Martin v. McCabe

213 S.W.2d 497, 358 Mo. 118, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 555
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 12, 1948
DocketNo. 40756.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 497 (Martin v. McCabe) 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
Martin v. McCabe, 213 S.W.2d 497, 358 Mo. 118, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 555 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*121 [498]

ELLISON, J.

This actionby appellant was started under

Sec. 1684 1 as a suit to determine title to the land described in the margin, 2 which for brevity we hereafter refer to as a “tract”. It wound up with the concession that the defendant-respondent owned an undivided half interest therein; a prayer for partition; and the assertion by appellant of an equitable claim and lien against respondent’s said half interest in the sum of $12,000, this being one-half the amount expended by appellant in placing improvements on the land and discharging tax liens thereon,' in alleged good faith and ignorance of the true state of the title. Appellant says it is essentially an action in equity for unjust enrichment, as to the improvements. The chancellor found and decreed for respondent as to the improvements; for appellant as to the tax liens; and ordered partition by a sale of the land and apportionment of the proceeds.

Appellant is the niece of Byron Crutcher, a man of considerable experience in real estate developments in the City of Springfield. He promoted the opening, paving and curbing by special assessment of a street crosswise of a tier of lots in Country Club Place, dividing them into half lots,, including the one here involved. He then bought, among others, two of the tax bills against the tract in controversy for about $300, and gave them to appellant as a gift. *122 Thereafter be furnished all the money and did all the acts in her name and behalf which figure in this ease. And so, while he is not a party to the record, he was appellant’s agent and alter ego. He caused the tax bills to be foreclosed by suit, and bid in the tract at the execution sale, taking the sheriff’s deed in appellant’s name. Thereafter he paid, the taxes against the tract, graded it, and built two dwelling houses thereon, under the- innocent and mistaken belief —he testified — that appellant was the owner thereof. His total outlay was $24,000, of which appellant now seeks to recover one-half from the respondent, on the concession that she is a tenant in common owning an undivided half interest in the land. That is the principal issue on this appeal, and it depends on whether Crutcher acted in good faith in making the foregoing expenditures.

Stating the facts more fully and in order of date. The record title to the tract was in the name of “Miss Bessie McCabe of Los Angeles, California,” as devisee under the will of Lawrence San-sone, deceased, a brother of Charles Sansone of Springfield, who was executor of the will and a friend of Crutcher’s. Crutcher knew Bessie McCabe owned the tract and where she lived, for he wrote her- in California in March, 1941, offering to buy it. The tax bills involved were issued a year later in March, 1942. Crut-cher bought them in April, 1943. They were issued only against the east half of the tract, but a little over two years later, in the fall of 1945, he took them to the City Clerk, complaining that they should cover the whole tract. The City Council passed ordinances cancelling [499] the old tax bills and authorizing the issuance of new ones accordingly, under Sec. 6782. This change was not made in the tax bills against any other lots (1 to 9) in the tier. The new issue of tax bills did no bear the date of their own issue, as the statute required, but were dated back to the date of the old tax bills of 1942, thereby making it appear three installments were past due thereon, when in fact they were not. This rendered void the new tax bills and the judgment thereon.

Crutcher testified he notified Bessie McCabe as each installment on the tax bills came due, but none of these notices were ever acknowledged or returned undelivered. In 1944 and 1945 he talked to .Charles Sansone several times about the tax bills and whether any of the family would pay them. He admitted Sansone told him Bessie McCabe had died and that Lawrence Sansone had a living sister, Mrs. Staggs, but denied he was informed as to Bessie McCabe’s heirs. He gathered from what Sansone said that these relatives did not want to get involved in any family affairs and were not interested. In fact he said he learned from Sansone “that there was no one that was interested in the bill (the two tax bills) to protect it,” and was told the way to do would be to bring suit thereon.

*123 At the time of trial below it was stipulated that on account of Sansone’s physical condition he was unable to testify or give his deposition. But it was shown that he had employed the law firm of Iiaymes & Dickey to look into the matter, and had authorized them to disclose the contents of their file of correspondence to both parties to this suit. Mr. Dickey testified and produced the file at the trial. In it was a letter from a California lawyer dated June 11, 1945, addressed to Mr. Sansone — with whom Crutcher had been conferring — which stated Bessie McCabe, deceased, was survived by a sister, Mrs. Mary L. Harrington, and a niece Mary McCabe, who four years theretofore, was living in St. Louis, However it expressed the opinion that the tract was not worth redeeming. So it seems the foregoing information was in Sansone’s possession when he talked to Crutcher, though he may have been inclined to the view that the value of the tract would not justify payment of the tax bills thereagainst.

At any rate appellant brought suit to foreclose the tax bills six months later on December 20, 1945, against the unknown heirs of Bessie McCabe, apparently without any further effort to find out who and where they were. He recovered a default judgment based on service by publication on March 16, 1946, under which the tract was sold at execution sale to appellant, and a sheriff’s deed was executed to her, which was recorded on April 24, 1946, in Book 687, page 367, Recorder’s Office, Greene County. It should be stated Crutcher did not disclose to the lawyer who brought the suit that the tax-bills, which were fair on their face, actually were a reissue of later date, and with a different land description.

This lawyer testified from recollection that Crutcher did not tell him he could find out who the heirs were, but did say he (Crut-cher) had talked to Mr. Sansone; and the witness further stated he felt “reasonably certain” that “Charley” (Mr. Sansone) had told him he did not know who the heirs were, or where they might be found. Whether this was before or after Sansone had received the letter of June 11, 1945, from the California lawyer does not appear. Appellant did not begin to make the improvements on the tract, upon which his present claim to reimbursement is based, until April, 1946, after he had whatever information he had got from Sansone, and after the judgment in the suit on the tax bills had been obtained.

Near the end of that year (1946) another law firm in Springfield was employed to examine the abstract of title to the tract, in view of a contemplated sale thereof involving the obtention of a “G. I.” or Government loan. Certain requirements on the title were made which disturbed Crutcher, and he, or the Union National Bank of Springfield, employed one of appellant’s present counsel, Judge Johnson, about March 1; 1947 to look into the matter.

*124

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 497, 358 Mo. 118, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-mccabe-mo-1948.