Meyer v. Meyer

285 S.W.2d 694, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 9, 1956
Docket44765
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 285 S.W.2d 694 (Meyer v. Meyer) 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 v. Meyer, 285 S.W.2d 694, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 676 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

; VAN OSDOL, Commissioner.

' This is an action in equity to" establish a resulting trust in described real estaté on Tecumseh Street in Riverside View’ Addition to St. Charles. The trial co'urt rendered judgment for plaintiff' Lulu Meyer, declaring a trust in her "favor, and ordered defendants, Raymond T. Meyer and Mathil-da C. Meyer, upon payment of $1,464.16 by plaintiff to them, to execute a conveyance to her. Defendants have appealed. ’

The action was originally brought by Hugo and Lulu Meyer, parents of defendant Raymond. Hugo Meyer died July 15," 1954, while the action was pending. Thereafter, plaintiff Lulu filed an amended "petition in two counts. In Count I, plaintiff alleged the death of her husband Hugo and sought a decree establishing a trust in the described property, and, in the alternative in Count II, sought the recovery of $3,737.43, the aggregate amount alleged to have been expended by plaintiff and her husband Hugo in retiring an encumbrance, in repairs and maintenance, and in taxes and insurance.

The parties have, taken conflicting evi-dentiary positions as to- their intention and the effect of their acts and conduct in the circumstances of defendants’ acquisition of the legal title to the described property. It is essential that we review the evidence; indeed, it is helpful in this case to quote and examine some of the language precisely as used by the parties in testifying in- the trial-of the cause.

The described property on Tecumseh Street was conveyed to defendants, Raymond and his wife Mathilda, as tenants by the entirety, by William. R. Rowe and Lulu. B. Rowe by warranty deed dated May 8, 1944. At the time defendant Raymond paid the grantors one thousand dollars in cash and the further sum of three thousand dollars which he borrowed the same day, May 8, 1944, from the St. Charles Building and Loan Association.

*696 At the time of the conveyance to defendants in 1944, plaintiff Lulu Meyér and her husband Hugo resided at New Melle. They had formerly owned a store in New Melle, but they had sold their store and Hugo was unemployed. They jointly owned, of had a substantial. “equity” in a rental property, six flats, in St. Louis, in one of which flats defendants were then living “free of rent,” although defendant Raymond was acting for his, parents in the collection of rentals and the management of the rental property. Plaintiff and her husband Hugo wished to move to St. Charles where he could get employment. They sought the assistance of their son, defendant Raymond, in getting a house in'St. Charles. ’

Plaintiff Lulu testified, “Weil, we didn’t have any work in New Melle and hardly had any income and we had to do something so we asked him (their son, defendant Raymond) if he could find a place for us here in St. Charles and he did * * * he paid down a thousand dollars on it and we had our money tied up in the St. Louis property and then he took a loan on it and after we had work in St Charles then, after that, we started to pay off the loan and then later on after we sold the property in St. Louis we paid the whole loan off,” After plaintiff and her husband had paid the loan, they said to Raymond, “ ‘Well, Raymond, we want to- pay you off the thousand dollars you have in here’ and he said ‘No, I don’t want the -money/- He- said-‘You- just keep that in there*; leave it in there -because you may need it’ and so then 'he said he would leave that in there *' . * ' $ -then we found out it must be in-his name and we told-him that we wánted to pay him off- because we wanted to have it settled, we wanted- to have everything paid for pnd he .said no; and later on we asked him — that*’way We would get a deed to'it — and He said ‘No, I keep the deed/' He said ‘It is yours but I keep the deed/ Then, later on, we asked him again for the deed and he said T keep; the deed; maybe, some day you can get old age pension/! So that was what he, told us.

A real- estate broker, who:had acted for the parties when the Tecumseh Street property was acquired, testified that defendant Raymond first approached him in the spring of 1944 in regard to the purchase of a home for the father and mother. The witness was “under the impression” the parents were going to live in the property and pay off the loan “and pay Raymond back” when the parents sold their St. Louis property. As the witness remembered — when the deed was to be made out the legal title was put in defendants — the reason was “to protect his (Raymond’s) thousand dollars.”

Plaintiff testified that “we were insisting we would like to have a deed * * *- ^e °ffered him six thousánd dollars for tbe place * • * * we thought if we gave him a £ood Profit maybe we would get a deed and we would give him that. * * * Well, he had the deed — as long as he had the deed — he bought that, maybe, but he always said it was ours.”

A witness, who had known the Meyer family for many years, testified that when the property was acquired the parents, or one of them, had questioned, “Now, which would be the best way to take title? Shall we take it in our name or shall we put the title in the name of our son?” On a Saturday “a number of years ágo” something was said to' the witness by defendant Raymond “about the preparation of a deed (to his mother) but that thing never did materialize * *

Victor Meyer, son of plaintiff Lulu and Hugo, brother of defendant Raymond, returned from military service in October, 1945. He found his parents residing in the Tecumseh Street property. He asked his brother Raymond, how the place was made out and be (Raymond) said it was made out m b*s name, that he had a thousand dollars in it and the folks were going tq PaX ,°⅜ the loan” . In another conversation with the witness,' Raymond had said that “he went down to the loan company and told the loan -people that the folks 'wanted to borrow some money. * * * Yes; he told me it was all Mom’s, there was nothing he could do about it.” ■■ . , .

1Defendant -Mathilda testified that plaintiff Lulu and her husband wanted to come to *697 St. Charles County “and they didn’t have any money to buy and they couldn’t rent anything so they asked us if we wouldn’t find a place for them to rent or buy, so we looked for a place and we found this place.” Defendants came to St. Charles “and went to the various real estate people and * * * I (defendant Mathilda) was the one that spoke for the plaintiffs.” Defendant Ma-thilda said the amount, one thousand dollars, paid on the purchase price was her money. She. said the parents were to pay monthly payments to the loan company and pay taxes “until they sold their property in St. 'Louis and then they were supposed to buy .their own place' but they insisted on buying our place.” She- further testified that the parents offered defendants $6,500 for the Tecumseh Street property in 1950 or 1951.

Plaintiff Lulu and her husband paid the building and loan association. monthly installments (except the first three installments totaling $75.96 which were paid by defendant Raymond), until November 3, 1945. _ The payment of these installments and the payment by the parents of one thousand dollars on the principal as of October 28, 1944, reduced the debt to the building and loan association to $1,743.89 as of December 1, 1945, and on that date the parents paid the balance of the loan in full. Meanwhile, the parents had sold their St. Louis property on or about October 3, 1944.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.2d 694, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-meyer-mo-1956.