Matthews v. Van Cleve

221 S.W. 34, 282 Mo. 19, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 34 (Matthews v. Van Cleve) 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
Matthews v. Van Cleve, 221 S.W. 34, 282 Mo. 19, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 103 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

*25 WILLIAMSON, J.

Appellants brought their suit, a proceeding in equity, in the Circuit Court of Macon County, Missouri. The issues were duly made up> and upon a hearing of the cause the judgment of the court was in favor of the defendants, and plaintiffs thereupon appealed to the Kansas City Court of Appeals. That court transferred the- case to this court, on the ground that the title to land is involved in the proceeding. A motion to remand having been overruled, the cause remains here for decision. The facts out of' which this controversy arose are 'substantially as follows:

Benjamin N. Tracy, Senior, was the father of Milton C. Tracy, Bettie Tracy Roberts, Luther Gr. Tracy, Benjamin N. Tracy, Junior, and Aubrey D. Tracy. Benjamin N. Tracy, Sr., died, testate, in Macon County, in 1873. His will was duly admitted to probate in that county, and the estate was duly administered. His wife, Frances W. Tracy, is also dead.

The third paragraph of testator’s will reads as follows:

“I devise and bequeath to my son, Ben N. Tracy and his heirs the following described real estate, to-wit: Twenty-six feet off of the east end of Lots One and Two in Block 87 in Macon City, Missouri; also Lot No. Thirty in College Addition to Macon City, Missouri, and Lot No. Six in Block 167 in the College Addition to said City of Macon; to have and to hold the same in; trust for the use and benefit of my son, Milton 0. Tracy and his heirs, the said trustee to[ have the sole management and control thereof, to collect the rents and pay the same to said beneficiary and his heirs, |the said Milton to have no control or disposition of said estate and no power to encumber the same, but said trustee to have power to sell and convey the same or any part thereof for reinvestment in other property to be held by him or his successors in the same way.”

Benjamin N. Tracy, Jr., on the death of his father, duly qualified as trustee of Milton 0. Tracy, and acted in that capacity for a number of years. He; was sue *26 ceeded in the office of trustee by one Philip Trammel, who was succeeded by James W. Roberts (husband of the defendant Bettie Tracy Roberts), who resigned in 1912, and the plaintiff' R. S. Matthews was then appointed trustee in his place, and acted in that capacity until the death of Milton 0. Tracy, July 11, 1915'.

This' suit was originally brought by Milton C. Tracy and his said trustee, R. S. Matthews, against James 0. Van Cleve, Edwin McKee and Edward* J. Demeter, all of whom are judgment creditors of the said Milton C. Tracy, and Bettie Tracy Roberts and Charles H. Pavson. Upon the death of Milton C. Tracy-pending the suit, his heirs, Fred N. Tracy and Luther G-. Tracy, were substituted as parties plaintiff in his stead.

It is alleged in the petition that by inheritance or purchase the title to all of the land involved in this action is now vested in the three plaintiffs and in the defendant Bettie Tracy Roberts. Mrs. Roberts, however, also claims in her answer to be the sole owner of these 'lands by virtue of the will of Milton C. Tracy. Further details as to the- derivation of title are not necessary to an understanding of the issues of this case.

Charles II. Payson was made a party defendant because he also had a judgment against the decedent, Milton C. Tracy, and under his said judgment had caused an execution to be issued, and had levied the i same upon the interest of Betty Tracy Roberts in said real estate. Further reference to this matter is unnecessary.

It is further alleged that for about fifteen years prior to his death, Milton C. Tracy was an invalid, confined to his home and unable to attend to any business; that the defendants Van- Cleve, McKee and Demeter had each obtained separate judgments against said Milton 0. Tracy, and thereafter 'had brought a creditors’ bill, so-called, in the Circuit Court of Miacon County, Missouri, whereby, as they claim, they had obtained a perpetual lien upon the portion of the property left- in trust to Benjamin K Tracy, Jr., for the use of the *27 said Milton 0. Tracy by the will of the testator. This proceeding was ¡badj' during the latter years of .the life of Milton C. Tracy, and at a time when his brother-in-law, James W. Roberts, was acting as his trustee. James W. Roberts was an attomey-at-law, and, if is alleged, undertook to enter the appearance of the said Milton C. Tracy, to sajid, action; in the [nature of a creditors’ bill, and no process whatever was served upon the said Milton 0. Tracy in that suit. Plaintiffs allege that the conduct of the said Roberts in so doing was unauthorized and fraudulent, and done in connivance with the said judgment creditors and without the knowledge, consent or approval of the said Milton C. Tracy, and that' the judgment so rendered is, for that aind other reasons in the petition alleged, null and void; that the original judgments in favor of said judgment creditors separately are barred by the Statute of Limitations, and that neither the original judgments nor the judgment obtained in the so-called creditors’ bill proceeding constitute a lien upon the lands in question.

It further appears that by order of court, in an effort to preserve the trust estate, the trustee was authorized to borrow of one George W. Gilstrap, the sum of six hundred dollars, and to give a deed of trust upon the property in question to secure the same, which he did. The validity of this deed of trust is not attacked. It appears that a portion óf the trust estate had been sold, and in violation of the terms of the will, the proceeds had been paid to the said Milton 0. Tracy, or used in the payment of taxes against the trust property, so that at the time of the suit but a small part of the trust estate remained.

The answer of the defendants Van Oleve, McKee and Demeter admits that they severally obtained judgments against the said Milton 0. Tracy, and that their judgments were afterwards consolidated in one judgment in the so-dalled creditors’ proceeding, and (the original judgments were thereupon released upon the record. They deny the allegations of fraud and collusion between themselves and Roberts, trustee, plead. *28 that their judgments were from timef to time revived; by writs of scire facias until consolidated in the creditors’ judgment aforesaid; aver that Roberts was duly, authorized to enter the appearance of Milton C. Tracy to these various proceedings, both as his trustee and as his attorney; plead that no appeal was taken from the judgment rendered in the'creditors’ bill proceedings against Milton C. Tracy and James "W. Roberts in January, 1907, and that all questions concerning the same are now res adjudicata; that the existence of, said judgment was well known to 'Milton C. Tracy for a long time prior to this death, -and to the plaintiff R. S. Matthews at the time of his appointment as trustee; that Milton C. Tracy died testate; that his will was duly probated in the Probate Court of Macon County, Missouri, and that by the terms of his will the said Milton 0.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 34, 282 Mo. 19, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-van-cleve-mo-1920.