Morley v. Prendiville

295 S.W. 563, 316 Mo. 1094, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 563 (Morley v. Prendiville) 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
Morley v. Prendiville, 295 S.W. 563, 316 Mo. 1094, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 751 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*1097 WALKER, J.

This is a. suit arising out of a proceeding to discover assets of an estate under Article II, Chapter 1, Revised Statutes 1919. The plaintiff, as the residuary legatee of the estate of Jeremiah Prendiville, deceased, filed an affidavit in the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis, alleging that the defendant had concealed and appropriated to her own use certain Liberty bonds belonging to said estate, and asking that the defendant be cited to appear before the court to answer such questions as may be propounded to her touching her possession and retention of said bonds and for further relief. Upon being cited and appearing before the court for examination the defendant denied the allegations of the affidavit. Whereupon the court ordered that written interrogatories be filed and that the defendant answer the same in writing. The executor of the estate then filed formal interrogatories. The gist of these interrogatories was to inquire if the defendant had in her possession any United States bonds which belonged at any time to the deceased, their numbers, nature and description, the conditions under which she obtained' them; what, if anything, she paid for them; where the same were deposited when she obtained them, and the circumstances connected with her acquiring them; what, if any, conversation occurred between herself and the deceased after she acquired the possession, and who was present; what was the condition of the health of the deceased at the time.

The defendant answered that she had certain bonds in her possession in which the deceased at one time had an interest, which was a joint one with the defendant. She enumerated and described the bonds; stated' where they were kept before she became the sole owner of the same and thereafter; and the circumstances in detail under which she became the sole owner;- that she paid nothing for the bonds. In addition and at great length she stated the facts under which the deceased gave her the bonds and all of the facts and circumstances connected therewith. That at the time the bonds were given to her by the deceased, who was her uncle, he was in good health, but had been ill several months prior thereto.

*1098 The executor replied to said answers denying specifically each of the same, and stating with unusual prolixity much matter of an evidentiary nature which cannot be properly classified as a reply to the answer. The cases was tried in the probate court without the intervention of a jury and an order of dismissal was entered. The plaintiff thereupon applied' for and was granted an appeal to the circuit court, where a- trial was had before a jury, which found that the defendant was not wrongfully concealing or withholding any property from the estate of the deceased. It was thereupon ordered by the court that the application of the plaintiff, Mary Morley, legatee under the will of Jeremiah Prendiville, deceased, for citation to Catherine Prendiville', the defendant, be dismissed and that she be discharged from the citation and go hence without day and recover her costs, to be paid out of said estate, and that a copy of this judgment with the original files be certified to the probate court. Thereafter, in conformity with the required procedure, the case was appealed to this court.

Jeremiah Prendiville, deceased, whose estate is involved in this controversy, was for many years a dealer in meat in the Union Market in the city of St. Louis. He was unmarried and at the time of his death, which occurred in November, 1921, he was sixty-nine years of age. For two months preceding his deáth he had resided at the home of the mother of the defendant in the city of St. Louis. The mother was a sister-in-law of the deceased, and the defendant his neice. The testimony of the latter was substantially as follows: In June, 1911, she went with her uncle, the deceased, to the Mercantile Trust Company, and he rented a safe deposit box for their joint use- and each of them signed a card for the same. Her uncle put about $20,000 worth of deeds of trust, together with the notes attached thereto, in the box. Subsequently she went with him at different times to the Trust Company and continued to do so until December, 1920, the year before his death. When he put the notes and deeds of trust in the box taken by him and her jointly he told' her that in the event of his death the notes and deeds would be hers. At different times thereafter when a note would become due he would ask her what disposition she desired made of the money arising therefrom. In this connection Liberty bonds were spoken of, and he said he Was loyal to his country and for himself he would not buy bonds but that he would buy them for her if she desired. As the notes secured by deeds of trust became due and were paid he would invest the proceeds in Liberty bonds and place them in the box held by them jointly. The bonds thus purchased aggregated $19,100, and are the bonds in this suit.

In June, 1921, at his request, shé again went with him to the Trust Company. Thereafter while he was ill in a hospital he suggested *1099 that upon his recovery they go to the Trust Company. He told her that he wanted her to go with him, as he wanted to give her the bonds and turn the box over to her. When he recovered they went to the Trust Company, and while there they took the bonds out of the joint box, which they surrendered. He turned the bonds over to her and at his suggestion she rented a box in her own name and deposited the bonds in it. When he gave her the bonds he said: “Now these are yours to do as you please with, but as a suggestion I think it would be a good investment to take the money and build flats with it on the lot adjoining your home.” He further said: “You can ask Mr. K'amp” (a real estate agent); “I have always found him a good adviser in real estate matters and is now. . . ; But you ask him and see what he thinks about it.” After June 7, 1921, when the bonds were delivered to the defendant, he never again had possession of them. Thereafter the possession of them by the defendant was continuous, and she collected the interest coupons thereon as they became due. Her uncle died November 23, 1921, and during the last two months of his life he was cared for by her mother and herself. When ill on previous occasions he had been cared for in a hospital, but had been discharged therefrom in September, 1921. He was not ill when he gave the bonds to the defendant, June 7, 1921, but had been attending to his business at the Union Market. This constitutes in the main the direct testimony of the defendant. Her cross-examination is principally in régard to her former testimony for the purpose of impeachment. The variance in her testimony from that on former hearings was explained to the satisfaction of the jury or was not deemed material.

Records of the Trust Company were introduced corroborative of her testimony in regard to the rental of the joint and separate boxes. Kamp, the real estate agent, testified to conversations with the deceased in which the latter said he wanted Catherine, the defendant, to have the bonds and that he intended to give them to her. Subsequently he told the witness that he had turned the bonds over to her and that she had them in her own box.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 563, 316 Mo. 1094, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morley-v-prendiville-mo-1927.