Linville v. Ripley

146 S.W.2d 581, 347 Mo. 95, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 581 (Linville v. Ripley) 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
Linville v. Ripley, 146 S.W.2d 581, 347 Mo. 95, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 512 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*98 DOUGLAS, J.

This is an action to quiet title to land in Nodaway County. To recount the facts which have given life to this controversy will serve as an epilogue, perhaps, to extended and prolonged litigation which has reached the Kansas City Court of Appeals on five different occasions in its tedious journey through the courts. That court has promulgated opinions in three of the eases. We refer to them for a history of this litigation. [See Bank of Skidmore v. Ripley (Mo. App.), 84 S. W. (2d) 185; State ex rel. Bank of Skidmore v. Roberts, 232 Mo. App. 1220, 116 S. W. (2d) 166; Bank of Skidmore v. Bartram, 142 S. W. (2d) 657.]

As the background of this case we find in 1931 a suit was instituted by the Bank of Skidmore of which Linville, the plaintiff in this case, is cashier against two defendants, Marion F. Ripley and John A. Ripley, on a promissory note for $1100. Neither defendant appeared and judgment was rendered by default. Marion F. Ripley is not concerned here. Less than a month later John A. Ripley died. His widow, Alice Ripley, the main appellant here, was appointed administratrix of his estate. The bank then filed its demand against the estate of John A. Ripley. Its demand was based not upon the note but solely upon the default judgment. The administratrix attempted to stay the proceedings for the allowance of the demand pending her action in the appellate-court to have the default judgment against her intestate set aside. The probate court refused her request and the demand was allowed. The bank, as a creditor of the estate because of its allowed claim, petitioned for the sale of the real estate belonging to the decedent’s estate in order to collect its claim.. The court sustained the bank’s application and entered an order to sell the land. The sale was not immediately held but was *99 postponed from time to time and at intervals the order of sale, based on tbe same original petition of the bank, was renewed. In the meantime the default judgment against the deceased Ripley was set aside by the Kansas City Court of Appeals and held void ab initio and the suit on the note was remanded for trial on its merits. [Bank of Skidmore v. Ripley, supra.] The reasons assigned for setting aside the default judgment was because, when summons was served upon John A. Ripley, he was “under total disability by reason of illness in both mind and body, so much so that he was insane, unable to give the matter attention, and incapable of protecting his own affairs or business, being prostrate in bed in his last illness, totally helpless, and unable to attend court or to look after any business or to employ attorneys, or to communicate with any person to attend to his defense and pleading in his cause. ’ ’ The court also found the pleadings showed there was no consideration for Ripley’s signing the note which fact, if proved, would establish a good defense in favor of Ripley’s estate. After some intervening legal combats, judgment was entered in the circuit court holding Ripley’s estate not liable on the note. This judgment was affirmed in Bank of Skidmore v. Bartram, supra. The bank, still relying on its allowed demand, made further application to the probate court for various orders and relief. The administratrix in opposing these applications advised the probate court through pleadings of various character that the default judgment which, as we have observed earlier, was the sole basis of the bank’s allowed claim, had been declared void by the Kansas City Court of Appeals and contended that the bank was not, therefore, a creditor of the estate. However, the probate court disregarding this contention permitted the bank to proceed as a creditor.' The bank had Alice Ripley removed as administratrix and defendant Bartram was appointed administrator in her stead. Finally in 1939 the order of sale originally obtained on the bank’s petition was renewed and the real estate sold to a person acting for plaintiff.

In this case plaintiff is seeking to quiet title to that real estate. He claims title by mesne conveyance from the purchaser at the sale. He alleges defendants are claiming title under the intestate to the same land and asks that the court decree that he, the plaintiff, is the sole owner. Defendants answer that the deed obtained through the administrator ’s sale conveyed no title to plaintiff because the sale was based on a void order of the probate court and prays that title be decreed in them as the widow and heirs of the intestate, and that the administrator’s deed be cancelled as a cloud upon their title. Judgment below was for plaintiff and defendants have appealed.

The determination of the question of the validity of the sale will settle the issues of this appeal. If the judgment of the probate court ordering the sale is void, naturally the sale itself is void.

*100 The attack upon the judgment in this proceeding' constitutes, of course, a collateral one. But we held in Orchard v. Store Co., 225 Mo. 414 at 463, 125 S. W. 486, a Amid order of sale by a probate court Avas subject to collateral attack and further, a sale under such, a Amid order conveyed no title to the purchase.

It is true an order of sale is a judgment of the probate court Avhich is entitled to all the presumption in favor of its validity given by law to a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction. [Bray v. Adams, 114 Mo. 486, 21 S. W. 853.] And, like the judgment of a court of general jurisdiction, if a judgment of a probate court is regular on its face and does not disclose lack of jurisdiction in the record of the proceedings in the course of which it was rendered, it is impervious to collateral attack. [Wilson v. Wilson, 255 Mo. 528, 164 S. W. 561.] Only the face of the judgment and the record proper may be used to impeach the judgment in a collateral proceeding. Even though a judgment on its face shows jurisdiction yet it may be impeached by other parts of the record which show affirmatively Avant of jurisdiction. [Cloud v. Inhabitants of Pierce City, 86 Mo. 357; McClanahan v. West, 100 Mo. 309, 13 S. W. 674; Sisk v. Wilkinson, 305 Mo. 328, 265 S. W. 536; Inter-River Drainage District v. Henson (Mo. App.), 99 S. W. (2d) 865.]

In the trial below the full record of the proceedings in the probate court was introduced in evidence and is before us. From that record we find the order of sale was based on the petition filed by the bank, in which it was represented that the bank was a .creditor of the estate. The record also shows the bank’s claim against the estate which furnished its status as creditor Avas founded on a judgment of the circuit court which was void ab initio. In addition, the record shoAvs that there was no liability of the estate on the note itself aside from any consideration of the default judgment. Repeating for emphasis, we find from the record the bank’s claim was allowed solely on a judgment which Avas under review; the judgment was later declared Amid ab initio; the estate as held free from any liability on the promissory note as well on which the judgment had been rendered; all these facts were of record in the probate court at the time of the final renewal of the order of sale, at the time of the sale and at the time of the approval of the sale. The bank Avas not, therefore, a creditor of the estate and the judgment reciting that it was a creditor is impeached by the record.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 581, 347 Mo. 95, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linville-v-ripley-mo-1941.