Meador v. Ward

260 S.W. 106, 303 Mo. 176, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 7, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 106 (Meador v. Ward) 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
Meador v. Ward, 260 S.W. 106, 303 Mo. 176, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 749 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

*179 RAGLAND, J.

This is a suit in equity for the cancellation of a deed and incidentally for the partition of the real estate therein described.

On March 25, 1918, James F. Meador and Anna Meador were husband and wife. They had two sons, Adolphus Meador and J. Frank Meador, and five daughters, Minnie Atnip, Ninnie Ward, Callie L. Bell, Pearl Biggerstaff and Luna Chilton. Between them they owned 578 acres of land in Wayne County, he having the legal title to 398 acres and she the title to 180 acres. On the date mentioned they signed and acknowledged a deed purporting to convey the entire tract of 578 acres to their five daughters. The deed was one of general warranty. Except in the particular presently to be noted it followed literally in its verbiage that found in the blank printed form in general use in this State for drawing general warranty deeds. Meador and his wife were described as “parties of the first part” and the daughters above named as the “parties of the second part.” The consideration expressed was “the sum of natural love and affection and the sum of one and no/100 dollars.” Im *180 mediately following the description of the lands which constituted the concluding part of the granting clause, this language was inserted:

“It is herein stipulated and understood that the said parties of the first part are to have the peaceable possession of the premises herein described, for and during their natural lifetime.”

The deed was filed for record by Ninnie Ward, one of the grantees, May 3, 1919. On the following day James F. Meador died intestate, leaving surviving him a widow, said Anna Meador, and the sons and daughters above named as his only heirs at law. Subsequently his daughter Minnie Atnip died leaving seven children.

On December 1, 1919, the two sons of Meador and the children of his deceased daughter instituted this suit against the four surviving daughters and the widow. As grounds for setting aside the deed from Meador and his wife to their daughters, the petition charged mental incapacity on his part and undue influence on theirs, and further, that the instrument had never been delivered by him. The answers of the defendants put all of these matters in issue. In her separate answer the widow, Anna Meador, claimed “the exclusive right to the possession, use, benefits and profits of all said lands as long as she shall live, under the provisions of said deed.” Her co-defendants claimed title under the deed “subject only to the right of the exclusive possession, the sole use, profits and benefits of all the lands described in the deed in the defendant Demaris A. (Anna) Meador for and during her natural lifetime.”

At the trial below plaintiffs abandoned all the grounds upon which they sought a .cancellation of the deed except that of non-delivery. On that issue they offered the deposition of Ninnie Ward, one of the defendants, in the giving of which she testified, in substance, that during her father’s last illness, a day or two before he died, her mother took the deed out of a box in her father’s house, in which he kept his papers, and gave it to her; that she never saw the deed until that time; *181 that she did not know whether her father ever knew that the deed had been given her. Defendants then offered the deposition of the defendant Anna Meador. When the offer was made the following colloquy between counsel occurred:

“Me. ING: The Court please, we offer next the deposition of Demaris'A. Meador.
“Mb. Hay: The widow of the deceased James F. Meador?
“Me. Ihg: Yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Me. Hay : And one who, under the deed, has a life interest in this land — that is true?
“Me. ING: A life interest.”

Plaintiffs then made the following objection to the proffered testimony:

“We object to the testimony of this witness for the reason that under the provisions of this deed she is one of the parties in interest, having a like interest under and by virtue of the provisions of the deed, and the grantor conveying the fee of the estate in which she has a life interest being dead. Any testimony on the part of this witness would be incompetent.”

The court first ruled that the witness was incompetent, but subsequently admitted her testimony. With reference to the execution of the deed it was as follows:

“Q. What was done with the deed after you and Mr. Meador signed it before Mr. Ford A. He come home and gave it to me to take care of for the girls.
“ Q. Did you take care of it for the girls? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. State where the deed remained, in whose care and custody, who had it in their possession after it was delivered to you? A. I put it in a box with his papers.
. “Q. Who had charge of it, who kept it? A. I did.
“Q. What was done with the deed a short time before Mr. Meador died. A. He told me to have it put on record, on Thursday morning before he died.
“Q. On what day of the week did he die? A. Sunday morning. '
*182 “Q. Wliat did you do with the deed after your husband told you to put it on record? A. I taken it and given it to Ninnie Ward.
“Q. What did you tell her to do? A. I told her what her papa said — to take it and have it put on record.”

The trial court found that the deed in question had been duly delivered by James F. Meador in his lifetime, and adjudged that under the provisions of that instrument defendant Anna Meador had a life estate in all the lands therein described, and the remaining defendants and the heirs of the deceased daughter were vested with the remainder in fee. Whereupon it dismissed plaintiffs ’ petition. From such judgment plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

There is no question but that there was a delivery of the deed in controversy so far as Anna Meador, one of the grantors, is concerned. It is equally plain that it operated as a conveyance of her individual land, conveying the entire fee therein, save and except “the peaceable possession of the premises . .- . for and during their (grantors’) natural lifetime.” It is as the deed of James F. Meador that the delivery of the instrument is questioned and put in issue. On this issue plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that Anna Meador took the deed from a box in which her husband kept his papers and without his knowledge, consent or acquiesence gave it to one of the grantees. This evidence fell short of showing a delivery as to him (Dallas v. McNutt, 249 S. W. 35, 37), yet it was sufficient to destroy, the presumption of delivery that might have arisen from the fact that the grantees were found in possession of the deed. This was the state of the proof when plaintiffs closed their case in chief. To meet this situation the defendants offered the testimony of Anna Meador, the surviving grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 106, 303 Mo. 176, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meador-v-ward-mo-1924.