Meyer Bros. Drug Co. v. Bybee

78 S.W. 579, 179 Mo. 354, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 579 (Meyer Bros. Drug Co. v. Bybee) 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
Meyer Bros. Drug Co. v. Bybee, 78 S.W. 579, 179 Mo. 354, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 14 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

FOX, J.

— This proceeding originated from a levy of an execution in the hands of the sheriff of Benton county, Missouri, upon certain land of respondent, J. W. Bybee.

In respect to the levy it is claimed by respondent that the land levied upon constituted the homestead of respondent, hence was exempt from the levy under the execution.

[360]*360This proceeding is based upon the following motion filed by respondent:

“Now comes the defendant J. W. Bybee and moves the court to quash the levy of the execution heretofore levied in this cause, as far as the same pertains to the land of defendant J. W. Bybee which has been seized under said execution, because said real estate is exempt from execution, the same being the homestead of the said J. W. Bybee, and because the sheriff in levying said execution failed to advise said Bybee of his rights to homestead and failed to set off his homestead to him as the law requires the sheriff to do in such cases. ’ ’

While technically appellant was not required to file an answer to this motion, yet one was filed, which is substantially as follows:

‘ ‘ Comes now the plaintiff and for answer to defendant J. W. Bybee’s motion to quash levy made by the sheriff of Benton county on the execution issued on plaintiff’s judgment against said J. W. Bybee, denies that said real estate so seized and levied on by said sheriff of Benton county, Missouri, under and by virtue of said execution is or was defendant’s homestead, and denies that defendant is entitled to homestead in said real estate, and avers the fact to be that if said real estate ever constituted the homestead of defendant, or any part thereof, which fact the defendant denies, the same was abandoned by the defendant long before contracting the debt for which plaintiff’s said judgment was rendered, and said defendant, after contracting said debt with plaintiff on the faith of the fact that said homestead, if any ever existed, had been by defendant abandoned, for the purpose of fraudulently depriving this defendant of his remedy in collecting his said debt went into the possession of said real estate and now sets up his pretended claim of homestead.
“Further answering defendant’s said motion to quash said levy, plaintiff says that defendant ought not to be permitted to claim said real estate as a homestead [361]*361and exempt from sale on said execution, in this, that long before defendant contracted the debt for which plaintiff’s judgment was rendered against him, and upon which judgment the execution in this case was issued, defendant had removed from the neighborhood of said real estate, never having actually occupied the same, to the city of Warsaw, Benton county, Missouri, and had become a resident thereof, and engaged in the mercantile business in said city; that said defendant while so engaged in the mercantile business in said city of Warsaw for the purpose of procuring credit and inducing this plaintiff to sell him goods, wares, and merchandise on credit and to induce him to contract the debt for which this judgment was rendered, by his conduct, claim and representations led this plaintiff to Relieve that said real estate was assets in his hands, subject and liable for the payment of debts, and especially the debt which he, the defendant, was endeavoring to contract with plaintiff, and for which debt this judgment was rendered, and that said real estate was not homestead; that this plaintiff had no knowledge or information that said real estate was homestead, or that said real estate was not subject to the payment of the debt about to be contracted with defendant, and believed and relied on such conduct, claim and representation as true, that said real estate was assets in defendant’s hands subject to the payment of this, as well as other debts, of defendant, and not homestead, and so relying on said conduct, claim and representation of defendant, extended defendant credit, and contracted the said debt for which said judgment was rendered; that this plaintiff would not have extended said defendant credit and sold him goods, wares and merchandise or contracted said debt if it had not believed and relied upon the said conduct, claim and representations that said real estate was assets belonging to defendant subject to the payment of said debt, and not homestead as now claimed by him; that defendant well knew all of the facts in relation to the said real [362]*362estate at the time he, by his conduct, claim and representations, induced said plaintiff to extend him credit, through and by which said debt was contracted on the faith of his said conduct, claim and representations, that said real estate was assets in his hands and not homestead, and subject to the payment of said debt; that to permit defendant now to assert his claim that said real estate is homestead, operates as a fraud on this plaintiff, and wholly deprives it of any remedy or means by which it is able to collect its debt so contracted, and reduced to judgment; that this defendant is insolvent, and without any other property subject to execution on said judgment, so that plaintiff says that defendant ought to be es-topped from now asserting his said claim that said real estate is homestead, exempt from execution, after so inducing plaintiff to extend him credit and contracting-said debt for which said judgment was rendered on the faith of the fact that said real estate was subject to execution for the payment of defendant’s debts.”

The trial court heard the testimony on the motion, which was substantially as follows:

“In 1892, defendant Bybee purchased a farm of 225 acres about 14- or 15 miles from Warsaw, and with his family took immediate possession thereof, or rather he was living on the farm at the time he bought it. He bought this farm in two parts from different persons, 150 acres was purchased from his father and about two months later he purchased 75 acres adjoining the 150, of one Bird, for the purpose and with the intent of making the two tracts one farm which he intended to use and occupy as his home. The 75 and 150 acres had formerly been one farm, and belonged to the same person, but had been sold in two parts to two different persons, and defendant purchased both pieces and used them together as one farm. The two pieces were already enclosed under one fence as one tract, and there was no fence dividing them, but there was a small stream or branch running between the 75 and 150-acre pieces. During all [363]*363the time that defendant owned this land np to the time he sold the 150 acres he used the entire 225 acres together as his home place or homestead.
“When Bybee bought this land the house or residence building was situated on the 150 acres, and hence defendant with his family resided on this part where the building was, as there was no building on the 75 acres, yet it formed a part of the entire tract which defendant was occupying as a homestead.
“In 1894 or 1895 defendant built a new dwelling house on this 75 acres with a view and the purpose, as he testifies, of making that new house his permanent dwelling house on said farm, but did not at that time remove from his old house into the new, but as his father and mother lived with him, were dependent on him, and in fact constituted a part of his family, he placed them in this new house, but with the intent of making this new house his own, as well as his parents’, dwelling house.

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

Related

George Maroun, Sr. & a. v. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company
167 N.H. 220 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 2014)
Chames v. DeMayo
972 So. 2d 850 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2007)
Mayhugh v. Coon
331 A.2d 452 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)
Overfield v. Overfield
30 S.W.2d 1073 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Wendler v. Brenneman
7 Alaska 13 (D. Alaska, 1923)
State Ex Rel. Bush v. Sturgis
221 S.W. 91 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1920)
Schenker v. Breece
102 S.W. 659 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
Mitchell v. United Railways Co.
102 S.W. 661 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1907)
Ewart v. Young
96 S.W. 420 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Cobb v. Houston
94 S.W. 299 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Jonesboro v. United Iron Works Co.
94 S.W. 726 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 579, 179 Mo. 354, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-bros-drug-co-v-bybee-mo-1904.