Moore v. Hoffman

39 S.W.2d 339, 327 Mo. 852, 75 A.L.R. 135, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 661
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 21, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 339 (Moore v. Hoffman) 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
Moore v. Hoffman, 39 S.W.2d 339, 327 Mo. 852, 75 A.L.R. 135, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 661 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

* NOTE: Opinion filed at October Term, 1930, March 31, 1931; motion for rehearing filed; motion overruled at April Term, May 21, 1931. This is a suit to determine title under the statute and for partition of 262 acres of land in Perry County, Missouri. The petition is in two counts and sets up both legal and equitable titles, a resulting trust, adverse possession under claim of ownership *Page 858 for more than ten years, and estoppel against any claim of ownership by defendant Alpha Hoffman and her trustee in bankruptcy, who is the real defendant. Certain other parties, the Federal Land Bank and the Bank of Perryville, which hold deeds of trust against the land, are parties defendant, but their respective interests in the land are not controverted.

It is conceded that defendant Alpha Hoffman, who is a daughter of the plaintiff, is an adjudged bankrupt whose estate is in charge of defendant Harry R. Phillips, and that he as such trustee and for the benefit of creditors has a right to set up and claim as against her mother whatever interest Alpha Hoffman has under the law in and to this land, regardless of her wishes in the matter. This is said because Alpha Hoffman in her schedule of property in bankruptcy disclaimed having any interest in this land, and such is her personal attitude in the trial of this case. In a way, her trustee in bankruptcy is trying to force on her, and properly so for the benefit of her creditors, an interest in this land which she personally repudiates. By his answer the trustee claims that Alpha Hoffman owns a three-fourths interest in this land by inheritance from her deceased father, Hilary Moore, and from a deceased sister. The answer concedes a one-fourth interest in plaintiff derived from this same daughter of plaintiff and sister of defendant Alpha Hoffman. The plaintiff claimed, and the trial court awarded her an additional interest, making one-half in all, by reason of her election to take a child's part of the real estate of her husband, Hilary Moore — an election made on the eve of this trial and brought into the case by amendment of the petition. The trial court also awarded to the plaintiff a lien, claimed in her petition, on the land, or its proceeds if sold in partition, for $1200 and interest "paid by plaintiff after the death of her husband for the protection and preservation of her rights and those of the heirs in the property," and for $7500 for permanent improvements placed on the land by plaintiff in good faith and under the belief that she alone owned the land. The interests of the mortgagees, Federal Land Bank and Bank of Perryville, were also preserved and the land ordered partitioned. The defendant trustee alone has appealed, though plaintiff complains here of a number of errors against her. No serious error is complained of as to the pleadings and same need not be further discussed, though some phases thereof will be adverted to further along.

Hilary Moore, who died in 1890, husband of this plaintiff and father of defendant Alpha Hoffman, may be regarded as the common source of title, though plaintiff claims a resulting trust or at least a preferential lien on the land for having paid from her own funds a large part of the purchase money by which he acquired title to the land in question from, his brothers and sisters along in 1882 *Page 859 to 1885. The money so furnished by her forms the basis of the trial court's allowance of the lien for $1200.

In the picture of pioneer life here presented, Hilary Moore, the husband and father, soon passed away, leaving plaintiff, then a middle aged woman, and two daughters, Alpha, the nominal defendant here, and Ida. The tract of land in question had belonged to the father of Hilary Moore, who died in 1880, leaving eight children. When the scene opens, we find Hilary Moore living on a tract of 132 acres of land, the source of the title to which is not shown, either adjoining or close to the 262-acre tract in question. He then buys up the interests of his brothers and sisters in the 262-acre tract in question and pays or contracts to pay them $100 each, making $700 in all. This money he borrowed from his wife's (plaintiff's) sister. Hilary Moore soon becomes unable to work, and dies, leaving this purchase money unpaid. He had sold and spent practically all his personal effects and left little with which to carry on the farm. He also owed other debts, to which was added the funeral expenses. The tract of 132 acres on which he lived was only partly in cultivation. The tract of 262 acres in question was swamp land, subject to overflow from the river and a small creek passing by and through it, and covered with heavy timber, but, when the water was controlled, proved to be rich and productive land. Only a few acres of this land, twenty to thirty perhaps, was then in cultivation.

This plaintiff is shown to have been a typical, resolute, pioneer woman, industrious and with considerable ability. She never remarried and at the time of this trial was seventy-eight years old. No administration was had on the estate of her husband, Hilary Moore. The widow, this plaintiff, took charge of his property without question from anybody. She rented out the land and paid all her husband's debts, including the purchase price of this land. Her own father died about this time, and she got $500 from his estate, and with that and her savings paid the $700 yet due on the purchase price of this land. The evidence shows that this land was worth little more than the amount thus paid by the widow. The personal property left by the deceased was probably worth less than the widow's absolute allowances and this accounts for there being no administration. That under the law the widow was entitled to dower in this land, is conceded. Whether her homestead rights would cover any part of the tract in question seems doubtful, but the evidence shows that the tract now in question was farmed and used in connection with the other tract, on which was the dwelling house, as one farm, and under the law the widow's quarantine right of occupation and use would cover this tract until such time as dower and homestead were assigned or extinguished. [Gentry v. Gentry, *Page 860 122 Mo. 202; Grogan v. Grogan, 177 S.W. 649; Betts v. Gehrig,306 Mo. 36, 41.]

There can be no doubt that whatever was the legal rights of the widow and her two children in the deceased's property, real and personal, the widow believed that when she had thus paid all it was worth to preserve it, it was hers absolutely, and that her children then and later fully acquiesced in this view of the matter. She testified that she thought the deeds had been so made that the land was hers and did not know differently till this controversy arose. Under this view of her rights, the widow, this plaintiff, took full and complete charge of this land, rented it out and collected the rents, paid the taxes and for improvements without accounting to anyone, treated it as her own, and exercised full dominion over it for thirty-seven years, when this suit was brought to assert the inherited rights of the daughter Alpha Hoffman. Some three years after Hilary Moore died, the daughter Ida died without issue and the mother inherited from her one-half of her one-half in fee — this on the theory that the mother took only a life estate of dower and homestead plus her quarantine right and that the two children took the remainder in fee. There was no question but that the mother, this plaintiff, continued to use, occupy and treat the land as her own.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 339, 327 Mo. 852, 75 A.L.R. 135, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-hoffman-mo-1931.