Miller v. Miller

184 S.W.2d 1011, 353 Mo. 884, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 439
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39050.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 1011 (Miller v. Miller) 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
Miller v. Miller, 184 S.W.2d 1011, 353 Mo. 884, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 439 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J.

This is an action to partition 531 acres of land in Mercer county among the heirs of Robert Miller, who died intestate December 5, 1938. The suit was brought in July, 1942. The plaintiff-respondent, Earnest E. Miller is one of the sons and heirs of the decedent, having an undivided one-ninth interest in his land and estate. The defendants who did not appeal likewise are heirs, having undivided interests ranging from one-ninth to one- *886 sixty-third. The defendant-appellant Walter R. Miller is another son and heir of the deceased, and the defendant-appellant Esther A. Miller is his wife.

The land consists of three tracts, the first 1 containing 147.87 acres; the second, 2 270 acres; and the third, 3 113 acres. About a year before his death the deceased, then over 80 years old, conveyed the first tract by warranty deed recorded in book 88, page 385, of the land records of the county to the appellants Walter R. Miller and wife as tenants by the entirety. The first count of the petition alleges this deed was in fact a mortgage and seeks a decree so declaring and vesting title in the heirs of the decedent, subject to the aforesaid mortgage lien of the appellants and an equitable lien in favor of the defendant Jessie Fred Miller for money advanced in the sum of $1141. The second count prays an accounting of the rents and profits of said first tract during the four years from 1939 to 1942 while appellants were in possession. The third count prays partition of the three tracts between the parties according to their several interests.

The chancellor rendered a decree in favor of the plaintiff-respondent on all three counts. Appellants state in their brief that they are contesting only the part of the decree covering the first and second counts, namely the part holding the deed to appellants covering the first tract was only a mortgage, and requiring them to account for the rents and profits therefrom.

The warranty deed was dated November 23, 1937, and was made for a recited consideration of $2000. It was acknowledged December 29, 1937 and filed in the Recorder’s office on January 3, 1938 at 11:45 A. m. The appellant grantees in said deed executed a deed of trust dated December 1, 1937, covering the same land, to a trustee for the Farmers State Bank of Princeton in Mercer county, securing the payment of their promissory note for $2200, due December 1, 1942. This deed of trust was acknowledged on January 3,' 1938 — the same date that the warranty deed was acknowledged. 'It was filed in the Recorder’s office on that day at 11:55 a. m., ten minutes after the warranty deed had been filed.

*887 There is little dispute about the facts attending the practically contemporaneous execution of the warranty deed and deed of trust. The 147 acre tract was clear of mortgages but heavily encumbered with drainage taxes, and the deceased father at one time had been indebted to the bank in the sum of $3300 on personal notes, backed only by his financial statement. This indebtedness was in process of reduction as the grip of the economic depression relaxed, but amounted to $3000 at the time of the events here involved. Hubert Fuller, president of the bank and also a lawyer, testified the father and the appellant Walter Miller had consulted him about obtaining funds to pay the delinquent drainage taxes, having also in view the fact that the last drainage bonds would mature in 1938, when the district could be fully liquidated and further taxation would probably end.

Mr. Fuller was averse to accepting a note secured by a five year mortgage on the tract signed by the father alone, because he was 80 years old and his expectancy did not promise that he would live to the maturity of the loan. So he suggested that all the children sign with the father, or that the land be conveyed to one of them who, in turn, could borrow the money. In his opinion the tract was worth $30 per acre or $4400, and the drainage taxes aggregated about $2200 thereby making the debt 50 % 'of the security, which was sound on a banking basis. The bank cashier, Mr. Coon, thought the land was worth $35 per acre, or more than $5000.

The appellant Walter Miller later came to the bank alone, Mr. Fuller testified, and requested that a warranty deed be prepared, running from the father to him and his wife as tenants by the entirety. Still later he brought the father in and Mr. Fuller had the deed drawn by a typist in the bank, giving her an outline of the facts and perhaps even suggesting that a tenancy by the entirety be conveyed. About the same time, the note and deed of trust from appellants Walter Miller and wife to the bank were written. All these were executed in Mr. Fuller’s office. After he signed the warranty deed, the father said, ‘ 1 This will fix it so we can get that loan and pay the drainage tax.” Being asked on cross-examination whether the warranty deed was made to Walter Miller for the purpose of obtaining a loan, Mr. Fuller answered, “Well of course I couldn’t say absolutely, all I can say is that they talked about getting a loan. ’ ’

It is conceded that the bank account of the appellant Walter Miller, not the father’s, was credited with the $2200 advanced on the note and deed of trust; that he paid the note in full and the deed of trust was released of record on November 24, 1942; and that on January 3, 1938, he paid the amount of $2200 in full of all delinquent taxes then due on the tract by his check drawn on the bank. This was the date on which the warranty deed and deed of trust were recorded.

Mr. Fuller further testified that after the death of the father he had several conversations with the appellant Walter Miller relative to *888 the latter’s deeding the tract back to the heirs. The first was shortly thereafter. Appellant said “he didn’t get the place and he never made a deal for it,” or that “no deal had been completed.” He said that on several occasions. And about a year later he and his wife or the respondent Earnest Miller came to the bank to have drafted a warranty deed from himself and wife (the two appellants) back to the other heirs, conveying to each a one-ninth interest; and also a note and deed of trust for $2200 running from all the heirs and their spouses to the bank, which were to be substituted for the ones the two appellants had executed on December 1, 1937. The new papers were dated February 23, 1939.

The new note and deed of trust were circulated among the heirs for over four months and were executed by all of them except the two appellants. Appellant Walter Miller came to the bank one day and took these papers out for examination but never returned them until he produced them at the trial — this notwithstanding he had said when they were drawn to send them around and he and his wife would sign them; and later after he had got possession of the papers he told Mr. Fuller on the street that he was going to bring them in and execute them. The respondent, Earnest Miller, corroborated the foregoing testimony as to the order for and execution of the new deed of trust by the other heirs, and its purpose. Both the deed and deed of trust were introduced in evidence.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 1011, 353 Mo. 884, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-miller-mo-1945.