the Days was without consideration and that it was not intended to transfer ownership to them. Thus, there was no issue below, nor is there one here, concerning the deed to the Days. That is to say, if plaintiff is the fee simple owner of the real estate in question but for the Day deed, then it is conceded that that deed was properly canceled.

The trial court adjudged plaintiff to be the fee simple owner subject to plaintiff’s assumption of the balance due on certain notes executed by defendant and secured by a deed of trust on the property involved, and ordered the cancellation of the Day deed. Among other things, the trial court found that defendant, Ruby M. Qark, was a straw party who held the record title for the benefit of Charles M. Lambert. As we view it, if this finding by the trial court was correct, it is decisive of the only real issue in this case. We are of the opinion, upon our independent examination of the transcript, in which we have weighed the evidence and reached our own conclusions, that the noted finding of, and that the decree and judgment of, the trial court were correct.

Plaintiff proved by clear and convincing evidence- — much of it documentary and none of it seriously controverted — the facts which justify these statements. Charles M. Lambert, for a number of years prior to his death, was a salesman for H & K Realty Company. Mr. and Mrs. Redman were also salesmen for that company. Mr. Lambert owned property on Oriole Avenue which he later traded for property on Floy Avenue and, in real estate transactions involving both those properties, Mr. and Mrs. Redman acted as straw parties for Lambert. Lambert had represented to the Redmans that Mrs. Lambert (plaintiff) was mentally ill and that he wished to avoid the troubles connected with later transfers of the property in the event that titles were put in his (Lambert’s) name. (Mrs. Lambert, incidentally, was never mentally ill, but, in our view, this fact is of no vital importance.)

[242]*242In November 1945 Lambert wanted to acquire the property here involved, a 4-family flat on Natural Bridge Road. The purchase price was $10,500. Lambert used the ultimate proceeds of the Oriole and Floy Avenue properties, but¡ needed an additional $7,500. Mr. and Mrs. Redman, as straw parties for Lambert, executed a deed of trust in the amount of $7,500 to secure a loan in that amount, made by H & K Realty Company, on the Natural Bridge property. The property was purchased and title put in Mr. and Mrs. Redman as straw parties for Lambert. Mr. and Mrs. Redman immediately executed a quitclaim deed to the property (grantee’s name not inserted) and delivered the deed to Lambert. The record title remained in Mr. and Mrs. Redman until the $7,500 deed of trust came due. At that -time Lambert requested Mr. Kroeger, president of H & K Realty Company, to renew the deed of trust for an amount in excess of $7,500. Mr. Kroeger refused to do so and asked that Lambert obtain a new loan elsewhere. At the same time, Mr. and Mrs. Redman, the straw parties, asked to be relieved of their responsibilities as such, and refused to act as straw parties in any new transaction in which Lambert might obtain a loan on the property in an amount in excess of $7,500. Mr. Lambert told the Redmans that he would arrange to put the property in some other person’s name. Consequently, on December 7, 1948, the Redmans, at the request of Lambert, signed a quitclaim deed conveying the property to Ruby M. Clark. They, of course, received no consideration from Mrs. Clark. At the death of Charles M. Lambert the quitclaim deed from the Redmans to Ruby Clark and a partially completed quitclaim deed signed by Ruby M. Clark (which she executed as grantor but in which no grantee was named and which was not recorded) were both found in Mr. Lambert’s safe-deposit box. On November 21, 1949, Mr. Lambert obtained a loan of $10,500 on the property from Investment Service, Inc. Defendant, Ruby M. Clark, executed the deed of trust and principal and interest notes securing the $10,500 loan. The proceeds of the loan, by direction of Mrs. Clark, were paid to Mr. Lambert by means of two checks, one in the amount of $7,687.50, the amount then due on the $7,500 deed of trust (which amount was in turn paid to H & K Realty Company by Lambert), and the other for $2,604.95, the balance of the $10,500 loan. Lambert was required by the lender to endorse the principal and interest notes and he was carried on the lender’s records as the principal in the transaction. All of the interest notes that came due prior to Mr. Lambert’s death were paid by him.

Later, on August 11, 1949, an F. H. A. home improvement loan was secured for the Natural Bridge property in the amount of $2,000, with Ruby M. Clark and Charles M. Lambert as cosigners of the F. H. A. credit applications and of the note evidencing the loan. This loan was to be repaid in 35 monthly payments of $63.88 and one monthly payment of $63.79. These monthly payments (at least all the payments about which there was any proof) were made by Mr. Lambert prior to his death.

Subsequent to the time the record title to this property was put in the name of Ruby M. Clark, Mr. Lambert collected the rents from the tenants. He instituted and prosecuted proceedings under OPA for the purpose of evicting certain tenants and executed and filed the necessary papers to institute and prosecute such suits as landlord and appeared as the plaintiff in the resulting action to gain possession of the apartments. He listed in his federal income tax returns for the years 1946 to 1950, inclusive, the income and disbursements from and made on account of, the Natural Bridge property, and took credit therefor in those returns.

Plaintiff did not know of her husband’s beneficial ownership of the property until after his death.

Based on the foregoing evidence, we think the conclusion is compelled that Ruby M. Clark was intended to be, and at all times was, the straw party for Charles M. Lambert and held the title to the property for his use and benefit. Defendant’s contention to the contrary, as we understand it, is simply this: that because defendant exe[243]*243cuted a deed of trust and notes for $10,500, the proceeds of which loan were paid to Charles M. Lambert, therefore, she was the purchaser of the property and had paid full consideration for it. It seems to us that this argument begs the decisive question. That is to say, if Mrs. Clark was in fact a straw party for Charles M. Lambert, then her execution of the deed of trust and notes, with directions to pay the proceeds to Lambert, were the very functions she would perform as a straw party.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W.2d 240, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-clark-mo-1955.