Larrick v. Heathman

231 S.W. 975, 288 Mo. 370, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 6, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 975 (Larrick v. Heathman) 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
Larrick v. Heathman, 231 S.W. 975, 288 Mo. 370, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 209 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Action to have declared a resulting trust in and to eighty acres of land in Shelby County, Missouri. Mary A. Larrick is the mother and James A. Larrick and Mattie L. Byers are the brother and sister of Fannie B. Heathman, who died childless and intestate-April 26, 1916, in Shelby County, Missouri. These are the plaintiffs who seek to enforce a resulting; trust, on the theory that the money of Fannie- B. Heathman was used in the purchase of the land involved. Defendant Frederick G. Heathman is the former husband of the deceased, Fannie B. Heathman, and the defendant Addie Heathman is his present wife.

The land in question was bought in 1901 from one Homer Dale, and the deed taken in the names of “Fred *375 Gr. Heathman and Fannie B. Heathman, husband and wife.” They lived upon the land to the date of Fannie B. Heathman’s death. Fannie B. Heathman (the wife) received from the real estate of her father’s estate the sum of $1,572, and there is but little doubt that this money went into the land in question, which land cost $2,200. The difference was .paid by the husband, Frederick Gr., who, after getting the deed as aforesaid, put valuable improvements thereon, aggregating some $2400 or more. It is shown that Fannie. B. had but little other property of her- own. It included two horses, two cows and $100 cash, which likewise came from her father’s estate. The $1572 came from the sale of the father’s land.

After hearing all the testimony, the trial court decreed a resulting trust in favor of plaintiffs in said land as follows:

“Wherefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that the defendant Frederick Gr. Heathman took and held the title to 1575-2200 of said land in trust for the said Fannie B. Heathman and that 625-2200 thereof was taken and held in his own right and is now so held by him. That upon the death of the said Fannie B. Heathman as aforesaid one-half of the 1575-2200 of said land descended to Frederick Gr. Heathman as her surviving husband, and one-half thereof to the plaintiffs, Mary A. Larrick, James A. Larrick and Mattie L. Byars, each being seized of and entitled to an equal share in the said one-half of 1575-2200 of said land, and said lands so held by said Frederick Gr. Heathman are hereby impressed with a trust in favor of said plaintiffs in accordance with the findings herein.

“It is further adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs recover nothing for rents from said Frederick Gr. Heathman, and that said defendant Frederick Gr. Heath-man recover nothing for improvements placed upon said land, and that the costs of this action be taxed against defendant and that execution issue therefor. ’ ’

*376 From such, judgment by both sides an appeal is taken. The vital question is the real character of the deed from Dale. Of this, and the pertinent facts in the opinion.

Quantum of Proof. I. Upon its face the deed from Dale created an estate by the entirety. If we were confined to that, the end of this case would be in sight. But a resulting trust may be shown by parol proof, and in the face of the deed, if the quantum of proof appears. The burden 0f proof is upon plaintiffs in this case, if they are allowed to overturn the deed. [Joerger v. Joerger, 193 Mo. l. c. 139; Morford v. Stephens, 178 S. W. l. c. 441.] And such proof must be of a strength that will leave no doubt as to the trust. [Morford v. Stephens, supra; Ferguson v. Robinson, 258 Mo. l. c. 133.] The intention of the parties at the time the deed was made is a material element in determining the question of trust or no trust. That is to say, the presumption of a trust arising from the fact of one party paying all or a part of the money, may be rebutted by the testimony, as well as by the deed. The deed itself may be contradicted, so as to show a resulting trust, if the facts in .evidence warrant.

The question of the proof required may be gathered from the case, 'supra. So in this case it but remains to measure the proof made by plaintiffs by the rule established by these cases as to quantum of proof. Many other cases might be cited, but these will suffice to illustrate the rule.

consent of wife. II. It would be jockeying with facts to suggest that $1572 of Fannie G. Heathman’s did not go into the land. Tt is clear that Fred G. Heathman put in the remainder, Whether or not he got any portion of this from Fannie’s share in the personal estate of her father is not definitely shown by the evidence. It appears that Heathman was a-man of limited means at his marriag’e a few years before this transaction, and the improvement *377 placed upon the farm were no doubt from accumulations made after the purchase of the farm. When the farm was purchased in 1901, Fannie had not yet received her part from the sale of the father’s real estate, and the first $500 payment on the farm was made by the husband. But, before the delivery of the deed, in 1902, she had received the $1572, and as indicated it is clear that this money went into the land. Had the husband taken full title to the land in his own name, under these facts, without more, a resulting trust might have to be declared, as to the interest represented by the money of the wife. [Moss v. Ardrey, 260 Mo. l. C. 604.] So, too, it might be said that had the husband caused the deed creating an estate by the entirety to be made without the knowledge or consent of the wife (after placing her money in as a part of the purchase money) then a like situation might result. [Moss v. Ardrey, supra, and the cases therein cited and reviewed; Johnston v. Johnston, 173 Mo. l. c. 118.]

Our cases cover the time before, as well as the time after, the Married Woman’s Act of 1889. This case, upon the facts, would come clearly under the law existing after the passage of the several Married Woman’s Acts. It arose at a time when, under ordinary circumstances, the wife could even contract with her husband. It arose at a time when Section 8309, Revised Statutes 1909 (formerly Section 4340, R. S. 1899), was in full force and effect. Under this statute we have ruled that when the money of the wife is invested in lands (either as full or partial consideration thereof) without the written assent of the wife, a resulting trust arose in favor of the wife (and of course in favor of her heirs) to the extent of the money so invested. Whether or not this construction should have been given to the peculiarly worded proviso, in said section, we need not now discuss. It had been so long so ruled that in Moss v. Ardrey, 260 Mo. l. c. 604, et seq., supra, the writer took it as settled. What our views might have been had we been dealing with it as an original proposition is immaterial. So that, inasmuch as no *378 written assent of the wife appears for the use of the wife’s money here, this case upon this theory would, fall within the line of cases cited in the Moss case, supra. And this is the contention of the respondents.

TmsttinS III.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 975, 288 Mo. 370, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larrick-v-heathman-mo-1921.