McCue v. Stumpf

79 S.W. 661, 180 Mo. 673, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 79 S.W. 661 (McCue v. Stumpf) 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
McCue v. Stumpf, 79 S.W. 661, 180 Mo. 673, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 88 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a bill in equity to cancel and set aside as fraudulent a certain deed to the north 55 feet of lot 9 of Seeger’s addition to Kansas City, dated March 10,1893, from Bridget McCue to the Aetna Building & Loan Company. The petition charges that the deed was executed by Bridget McCue to Margaret McCue, the plaintiff, and that the name of the plaintiff was subsequently fraudulently erased as the grantee and that of the Aetna Building & Loan Company substituted, but that the original deed is not in her possession or control, and that if upon the trial it turns out that she is mistaken as to such alteration, then she charges that the name of the Aetna Building & Loan Company was fraudulently put in the deed by George Stumpf, the husband'of the defendant, and the president of that company, instead of the name of the plaintiff, as was intended and as Bridget McCue believed to be the fact when she executed the deed. The petition then charges that the Aetna Building & Loan. Company on October 10, 1895, acting through said George Stumpf, conveyed the property to the defendant, Susie Stumpf. The prayer of the petition is that the title be divested out of the defendant and vested in the plantiff, and for a judgment for fifteen dollars a month rents and profits.

The defendant, Susie Stumpf, alleges that she holds the property as security for a note for $3,850, dated December 2, 1895, executed by the plaintiff; admits that she has collected certain rents, but claims she has paid out certain sums for taxes, insurance and repairs, and shows that she has a net balance of $190.83, [676]*676which should he credited on the note, and offers to convey the property to the plaintiff upon the payment of the balance due on the note with interest at six per cent, or the plaintiff failing so to do, she asks that the property be sold to pay said debt.

The reply admits that the plaintiff signed a note on December 2, 1895, for about $2,800, but alleges that George Stumpf represented to her that it was simply an extension of the indebtedness of her late husband to the Aetna Building & Loan Company, which was secured by deeds of trust on property in "Wyandotte, Kansas, and had nothing to do with the property in controversy, and she says she never executed any instrument or acknowledgment of indebtedness to the defendant.

The trial court entered a decree for the plaintiff, and ordered the title vested in her upon payment by her to the defendant of $942.20. The defendant appealed. As there is no question of law involved, but the case hinges entirely upon the evidence, the facts will be stated in the course of the opinion.

On the 10th of March, 1893, William McCue owned the property in controversy, and also certain other property in Wyandotte, Kansas. He was very sick and expected to die. The property in Kansas was mortgaged. The Aetna Building & Loan Company held two mortgages for $1,400 each, although only $980 on each was actually borrowed, on lot 2 of block 1 of Welsh’s subdivision, and on the southeast part of lot 10, block 1, Armstrong. And George Stumpf held a mortgage for $1,360 on lot 1 of block 1 of Welsh’s subdivision. The property in controversy was free of incumbrance. George Stumpf was the personal friend of William McCue. Realizing that he had not very long to live, McCue sent for Stumpf and told him he wanted to arrange his affairs so that his wife would have an extension of five years time in which to pay what he owed on the property in Kansas. There is a sharp conflict in the [677]*677evidence as to what then followed. The plaintiff’s evidence tends to show that Stnmpf advised McCne to deed all his property to his sister, Bridget McCue, and have her deed it to his wife, the plaintiff, and thereby save the trouble and expense of an administration upon the estate. On the other hand Stumpf says he told McCue that if he would give the Aetna Building & Loan Company the property in dispute, as additional security, he would extend the time for the payment of McCue’s indebtedness to the company for three years, and that to save the cost of administration he could deed the Kansas property that was already mortgaged to Bridget McCue and she could deed it to the plaintiff.

At any rate, Stumpf caused deeds to be prepared, and returned with a notary. These deeds conveyed the whole property from 'William McCue to Bridget McCue, and then the property in controversy was conveyed from Bridget McCue to the Aetna Building & Loan Company by a straight warranty deed, and without any mention of its being additional security. At the same time Bridget McCue conveyed the Kansas property to Margaret McCue, the plaintiff, which, of course, was subject to the mortgages thereon. The plaintiff and Bridget McCue swear that Stumpf told them that the deeds were to Margaret McCue, and neither one read them, and neither knew that the Aetna Building & Loan Company was the grantee in the deed to this property, but both relied on Mr. Stumpf’s assurance that the deeds vested the title in Margaret Mc-Coe, and she says she never heard that it did not do so, until August, 1900, when one McAnary told her that Mrs. Stumpf had a mortgage on the property in controversy, and that she immediately went to see Stumpf about it and he told her not to borrow trouble about her property, and that he would see that it was all right, and not to pay any attention to McAnary, and that she relied on his assurances. At the time the deeds were [678]*678executed, ‘William McCue was very ill, and had to be held up while he signed them. He died shortly after-wards. Thereafter for more than seven years Stumpf attended to the property for Mrs. McCue, who was a woman of no business experience and entrusted everything to him so completely; she says, that she signed anything he told her to without reading it and without question. Stumpf says that in June or July, 1893, the Aetna Building & Loan Company commenced to wind up its affairs, and that he purchased the McCue mortgages that were held by the company. On October 22, 1895, the Aetna Building & Loan Company, acting through Stumpf, its president, conveyed the property in controversy to Susie Stumpf. The consideration was stated to be two thousand dollars. But in 1897, there was a judgment rendered against Stumpf for twenty thousand dollars, and his creditor sought to realize on it, and took the depositions of both Mr. and Mrs. Stumpf as to what interest they had in this property. At that time Mrs. Stumpf swore she had no interest in the property, and had given nothing for it, but that she held it simply as trustee for a lady whose name she did not exactly remember, but that it was “Coal” or Coon” or something like that. Stumpf testified then that he had no interest in the property and his wife had no interest in it, but that it was held by his wife as security for what Mrs. McCue owed the Aetna Building & Loan Company, and that the amount had been fifteen hundred dollars, but had been reduced by a payment of nine hundred dollars to twelve hundred ' dollars, and that subject to such balance Mrs. McCue owned the property.

In this connection it is proper to anticipate the chronology of events so as to show what Mr. and Mrs. Stumpf said about it, on the hearing of this case on the 3d of August, 1901. Mrs. Stumpf said that Stumpf had transferred the property and Mrs. McCue’s note for $3,850 to her in consideration of $3,500 worth [679]*679of stock in a bank -which he had previously given her, and that he had used the stock in his business affairs. Stumpf says McCue owed the Aetna Building &

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 661, 180 Mo. 673, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccue-v-stumpf-mo-1904.