McKenzie v. Donnell

106 S.W. 40, 208 Mo. 46, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 40 (McKenzie v. Donnell) 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
McKenzie v. Donnell, 106 S.W. 40, 208 Mo. 46, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 241 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Jackson county for an accounting and to enforce the decree of this court rendered on the 12th of July, 1899, wherein the plaintiffs herein were plaintiffs in error and the defendants herein were appellants in a cross appeal.

The petition sets forth at length the bringing of the bill in equity by the plaintiffs, as the children and heirs at law of Jedediah E. McKenzie, to recover certain lands and set aside a deed of trust thereon and for an accounting on the ground that a certain deed of conveyance, to-wit, a deed of trust made by the said Jedediah McKenzie on March 15, 1875, to Charles H. Vincent, trustee for Patterson Stewart for $3,000, was invalid, because of the insanity of the said Jedediah McKenzie at the date of its execution, and that a certain trustee’s deed, made by the sheriff of Jackson county, under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in [51]*51said deed of trust, to Catherine E>. Donnell, was invalid for the same reason, and that such proceedings were had that a decree was rendered by the circuit court of Jackson county in favor of plaintiffs on the 15th day of July, 1895, whereby it was adjudged that at the date of the execution of said deed of trust, said Jedediah was insane, and ordered and decreed that the said deed of trust of March 15, 1875, be set aside and for naught held. And that the trustee’s deed by the sheriff as aforesaid to Catherine E. Donnell should also be set aside and for naught held on account of the invalidity of the deed of trust under which said trustee’s deed was made. And that a certain other deed of trust given by the said Catherine E. Donnell and M. S. C. Donnell, her husband, to Oliver H. Dean, as trustee, for Israel B. Mason, of date July 29, 1886, and duly recorded in Jackson county, to secure a note of even date therewith for $15,000', which had been transferred and delivered to the Citizens’ National Bank of Kansas City, should also be set aside, and that a certain other deed of trust by the said Catherine E. Donnell and her husband to James S. Botsford, trustee, for George P. Ballingal, of date October 27, 1892, and for $500, and duly recorded in Jackson county, and which had been transferred to the Citizens’ National Bank of Kansas City, should also be set aside and for naught held. And it was further adjudged and decreed in the said action that the fee simple title to the above-described real estate should be and the same was thereby vested in the children and grandchildren of the said Jedediah McKenzie, the plaintiffs in this suit. It was further ordered and decreed that the defendants, Catherine E. Donnell and M. C. S. Donnell her husband, and the said Citizens’ National Bank, and the trustees in the said deed of trust and all persons claiming by, through or under them should be forever debarred and enjoined from having or claiming any right or title whatsoever [52]*52to the said real estate adverse to the plaintiffs therein, the children and grandchildren of the said Jedediah McKenzie, and the title to said property was forever quieted in the said heirs. It is also alleged that the said circuit court charged the said Donnells with the rents and use and occupation of said real estate and for certain rock quarried out of said premises by the said Donnells during their occupation of the same, which the court found to be in the aggregate, up to the time of entering* the said judgment, $3,223, and on the other hand the court charged the said real estate with the purchase price paid by the said Donnell therefor, to-wit, $2,105, and also with the taxes thereon sinee the year 1877 up' to the time of said decree, with interest thereon, and with certain attorney fees paid by the said Donnell in resisting the condemnation of a part of said land for Twenty-third street and in resisting a certain other taxbill against said property for the grading of Locust street, in all amounting to $1,250, and for certain repairs thereon, the whole amounting in the aggregate to $11,113.14, and deducted from the said sum the said sum of $3,223 rents and interest thereon and rock quarried up to the time of the entering of the said decree, and found a balance of $7,890.14, and decreed the same as a charge against the plaintiffs on said real estate and ordered and adjudged that the same be paid to the Citizens’ National Bank within twelve months of the rendition of the judgment and to bear six per cent interest. It was ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendants immediately deliver possession of the said real estate unto the plaintiffs. In default of payment of the said $7,890.14, within the 12 months allowed by the -court, it was decreed that the said real estate should be sold to satisfy the same, and out of the proceeds of said sale the sheriff should first pay the costs and expenses of said sale and no other costs, and next pay to the Citizens’ National Bank the said sum of [53]*53$7,890.14, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date of judgment until paid. Provided, however, that if the cost adjudged in said cause against said Catherine and M. S. C. Donnell had not been paid, on execution or voluntarily, at the time of the sale of the said land under said execution, then the amount of the said cost adjudged in said cause should be deducted from the said sum of $7,890.14 and the balance of said sum paid to the Citizens’ National Bank and, thirdly, the balance, if any, of the proceeds of said sale should be paid to the plaintiffs in this case. Plaintiffs were also charged with certain other items of costs, which are not necessary to be noted at this time. The plaintiffs filed a motion to- modify the said decree, which motion the court overruled and the plaintiffs excepted. The defendants also filed motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment and a motion to tax the costs against the plaintiffs, all of which motions the court overruled, and the defendants excepted. The plaintiffs brought their exceptions to this court by writ of error- and the defendants appealed. The circuit court made a further order in the cause whereby it permitted the said Donnells to pay any and all taxes general and special which might be levied or charged on the property in controversy pending their appeal except a certain special taxbill, which was then pending in the Supreme Court, and ordered that they be allowed all such payments as liens upon such property with interest thereon from the time of payments until the decree should be carried into effect if affirmed by the Supreme Court, and further decreed that the said Donnells should be charged with the actual rents of the said premises received by them during said appeal with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, and for all moneys received by them for rock, if any, quarried by them on the said property during said appeal and until said judgment was affirmed and carried into effect. It [54]*54is thereupon further alleged that on the 12th day of July, 1899, the Supreme Court of Missouri rendered an opinion in the said cause, which is reported in the 151 Mo. 461 to 472, and affirmed the said decree in all respects except that it disallowed the sum of $375 attorneys’ fees allowed the said Catherine Ei. and M. S. C. Donnell in defending the taxbills then in suit in the Supreme Court, thus leaving the amount with which said lands were to be charged in favor of the Citizens’ National Bank to be $7,515.14. It further appears that the Supreme Court modified the judgment of the circuit court so as to extend the time .to plaintiffs to pay said charge on said land, for ninety days after August 1, 1899.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 40, 208 Mo. 46, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-donnell-mo-1907.