McLaughlin v. McLaughlin

129 S.W. 21, 228 Mo. 635, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 157
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 21 (McLaughlin v. McLaughlin) 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
McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, 129 S.W. 21, 228 Mo. 635, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 157 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Plaintiff and defendant were formerly husband and wife. This cause comes here upon a judgment sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. His petition was in three counts originally, but it is stated that the second count thereof, which appears from the trial judge’s written opinion filed in the cause to have been a count in ejectment, was dismissed.

In the first count, plaintiff seeks by a direct count in equity to set aside that part of a judgment in a divorce suit between him and his wife by which the title to eighty acres of land in Caldwell county was decreed out of him and vested in his former wife, the defendant herein. In said count it is averred that plaintiff, from 1885 to 1897 was the owner of said land, was the head of a family and lived thereon; that his deed was recorded in Caldwell county; that he has never conveyed the same; that in 1897 he was convicted of murder and sentenced to the penitentiary of Missouri for ten years; that he remained in the penitentiary from 1898 to March 7, 1904, at which time he was released, and on May 19th was granted a full pardon by the Governor of the State. It is then averred that in 1902, whilst plaintiff was thus confined in the penitentiary and civilly dead, the defendant brought suit against him for divorce and alimony, as well as the care and custody of the children, and asked that such alimony or support and maintenance be decreed to her out of the property of this plaintiff; that service of the summons in said divorce suit was had upon plaintiff while he was incarcerated in the penitentiary under the judgment and sentence for murder aforesaid; that he could not defend the same; that in such divorce suit the defendant in this case was [642]*642granted a divorce from this plaintiff, together with the custody of the children of their marriage, and in said judgment and decree it was further decreed that the defendant in this cause he vested with the title to the land aforesaid, and that the title to the land aforesaid was divested from this plaintiff; that said action was beyond the powers and jurisdiction of the circuit court, and such decree, in so far as it affects the land, was beyond the powers and jurisdiction of the court, but was such as to create a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to said land, as well as his homestead rights therein. The said first count concludes with the following prayer:

“Wherefore, plaintiff prays that said judgment and decree of this court divesting out of this plaintiff the title to said real estate described as aforesaid, and vesting the same in the defendant Mary M. McLaughlin, be declared to be a cloud upon plaintiff’s title to said real estate. That the same be set aside and for naught held and that the court remove said judgment and decree as a cloud upon the title of plaintiff in and to said land, and for all such other and further relief as pertaineth to equity and good conscience, and as the plaintiff may on the trial of said cause show himself entitled to.”

The third count is one under section 650, to have ascertained and determined the respective interests of the parties to the land in question. In this count it is averred that defendant claims some interest in the land under the judgment described in the first count. This second count pleads all the facts pleaded in the first count, and alleges in addition that the equity in said land did not exceed $1500', the sum allowed as a homestead. By the prayer the court was asked to ascertain and determine the interests of the parties in and to the land.

To the petition the defendant demurred in this, language:

[643]*643“Defendant for plea to the first count of plaintiff’s petition in above cause demurs to tbe same for tbe following reasons:

“1. Because the facts therein stated1 constitute no cause of action against this defendant.

“2. Because tbe reasons assigned therein as causes for bolding tbe decree of divorce and alimony as void or invalid are not good in law.

“3. Because tbe facts stated therein do not entitle tbe plaintiff to tbe relief sought or any relief.

“To tbe third count of tbe petition tbe defendant demurs on tbe same grounds and for like reasons as those assigned as ground’s of demurrer to tbe first count. ’ ’

Plaintiff refused to plead further and upon judgment being entered against him has appealed to this court.

I. Plaintiff does not challenge that portion of tbe decree in tbe original cause which grants tbe divorce, but only that portion which deprived him of bis property. He charges in bis petition that be was civilly dead, and that no trustee was appointed for bis estate-as might have been done under article 2, chapter 141,. Revised Statutes 1899’. Tbe position of plaintiff is that a trustee must be appointed under said article 2, before-the court has jurisdiction of a case involving bis estate,, as contradistinguished from tbe marriage status.

Plaintiff was sentenced for a term of ten years; Our statute, Revised Statutes 1899, section 2382, reads: “A sentence of imprisonment in tbe penitentiary for a term less than life suspends all civil rights of tbe persons so sentenced, during tbe term thereof, and forfeits all public offices and trusts, authority and power; and tbe person sentenced to such imprisonment for life-shall thereafter be deemed civilly dead.”

Section 89-30 is tbe statute pertaining to tbs appointment of a trustee, and reads: “Whenever any [644]*644persons shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a term less than his natural life, a trustee, to take charge of and manage his estate, may be appointed by the circuit court of the county in which such convict last resided; or if he have no known place of residence, then by the court of the county in which the conviction was had, on the application of any of his relatives, or any relative of his wife, or any creditor.”

By other sections of article 2, chapter 141, supra, it is provided, (1) such trustee shall take an oath and give bond, (2) and shall be under the control of the court appointing him, (3) upon taking of the oath and filing of the bond all of the estate of the convict shall vest in the trustee, (4) such trustee may prosecute and defend actions by or against such convict, (5) the court may order sale of property for support and maintenance of family and education of children, (6) trustee shall settle with creditors, and to that end may examine witnesses, and (7) such trustee may redeem mortgages, conditional contracts and pledges of the convict. Other provisions are found in this article, but the ones enumerated suffice to illustrate the scope thereof. Finally the trustee is required upon the release of the convict to turn over the estate to him, or' in the event of ,his death to account to the personal representative.

The question, therefore, is, should the plaintiff in the divorce proceeding have had a trustee appointed before instituting a suit which involved the taking of the convict’s estate, and without there being* such trustee did the circuit court have the right to proceed with the cause in so far as it pertained to the estate of the convict? The question is not one void of difficulties. Nor are the cases from other States always enlightening, because of the difference in the statutory provisions.

It would appear that under the common law, the convict could not sue, but he could be sued. The exact [645]*645status of the convict at common law is not one to he determined without some perplexities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 21, 228 Mo. 635, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-mclaughlin-mo-1910.