Mathis v. Crane

230 S.W.2d 707, 360 Mo. 631
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 13, 1950
Docket41686
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 230 S.W.2d 707 (Mathis v. Crane) 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
Mathis v. Crane, 230 S.W.2d 707, 360 Mo. 631 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

*635 WESTHÜES, C.

This action was filed by plaintiff against her husband, John T. Mathis, to set aside an antenuptial contract; A trial was had and before the final submission of the case, the defendant died. The case was revived in the name of Cyrus Crane, executor of the will of John T. Mathis, as defendant. The trial court entered a decree setting aside the contract and made a finding that the agreement was unreasonable, unfair, and unjust, and that the plaintiff had been overreached. Prom the judgment the defendant, executor, appealed.

This being an equitable proceeding, this court must review the ease de novo.

In February, 1949, when the trial was had, plaintiff was 60 years old and the defendant 79. The defendant, John T. Mathis, was admitted to the Bar in 1896 and was associated with John H. Lucas for many years. He also served as Assistant City Counselor of Kansas City for eight years. At one time he was a traveling claim adjuster for the Union Pacific Railroad Company. He was married and in 1934 he and his wife, Rhoda, moved to California where she died in 1944. No children were born of this marriage. Mathis inherited a substantial amount of property from his wife.

Plaintiff was born in Denver, Colorado. After she graduated from school she married B. 0. Lockman. Of this union two children were born. This couple was divorced in 1916. In 1918 plaintiff married Dr. Hileman and three children were born of this marriage, two of whom were living at the time of this trial. The Hilemans lived in San Diego, California. Dr. Hileman died in 1936.

In February, 1946, at a Yalentine Party, Catherine Hileman, the plaintiff, and John T. Mathis met for the first time. It seems that a mutual friend, Mrs. Kirkendall, acted in the capacity of cupid in bringing about the introduction. She suggested that plaintiff and Mathis should get married since they both were single. The following Easter plaintiff sent Mathis an Easter greeting. An exchange of letters followed and marriage was mentioned. Plaintiff during the summer- months advised with her children as to the advisability of marrying Mathis. Mathis was in Kansas City, Missouri, most of the summer but returned to Long Beach, California, about September. Plaintiff was to be a delegate of a lodge to a convention to be held in St. Louis, Missouri, the - latter part of September. Marriage had been considered and she suggested that the marriage should take place before she left for the convention. Mathis would not agree; he wanted to have a prenuptial agreement signed before the marriage and wanted to discuss the matter with his friend, Cyrus Crane, a lawyer in Kansas City, Missouri. Plaintiff attended the convention and by appointment made by letter met Mathis at Kansas City . On the day following her arrival a visit was made to the office of Cyrus Crane and the terms of the prenuptial *636 agreement were discussed. A prenuptial contract was prepared and was signed on October 1, 1946. Mathis and plaintiff then left Kansas City to go to California. They stopped over at Fort Scott, Kansas, where they were married and then proceeded to San Diego, California, where they lived in a home owned by plaintiff. A separation occurred in April, 1948. The above is only a skeleton outline of the main events as revealed by the record of the lives* of plaintiff and Mathis.

The contract in question reads as follows:

“ANTENUPTIAL AGREEMENT
“MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT between JOHN T. MATHIS, Party of the First Part, and CATHERINE M. HILE- . MAN, Party of the Second Part, WITNESSETH:
“ WHEREAS, both of said parties contemplate entering into the marriage relation with each other, and both are severally possessed of real and personal property in his and her own right, and Second Party has children by a former marriage, all being of age and possessed of means of support independent of their parent, and it is desired by the parties hereto that their marriage shall not in any way change their legal right, or that of the children of the Party of the Second Part, and heirs in the property of each of them, from what they are before the marriage.
‘ ‘ Therefore, it is agreed:
“1. The Party of the First Part agrees that he will provide during the continuance of the marriage all necessary reasonable household expenses, and in the event the Second Party sells the home now owned by her that he will provide a home for the Party of the Second Part.
“He further agrees that he will pay to the Party of the Second Part the sum of One Thousand and No/100 Dollars ($1,000.00) per year from the date of their marriage for each year, or part of a year, that they live ■ together in the marriage relation, which amount is to become the sole and separate property of the Party of the Second Part.
“2. The Party of the First Part, agrees, in case he shall survive the Party of the Second Part, that he will make no claim to any part-of her estate as surviving husband; that in consideration of said marriage the Party of the First Part waives and relinquishes all right of curtesy, or statutory right, to the real estate of which the Party of the Second Part may die seized, and all right to her personal estate as surviving husband, heir at law, or otherwise.
“3. The Party of the Second Part, in consideration of said marriage, agrees, in case she survives the Party of the First Part, *637 that she will make no claim to any part or share of the real or personal estate of which the Party of the First Part dies seized, and said Party of the Second Part expressly waives and relin-. quishes all claims to dower; homestead, widow’s award, or other right in and to the real and personal estate of which the Party of the First Part may die seized.
“4. It is mutually declared that it is their intention that by virtue of said marriage neither one shall have or acquire any right, title or claim in and to the real or personal estate of the other, but that the estate of each shall descend to or vest in'his or her heirs at law, legatees, or devisees, as may be prescribed by his or her last will and testament or by the law of the state in force, as though no marriage had taken place between them.
“5. It is mutually agreed that, in case either of the parties desire to mortgage or sell and convey his or her real or personal estate, each one will join in the deed of conveyance or mortgage, as may be necessary to make same effectual.
“6. It is further agreed that this agreement is entered into by each party with satisfactory knowledge on the part of each as to the property of the other; but it is their desire that their respective rights to each other’s estate shall be determined and fixed by this agreement, which shall be binding upon their respective heirs and legal representatives.
“7.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W.2d 707, 360 Mo. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathis-v-crane-mo-1950.