McFarland v. Braddy

560 S.W.2d 259, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2434
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1977
Docket38085
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 560 S.W.2d 259 (McFarland v. Braddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFarland v. Braddy, 560 S.W.2d 259, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2434 (Mo. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

NORWIN D. HOUSER, Special Judge.

Action in ejectment and for damages, rents and profits (Count I) and to quiet title (Count II) to a tract of land in St. Francois County, and to annul two deeds to the land and expunge the deeds from the land records (Count III). Defendants filed a Counterclaim in three counts, (I) to quiet title in defendants based on implied trust, tenancy by the entireties, and a warranty deed from the survivor; (2) alternatively, to quiet title in defendants on the basis of adverse possession, and (3) alternatively to recover for improvements made on the land. Without the aid of a jury the circuit court heard all phases of the case except the issues of damages, rents and profits. The court found the issues for plaintiffs and against defendants on Counts I, II and III of the petition, except for the issues of damages, rents and profits, which were submitted to a jury. The court found the issues for plaintiffs and against defendants on all three counts of the counterclaim. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs and against defendants for $1.00 damages and $67.50 monthly rents and profits until possession was restored to plaintiffs. Defendants appealed from the ensuing judgment.

Plaintiffs assert title through their grandfather, Ed Curlee, who they claim was vested with fee simple title absolute in 1935. Ed Curlee died intestate in 1955. Plaintiffs contend that from Ed Curlee, plaintiffs’ mother Mary McFarland (Ed and Emma Curlee’s only child) inherited the land subject to Emma’s dower right (never assigned), her right of quarantine (which they say expired 10 years after Ed Curlee’s death), and her homestead right (which they say terminated upon the death of Emma Curlee March 1, 1974); that plaintiffs inherited the land from their mother, Mary McFarland (who died intestate in 1958), subject to the rights of their father Delbert McFarland, which terminated upon the execution by him of a quitclaim deed to plaintiffs.

Defendant Lewis A. Braddy (son of Emma by a former marriage; never adopted by Ed Curlee), claims title by deed dated February 7, 1967 from Emma Curlee to him. He traces his title back to Otto Behrbaum, who by way of gift deeded one portion and willed another portion of this land to Ed Curlee and Emma Curlee, subject to underground rights in 80 acres Behrbaum devised to Walter Meltzer, and an $800 mortgage held by St. Francois County School Fund. Lewis claims that in 1935 the county demanded payment of the $800 mortgage from the Curlees who, act *261 ing on advice of counsel, allowed the mortgage to be foreclosed and the land sold at public sale; that Ed Curlee purchased the land at the sale for $1,200; that three days after the foreclosure sale Ed and Emma Curlee signed a bond and deed of trust on the land to the school fund for $1,200— money used to pay the amount Ed Curlee bid at the sale; that the foreclosure wiped out Meltzer’s interest and the $800 lien; that both Ed and Emma intended to have the sheriff’s deed name both of them as grantees, as tenants by the entireties, but by mischance the sheriff’s deed, dated May 6, 1935, named Ed Curlee alone as grantee instead of both of them; that when Emma pointed out to Ed that he was named as sole grantee he acknowledged the error and promised to have the deed corrected to include Emma’s name as a grantee with Ed, but that he failed to do so; that when Ed bought the land at the sheriff’s sale and took title in his name he thereupon and at that time took title in trust for Emma and in equity held title with her as tenants by the entireties on the basis of a constructive trust 1 ; that Ed Curlee paid the $1,200 bond partly from funds supplied by Emma, and the deed of trust was cancelled; that upon Ed’s death January 15, 1955 Emma as survivor succeeded to the entire title, giving her good right to convey to Lewis on February 7, 1967.

The appellate court will sustain the decree on issues tried to the court “unless there is no substantial evidence to support it, unless it is against the weight of the evidence, unless it erroneously declares the law, or unless it erroneously applies the law.” Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32[1-3] (Mo. banc 1976).

Appellants, contending there is no substantial evidence to support the decree; that it is against the weight of the evidence and that the court erroneously applied the law, make two points: that the court erred (1) in failing to decree that a constructive trust arose at the moment Ed Curlee bought the land at the foreclosure sale with his and his wife’s money and took title in his name alone, and (2) that the court erred in holding that the deed from Emma to Lewis Braddy was the result of a scrivener’s mistake and was not intended to be executed or delivered.

Applying the tests of Murphy v. Carron, the first critically important question is whether some of Emma’s money went into the purchase of the land at the foreclosure sale, pursuant to an intention on the part of Ed and Emma that title be taken in their joint names as tenants by the entireties, or whether the sheriff’s deed was intended to be a conveyance of the title to Ed Curlee only. If that question is decided favorably to defendants the next vital question is whether the warranty deed from Emma to Lewis dated February 7,1967, purporting to convey the whole farm, was a good and valid conveyance of the fee simple title.

ON THE QUESTION OF SOLE OWNERSHIP OR TENANCY BY THE ENTIRETIES

Unchallenged documentary evidence shows that the sheriff’s deed named Ed Curlee as the sole grantee; that Ed Curlee and Emma Curlee, his wife, signed the $1,200 bond as principals and that they both signed the deed of trust of May 7, 1935 by which they bound themselves to pay that sum, referred to in the documents as money *262 borrowed from the school fund, and that the $1,200 bond was repaid to the school fund as follows:

Date Principal Interest
12-10-1941 $600.00 $60.60
12- 4-1942 400.00 36.00
2-10-1943 200.00 2.00

Receipts signed by the county treasurer were issued in each instance to “Ed. Cur-lee.” The proximity of the dates of the foreclosure (May 4), the sheriffs deed (May 6), and the deed of trust (May 7), together with a consideration of the amount borrowed ($1,200) in comparison with the amount required to satisfy the $800 debt, with interest to March 29, 1935 ($1,007.47), plus interest from March 29 to May 4,1935, plus publication costs, etc., totalling approximately $1,200, constitutes circumstantial evidence that the $1,200 borrowed as aforesaid was used to discharge the debt and costs.

Defendant Lewis A. Braddy supplemented this evidence by giving oral testimony as follows: Ed and Emma went to I. N. Threl-keld, an attorney, to get advice about the threatened foreclosure of the farm. Acting as spokesman, Emma told the lawyer that “she” wanted to borrow the money. The lawyer advised her to “let it go through foreclosure and reborrow the money to pay that off. * * * You can buy it in.” Attorney Threlkeld offered to arrange for the loan, sign the note as a surety and get Joe Diemer to sign as an additional surety.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 S.W.2d 259, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarland-v-braddy-moctapp-1977.