Magee v. Burch

108 Mo. 336
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 Mo. 336 (Magee v. Burch) 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
Magee v. Burch, 108 Mo. 336 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J.

The plaintiff Magee prosecutes this action of ejectment as the curator of the minor heirs of John Walls, to recover sixty acres of land in Macon county.

[339]*339The undisputed facts, as we gather them from the abstracts on the one side and the other, are these: Rosa Walls, who was the wife of John Walls, purchased the land in 1869, paid for the same out of her own means, and took the deed thereto in her own name. After-wards and on the seventh of March, 1878, she and her husband conveyed this sixty acres and also forty acres, the title to which stood in the name of John Walls, to their son-in-law, Luther C. Linn, for the consideration of $700. On the same day Luther C. Linn executed a deed of trust conveying both tracts to John K. Linn in trust to secure his note for $700, payable, according to the recitals in the deed of trust, to John Walls. The deed was recorded in March, 1878, and the deed of trust in June, 1879.

John Walls died and Rosa Walls was appointed the administratrix of his estate. She then married Mr. Johnson. The dates of these events are not stated. On the third day of January, 1884, Luther C. Linn conveyed the sixty acres in question and also the forty acres back to Rosa Johnson for the consideration of $700 as it is •expressed in the deed. In February of the same year, •she conveyed both tracts to McKenzie for $550, and in March of the same year he conveyed the sixty acres to ■defendant for $330. These deeds were all recorded before the dates hereafter mentioned.

Afterwards and in May, 1886, the present plaintiff was appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate •of John Walls, having been appointed curator of the minor heirs in November of the preceding year. As such administrator he caused the land in suit to be sold by the sheriff under the deed of trust, the trustee having refused to make the sale. The sale was made in July, 1887, and the plaintiff purchased the property at that •sale as curator of the minor heirs.

From the foregoing statement, it will be seen the plaintiff’s right to recover depends upon the validity, force and effect of the sale made under the deed of trust. [340]*340The claim of the defendant is that the note secured by the deed of trust belonged to Rosa Walls, and that it was paid by the reconveyance of the land to her. The evidence on these issues is as follows :

The deed of trust, as has been said, bears date the seventh of March, 1878, and professes to secure a note of that date executed by Luther C. Linn for $700, payable to John Walls in ten years after date with interest payable annually. It does not appear that any such a note was ever inventoried by Rosa Walls as administratrix or by plaintiff as administrator de bonis non of the Walls estate. The plaintiff testified that he never had the note or deed of trust; that he could not find them ; that he asked Mrs. Walls for them, and she said she did not have them. He was then asked this question: “When you asked Rosa Walls for the note and deed of trust, did not she give you a little note that she claimed to represent interest?” to which he answered, “She did, on Luther Linn.” Plaintiff put this note in evidence. It bears date the twenty-sixth of November, 1882, is for the sum of $118.44, due at one day, payable to Rosa Walls, and is signed by Luther C. Linn.

The defendant put in evidence a note signed by Luther C. Linn, dated the seventh of March, 1878, the date of the deed of trust, for $700, payable to John Walls and Rosa Walls, ten years after date with interest from date at seven per cent, per annum, payable annually. Rosa Johnson, formerly Rosa Walls, in her deposition read in evidence by the defendant, testified that she and her former husband sold the two tracts to Linn for $700; that the sixty-acre tract was her separate property; that the other tract was a government homestead; that Linn paid for the land by executing the $700 note payable to her and her husband, John Walls; that Walls gave her the note on the day it was executed, and she had it in her possession ever since that :date; that she did not know there was any [341]*341deed of trust given to secure the note, or if there was in whose name it was taken. She says if there was a deed of trust taken by her husband, it was taken without her knowledge or consent. There is also some - evidence tending to show that Rosa Walls paid for the forty-acre tract when acquired by her husband.

1. This record is remarkable for what it does not disclose. Mrs. Johnson was not examined as to the consideration for the reconveyance of the land to her, nor does she state why she kept the $700 note after she accepted that deed from Linn, nor does she state why or for what purpose she gave the small interest note to the plaintiff. Linn does not appear to have been examined by either party ; and there is nothing to show why he was not produced as a witness. Nor does the plaintiff state for what purpose he received the small interest note from Rosa Walls. On this point there is a seeming studied silence in his evidence. But whether Mrs. Johnson, formerly Walls, accepted the conveyance of the land back to her in payment of the note and accrued interest is not very material; for there is an abundance of evidence from which the court could find that it was this note held by her which was secured by the deed of trust, and that she was the owner of it.

This is an action at law, and was tried by the court without a jury. In such a case the finding of the court is as conclusive here as the verdict of a jury. ■

It must, therefore, be taken as a fact that Rosa Walls was the owner of the note secured by the deed of trust. It could not become the property of her husband by virtue of the marriage until he reduced - it to his possession, and, as this was not done by him in his lifetime, it did not become assets of his estate. It continued to be her property. Hart v. Leete, 104 Mo. 315. As the note did not belong to the estate, the plaintiff had no right to cause the land to be sold under the [342]*342deed of trust. The sale was made without any authority from the owner of the debt, and is a void sale. The plaintiff acquired nothing by his purchase.

2. As to the objection to the introduction of the note, because the words, “Rosa Walls,” were in one handwriting and the other parts of the note in another, it is sufficient to say, the original note is not before us, and there is nothing in this record to show any difference in the handwriting. . An objection based upon a fact does not prove the fact. The fact constituting the ground of objection must be made to appear. The statement of counsel in making the objection proves nothing. It may be the court overruled the objection because the note was all in the same handwriting.

3. The court, it is next insisted, erred in allowing Mrs. Johnson to testify that her former husband gave her the $700' note. The objection is made upon the theory that she was one party to a contract and he the other, and, as he is dead, she cannot testify under the provisions of section 8918, Revised Statutes, 1889.

We do not understand the witness to speak of any contract between her and her husband, or even of a gift from him to her. She does say he gave the note to her, but what she means is that he handed it to her not as a gift, but because it represented her land and belonged to her. This is quite clear from other portions of her evidence. The objection was properly overruled.

4.

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Bluebook (online)
108 Mo. 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magee-v-burch-mo-1891.