Morris v. Hanssen

78 S.W.2d 87, 336 Mo. 169, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 78 S.W.2d 87 (Morris v. Hanssen) 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
Morris v. Hanssen, 78 S.W.2d 87, 336 Mo. 169, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 366 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity by which plaintiff asks the court to set aside and cancel for fraud certain conveyances and particularly certain deeds of trust as constituting a cloud on her title to a tract of improved real estate in Kansas City designated as Lots 75 and 100, Prospect Vista. The trial court, after hearing the evidence, concluded that plaintiff had misconceived her remedy and without deciding whether such conveyances should be set aside for fraud as prayed, entered judgment dismissing plaintiff's bill and awarding costs against her for the reason that she had an adequate remedy at law. Such is the judgment from which plaintiff has appealed.

The facts as disclosed by the pleadings and evidence are in substance these: The chief controversy is between plaintiff and her former husband, Frank Yeoman, who will be referred to as the defendant unless someone else is so designated. They were married in January, 1921, and divorced May 30, 1930. Plaintiff's maiden name was restored and she brought this suit in August, 1931. Her ex-husband, the defendant Frank Yeoman, was a lawyer and real estate man. She became acquainted with him as an attorney and business adviser. Before their marriage plaintiff had some means of her own and her mother, whose business she largely looked after, had a considerable estate. Defendant was her attorney and business adviser and this relation existed at the time of their marriage and continued till shortly before their divorce, plaintiff continuing to pay her husband *Page 174 the usual fees for his advice and services. In January, 1923, defendant became the owner of the property in controversy, the legal title being held for him by a law student in his office, Claude A. Beard. The property was then encumbered by a deed of trust for $2000 placed thereon by a former owner. Defendant, in January, 1924, proposed to this plaintiff, his then wife, that she purchase or take over this property by paying and discharging the $2000 deed of trust against the same, which was then about due, and use the same as a home for her mother as well as themselves. She testified positively that defendant told her that this deed of trust was all that was against the property and all that she would have to pay — that on paying off this deed of trust she would own it free and clear of any encumbrance. She futher testified that she thought the legal title was in defendant instead of in his law clerk, Beard, and that he was to make the deed to her. She accepted the proposition and gave defendant a check for $2000 with which to pay off and discharge the deed of trust. Defendant then took up this secured note and had the deed of trust canceled and released of record on February 28, 1924. What the defendant had in fact then done, however, was to cause Beard, the holder of the legal title, to execute a second deed of trust on this property dated January 29, 1923, to secure a note for $1000 and defendant was then using said note as collateral security at the Produce Exchange Bank. He also caused Beard, who held the legal title, to execute and deliver to him a warranty deed of the same date as the second mortgage with the name of the grantee left blank and defendant held this deed unrecorded till over a year later. This deed recited that it was made subject to both the deeds of trust mentioned. The defendant, on his wife's agreeing to take over this property and pay the $2000 encumbrance thereon, inserted plaintiff's name as grantee in the warranty deed he held from Beard and put it of record February 20, 1924, without plaintiff ever having seen it. In this manner plaintiff became the owner of this property and, having paid off the $2000 encumbrance, believed she owned it free and clear of any encumbrance. Plaintiff and defendant, her husband, and plaintiff's mother, who really furnished the money to pay off the $2000 encumbrance, moved into this property and made it their home. Plaintiff says that she asked defendant, her husband, for her deed to this property soon after she paid the $2000 and he assured her that it was on record and that her title was clear and he would get the deed from the recorder's office for her; that he kept assuring her that her title was all right and that he would get the deed for her when he could think of it, etc.; that about the time of their separation in 1929 she went to his office and demanded her papers, including the deed to this property, and that defendant then gave her the canceled note for $2000 which she had paid and some other papers but declared that he could not find her deed. As a matter of fact, the warranty deed executed *Page 175 in blank by Beard was more than a year old when defendant inserted plaintiff's name as grantee and had it recorded, so that same had remained in the recorder's office for a year after recording. It is quite certain that plaintiff never saw this deed till at this trial when defendant got it from the recorder's office and produced it. The most that defendant claims is that he "told her all about it" and that she knew he had about $1000 invested in this property. When her divorce was granted plaintiff was not living in this property but had it rented. When she went to collect her rent some two months later her tenant informed her that another person had notified him that he had purchased this property at a foreclosure sale and was entitled to the rent. Plaintiff then had the title investigated and ascertained for the first time, as she says, that defendant, through his "straw man" Beard, had placed a second deed of trust on this property prior to its being deeded to plaintiff, using the secured note as collateral, and shortly after the divorce was granted defendant had caused the trustee in this deed of trust, defendant Hanssen, to foreclose same and sell the property thereunder. While the defendant had kept the interest paid on his own note to the bank, no interest had been paid on the secured note put up by him as collateral. In other words, defendant had been holding and using as collateral security at his bank this note for $1000 dated January 29, 1923, and secured by a deed of trust on this property in question which he had caused to be deeded to his wife, this plaintiff. Plaintiff was not paying and had never been called on to pay the interest on this note as she says she knew nothing about it, so that apparently there was about seven years' interest past due and unpaid. Defendant says he concluded to increase his loan at the bank and to do so was required to increase his collateral, and to do this he requested the trustee to foreclose the deed of trust, intending, as he did do, to buy in the property he had deeded to his wife under what was apparently then a first deed of trust. The foreclosure took place as soon as practical after plaintiff was divorced from defendant and at such foreclosure sale defendant caused his friend, the defendant Samuel Mayer, to buy it in for him and a trustee's deed was accordingly made to Mayer. There is no question but that plaintiff knew nothing of this foreclosure sale and took no steps to protect her property. But if, as defendant says, he had "told her all about it" and if the deed to her was made subject to this deed of trust, she would have to take constructive notice of the foreclosure. Such is defendant's contention. Immediately after the foreclosure sale and trustee's deed to Mayer, defendant caused him to execute a note for $1500 and a deed of trust on the property to secure the same payable to another friend Bush, who indorsed the note without recourse to defendant, and defendant pledged it as collateral security to his bank for a loan of a like amount, paying off the old $1000 note against *Page 176 the same property.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W.2d 87, 336 Mo. 169, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-hanssen-mo-1934.