Lewis v. Whitten

20 S.W. 617, 112 Mo. 318, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 221
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 28, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 S.W. 617 (Lewis v. Whitten) 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
Lewis v. Whitten, 20 S.W. 617, 112 Mo. 318, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 221 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Brace, J.

This is an action brought in the circuit court of St. Clair county by Robert E. Lewis, plaintiff, against Stokley D. "Whitten and James Elliott, defendants, to set aside a deed executed by the said Whitten and wife, bearing date the fourteenth day of June, 1881, conveying a tract of land in said county to the said Elliott for the expressed consideration of $3,600, on the ground that said deed was made without consideration, and with the intent upon the part of said Whitten to hinder, delay -and defraud his creditors, in which fraudulent intent the said Elliott participated.

The trial court so found, set aside and annulled the deed, and the case is brought here by the defendants on writ of error.

It appears from the evidence that, prior to the April term, 1881, of the circuit court of Henry county, a son of the said Whitten had been arrested for grand larceny in said county, which adjoins St. Clair on the north, and Whitten had entered into a recognizance to [323]*323the state of Missouri in the sum of $1,000 for the appearance of his son at the April term aforesaid, of the Henry county circuit court to answer such charge; that at said term the son was indicted for grand larceny, but failing to appear the recognizance was forfeited, and on the fourteenth day of June following the deed in question was executed. The tract conveyed contains about three hundred and fifteen acres of land, worth at that time between $4,000 and $5,000, situate in the northern part of St. Clair county, near the Henry county line; it was farming land except forty acres in timber. It had three houses on it, an ordinary frame dwelling, one and a half stories, a cabin and a small box house. At the time of the conveyance Whitten was living in the cabin, the main house being in the possession of a tenant to whom he had rented the place for a term ending March 1, 1882. Whitten was then agéd about sixty years, somewhat infirm in health, with weak eyes, and not capable of doing much farm work. His family-consisted of his wife, two boys who rendered him little assistance, and had become notorious as thieves, and some younger children. ■ Besides his farming implements and household furniture, he had a wagon, two or three horses, several cows and calves and some hogs. It also appears that he was an applicant for a pension from the government, which he afterwards received, but when or how much does not appear; that there was a mortgage on the place amounting to $400, which was afterwards, with the interest, paid by Elliott, $40 of which seems to have been with money deposited by Whitten. But besides this ■ mortgage debt the recognizance obligation, and a note of $100 to a firm of lawyers in Henry county retained for the defense of his son in the larceny case, it does not appear that he was otherwise indebted. .

[324]*324Defendant Elliott at that time was a farmer and trader in easy circumstances, living a few miles from Osceola, the county seat of St. Clair, and about twenty-two or twenty-three miles from the home of "Whitten. He had formerly lived near Whitten’s farm and been his neighbor, and they had been intimate friends and ‘chums” for many years when this conveyance was made.

A few days before it was executed Whitten came to the office of C. A. Calvird, in Clinton in Henry county, a member of the firm, who had been retained to defend his son on the criminal charge, had a talk with him about the forfeited recognizance and proposed to make him a conveyance of the land. This proposition Calvird declined, but told him he would go out and look at the land, and buy it from him if they could agree on terms. He accordingly went out to see it on the thirteenth of June, 1881, offered Whitten $10 per acre for the land, to surrender the $100 note of Whitten, which the firm held; fight the action on the recognizance free of cost; and give him $500 more if they succeeded in defeating it. Whitten agreed to come up the next day with his wife and talk it over. He did not come, and on the fifteenth of June Calvird went to see him, when he said to Calvird, “I went to Osceola yesterday and sold the place to Jimmy Elliott for the cash.”

On the twentieth of December, 1881, judgment was rendered in the circuit court of Henry county in favor of the state of Missouri against Whitten on the forfeited recognizance for the sum of $1,000 debt and $3.50 costs.

On the first of March, 1882, Whitten’s tenant moved out of the frame house, and Whitten moved into that house from the cabin and continued to reside there until April, 1885, when he moved to Kansas. During [325]*325this three years a part of the farm was cultivated by Whitten, but principally by tenants, one of whom moved into the small house when Whitten left it and continued there during the whole time that Whitten remained; the little box house was also at times occupied by a tenant. The rent was paid principally in a share of the crop raised, which was delivered to Whitten and by him disposed of; but, however paid, Whitten got it, and during this whole period he seems to have managed and controlled the farm, collecting the rents, selling and using its products, making improvements and repairs, contending for boundaries, and offering it for sale as if it were his own.

The sale to Elliott seems to have been made upon the spur of the moment, without previous consideration and without any reasonably fair pretext for such a deal between the parties. Elliott was living at a distance from the premises, engaged in a business for the purposes of which he needed all the money he had or could reasonably raise. He had no apparent use for this land foi his own business, or as an investment. He must have known of Whitten’s obligation to the state and his desire to defeat it. The deed was drawn by Elliott’s attorney, and $700 of the recited consideration passed to the attorney by Elliott, by him counted and passed to Whitten, a note for $2,500 executed by Elliott to Whitten, and the deed delivered.

The defendants testify that between that date and Whitten’s departure to Kansas in the spring of 1885, all the note except $300 was paid. Neither of them gives a satisfactory explanation of how or when these payments were made, and if Whitten retained this $700, and during the time he remained on the farm received the cash payments indicated, no appearance of the money is to be discovered in the payment of his debts, in his expenditures, or in his manner of living; [326]*326and when he left for Kansas he took with him personal property of about the same value as he had when the deed was made. And two years laterj when his deposition was taken in this case in Kansas, just before the trial, he had about the same amount of personal property — $100 in money, and was living on an unproved government claim. Whitten in his deposition does not undertake to show how or when the payments on the $2,500 note were made, but says he lost the note while in Missouri at a circus; and before he left for Kansas he and Elliott had a settlement, and he gave him a note for a balance of $300, on which $100 had since been paid. When requested to produce this note he refused to do so.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 S.W. 617, 112 Mo. 318, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-whitten-mo-1892.