Larue Ex Rel. Miller v. Larue

294 S.W. 723, 317 Mo. 207, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 723 (Larue Ex Rel. Miller v. Larue) 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
Larue Ex Rel. Miller v. Larue, 294 S.W. 723, 317 Mo. 207, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 720 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to establish an implied or resulting trust, filed December 29, 1922. By the decree of the trial court the plaintiffs' bill was dismissed and the title to the real estate in controversy — a dwelling house and parcel of ground in St. Louis, hereinafter called the Bates Street property — was quieted in the defendant. The plaintiffs have appealed on the sole ground that under the evidence the decree should have been for them. They are the heirs of George LaRue, who died July 29, 1922, and his widow by a second marriage, Paulina LaRue — impleaded by and through her guardian, she being a person of unsound mind. The defendant-respondent is the reputed third wife of the deceased.

A review of the record and a consideration of the whole case on its merits have convinced us that the cause was rightly decided by the learned chancellor who tried it. In accordance with the statutory mandate we set out a statement of the facts and legal conclusions which induce us to that view.

The petition conventionally recites that LaRue purchased and paid for the real estate involved and took title in the name of the defendant; that he died thus owning the land, and occupying it as a homestead; that the plaintiff widow, in consequence, is entitled to dower and homestead and, subject thereto, the plaintiff heirs to specified undivided fractional interests in the fee. The prayer is for divestiture of title out of the defendant into the plaintiffs according to their respective interests, for a determination of the interests of all the parties, for possession and costs, and for general relief. As characterizing the intention of the deceased LaRue it is alleged "that said George LaRue took title to said real estate in the name of defendant for the purpose of concealing his ownership thereof, and of defrauding and depriving these plaintiffs of their respective rights as widow and heirs of the said George LaRue."

The defendant's answer is a general denial and a plea of the ten-year Statute of Limitations, Section 1305, Revised Statutes 1919, coupled with an affirmation that she bought the real estate in controversy and paid the consideration out of her own separate means. As forecast by the pleadings, and as recognized in the briefs of counsel, the ultimate issue of fact is as to the ownership of the purchase money passing in the transaction.

The undisputed evidence is that George LaRue was twice married. By his first wife, Catherine, who died in August, 1881, he had one child, Frederick, who left at his death in 1899 two sons, the appellants Mathias and Peter. Four months after the demise of his first *Page 210 wife, or in December, 1881, George married the appellant Paulina LaRue, who bore him a year later a daughter, the appellant Paulina F.E. LaRue, also known as Lena, and hereinafter so designated. In 1883 when the latter was about a year old, the former became afflicted with some form of melancholia, and, whether for that reason or because driven away, as one of plaintiffs' witnesses surmised, a neighbor woman took both mother and daughter from LaRue's home to her own, and shortly thereafter the father of Paulina carried her and her infant daughter back to his home in Montgomery County. Thence, Paulina was presently transferred to an insane asylum in St. Louis, where she since has remained. Lena has continued to live in the home of her maternal grandfather.

In preparation for her confinement Paulina employed as domestic servant and attendant the respondent, Elizabeth LaRue, who then was a girl about seventeen years old, one of six children of humble parentage, their father being a common laborer living in a rented house. Elizabeth continued in her employment as a servant in the LaRue home from before the birth of Lena in 1882 until the departure of Paulina and Lena in 1883, and thereafter until 1885 performed additional work as an assistant in the office from which the deceased LaRue conducted a retail coal business. The uncontradicted testimony of Elizabeth (though doubted by appellants, in their brief) is that during this two-year period George LaRue made several trips to Pennyslvania, where he had relatives, the longest for about two weeks.

In February, 1885, George proposed marriage to Elizabeth, exhibiting a paper purporting to be an authenticated copy of a decree of the Supreme Court of Huntington County, Pennsylvania, dated February 24, 1885, granting to him, as plaintiff, a divorce from the appellant Paulina LaRue. Elizabeth testified she read over the decree and believed it genuine, and for that reason never submitted it to a lawyer. He also showed her a copy of a newspaper called the Springfield Weekly Journal, Volume 1, No. 48, dated Springfield, Mo., Thursday, February 19, 1895, containing an advertisement on the fourth page notifying the defendant in a suit between George LaRue and Paulina LaRue "to be at Mapleton, Huntington County, and State of Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, the 24th day of February, 1885," and failing, judgment would be rendered against him. Elizabeth preserved this paper because, she said, "it was to my interest." Objection was made by counsel for appellants to the introduction of these documents unless respondent would concede both the divorce decree and notice were null and void. This being agreed, they were admitted in evidence, "to show defendant's good faith in entering marriage with George LaRue." Appellants' inference is that the two papers were procured in the perpetration of a scheme, on the *Page 211 part of both George and Elizabeth, to fortify against a possible prosecution for bigamy following a contemplated bogus marriage.

A ceremony of marriage between George and Elizabeth was performed at St. Louis on April 21, 1885. They lived together before the world as man and wife for thirty-seven years until his death in 1922 at the age of nearly eighty-five years, she bearing him four children (not parties to the record) who, with her, constituted his family and wore his name. She was a party to seven of the deeds introduced in evidence by appellants to show the real estate transactions hereinafter mentioned, and in all of them her surname was given as "LaRue;" in four of them, wherein she joined as grantor with George LaRue, she was described as his wife; and, finally, when this suit was instituted by the appellants she was sued as Elizabeth "LaRue."

On the main issue, to establish their case the appellants attempted to trace into the purchase price of the Bates Street property proceeds from the sale of other pieces of real estate theretofore owned by George LaRue. In fact the appellants' whole showing consisted of a narrative by their three witnesses of the LaRue family history prior to 1895, plus the deeds evidencing the real estate transfers just referred to, plus certain alleged admissions, inconsistencies and improbabilities in the testimony of the respondent, Elizabeth LaRue.

It appears that at and prior to the time of the void marriage between George and Elizabeth, the former and his son, Frederick, owned two adjoining lots in St. Louis designated by street number as 7911 and 7913 Pennsylvania Avenue, respectively. Their title was derived from Catherine LaRue, deceased, mother of Frederick and first wife of George. George, it seems, had, or claimed the fee title to the lot at No. 7913, which was vacant, and a life estate in the lot at No. 7911, with the fee in Frederick. There was a small frame cottage on the latter lot in which the LaRue family lived. It was to this home that Elizabeth went when she entered the household as a servant, and here she lived as a member of the family after her supposed marriage, for about ten years until 1895.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 723, 317 Mo. 207, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larue-ex-rel-miller-v-larue-mo-1927.