McCluer v. White

93 S.W.2d 696, 338 Mo. 1017, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 406
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 696 (McCluer v. White) 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
McCluer v. White, 93 S.W.2d 696, 338 Mo. 1017, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 406 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

Suit in equity to set aside a deed as being in fraud of creditors. Finding and judgment for the defendants and plaintiff appeals. Plaintiff is trustee in bankruptcy of Nannie I. Payne, grantor in the assailed deed. His authority to institute and prosecute the suit is not questioned. Defendant Guiles White is the surviving husband and Nannie Ruth, Bruce and Edna White are minor children (represented by guardian ad litem), of Delia V. White, a daughter of Nannie I. Payne who died after the conveyance in question. Frank Kerwin and James R. Chancey are, respectively, husbands of Elizabeth M. Kerwin and Verna I. Chancey, daughters of Nannie I. Payne. The other defendants are children of Nannie I. Payne. Defendants claim title through the deed sought to be set aside.

By the deed in question, a general warranty deed, dated and executed June 25, 1929, and recorded the same day, Nannie I. Payne conveyed to all of her children, for a recited consideration of "love and affection and one and no/100 dollars," four described parcels of real estate situated in Milan, Missouri. The value of the real estate *Page 1020 so conveyed is not shown. From the rentals received from it, as shown by the evidence, the value could not have been very large. The only other real estate she then owned was a house and lot in Milan, referred to as the residence property, well located and well improved. That she retained. She had but very little money and no other personal property aside from her household goods. Her husband, D.A. Payne, had died in January, 1929. We gather from the record and briefs that prior to D.A. Payne's death, he and his wife, Nannie, owned all of the real estate above mentioned as tenants by the entirety, she, therefore, becoming sole owner upon his death.

On October 10, 1924, D.A. and Nannie I. Payne borrowed $4000 from a life insurance company and to secure the loan gave a first deed of trust on the residence property above referred to. That loan, due October 10, 1929, was outstanding on June 25, 1929, when Nannie I. Payne made the conveyance herein sought to be set aside.

It does not appear from the record what, if any, estate D.A. Payne left, nor what, if any, debts he owed, aside from the $4000 note above referred to and two small notes, to be presently mentioned. It is fairly inferable, however, that his estate was not sufficient to pay said two small notes.

Mrs. Payne, called as a witness by plaintiff, and upon whose testimony plaintiff's case largely depends, testified that after her husband's death two notes turned up, one, a small note, the exact amount of which is not disclosed, to a Mr. Price, and one of about $200 to a Mr. Quigley. She said she did not sign those notes and did not know of their existence until they were presented for payment. It seems, however, that her name appeared upon them as comaker with her husband. We suspect that her husband had signed her name to them without consulting her. Be that as it may her testimony shows that when she learned that her husband had given the notes she, desiring that his debts be paid, agreed to pay them, and did so. The actual payment was not made until shortly after the execution of the deed to her children. In the meantime Price, becoming impatient, had sued on his note, but Mrs. Payne's uncontradicted testimony is to the effect that before Price filed suit she had told him she intended to and would pay the note. It is not disputed that both those notes were paid in full. Except for those two small notes and the $4000 note secured by the deed of trust on the residence Mrs. Payne had no debts or liabilities, present or contingent, at the time she made the deed to her children. The children knew of the $4000 note and deed of trust.

Relative to the consideration for the deed Mrs. Payne testified: "I wrote the children in the spring after their father died, and I told them there wasn't enough income on this property to take care *Page 1021 of me and pay the expenses, and if they thought it best I would sign it over to them and them take care of me. . . . I was to have the rents and they was to supply me with money in my needs. . . . There wasn't enough income to pay taxes, insurance and $120 every six months to the loan company that I was paying without their help." On this point she further testified, speaking of the above-mentioned debts, "The children was to help and send the money to fix up these things was why I deeded the property away." She testified that when she made the conveyance to her children she believed the residence property to be worth about $6000 and that she "didn't want to give it up." She testified that, at the time of the trial, she still thought the property was worth, in June, 1929, five or six thousand dollars.

About July, 1929, and after the conveyance to her children, Mrs. Payne renewed and paid for the insurance on the residence property. In October or November, 1929, she paid the interest ($120), due October 10, 1929, on the $4000 loan, and about January 1st or 2d 1930, paid the 1929 taxes on the residence property. The amounts paid for insurance and taxes are not shown. The property was assessed for taxation at a valuation of $6000. It is not clear whether or not Mrs. Payne paid the interest due April 10, 1930, on the $4000 loan. There is some evidence indicating that she may have done so. Her schedule of debts, filed in the subsequent bankruptcy proceeding (referred to hereafter) lists the debt to the insurance company as $4000, secured by deed of trust (describing it) "due October 10th, 1929, and interest thereon from April 10th, 1930." The schedule further recites "which said deed of trust has been foreclosed and the above property sold for the sum of $1000 to a representative of said Life Insurance Company." It was offered in evidence by plaintiff. From her testimony, however, we get the impression that she did not pay the April, 1930, interest.

H.B. Hill, president of the insurance company, testified by deposition for plaintiff that he was in Milan about February or March, 1929, on other business and talked with Mrs. Payne about her loan; that he told her he thought the security was depreciating and that when it matured the company would have to have the money or additional security; that "She said that when Uncle Dan (D.A. Payne) died that she found that he had given some notes she didn't know anything about on which her name was on as security, and she stated that they was attempting to hold her on those obligations and she wasn't going to stand for it, that she was going to hold onto the property that Uncle Dan had left, and if it was necessary she was going to deed her property to the children in order to evade that."

Mrs. Payne denied having had such conversation with Hill. She said the only time she saw Hill in 1929 was about October of that *Page 1022 year, when he asked her if she could pay the loan. (That was after the conveyance to the children.) Defendants' counsel sought to show by Mrs. Payne what Hill then said about the security but were precluded by plaintiff's objections, which the court sustained. While a formal offer of proof was not made it is fairly apparent from counsel's remarks, arguendo, to the court that he was proposing to show that Hill, representing the insurance company, then expressed the opinion that the security was sufficient.

In the early part of August, 1930, the insurance company foreclosed its deed of trust and bid in the property for $1000 and was the owner thereof at the time of this trial. After that sale and on August 14, 1930, Nannie I. Payne was adjudged bankrupt. No debts were scheduled in the bankruptcy proceeding other than the one above mentioned to the insurance company.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 696, 338 Mo. 1017, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccluer-v-white-mo-1936.