Murphy v. DeFrance

105 Mo. 53
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 105 Mo. 53 (Murphy v. DeFrance) 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
Murphy v. DeFrance, 105 Mo. 53 (Mo. 1891).

Opinions

Gantt, P. J.

This action was commenced September 22, 1886, in Adair circuit court, and, on November 20,1886, the venue [57]*57was changed to Knox county. Judgment was rendered for respondents at the June term, 1888, against DeFrance and dismissed as to his codefendant, James Dodson.

The- petition is as follows :

“Stephen A. D. Murphy, Plaintiff, v. “James M. DeFrance and James Dodson, Defendants.
In the circuit court of Adair county, Missouri.
“Plaintiff states that he and Waddy Murphy, William Murphy and Nancy J. Dodson are sons and daughter and sole heirs at law of Benjamin Murphy, deceased, who died in Adair county, Missouri, in the year 1865, intestate, and seized in fee of the following real estate, to-wit: Sixteen acres off the entire north side of the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section eight (8), and the north half of the southeast quarter of section six (6), all in township sixty-two (62), range fifteen (15), west, ninety-six acres more or less. And on the-day of--, 1886, Waddy and William D. Murphy, aforesaid, and Nancy J. Dodson executed and delivered to plaintiff good sufficient deeds for their interest as heirs of said Benjamin Murphy, deceased, in and to all said lands; that the estate of Benjamin Murphy, deceased, was duly administered upon and final settlement thereof made in the year 1875. About the year 1874 the defendants, claiming and pretending to be creditors of plaintiff ’ s ancestor’s estate, made a fraudulent, collusive and illegal agreement to the effect that they would procure an order of the probate court of Adair county to sell the real estate herein described after it had once been sold and deed by a former administrator of said estate under the cloud of that sale and deed. . •
“That by fraud and collusion and by promising the judge of the probate court that said lands, if so sold under that cloud, they should not sell for less than [58]*58$1,000, and by repeated applications, they finally induced the court to make an order of sale of all said real estate; that in pursuance thereof said real estate was appraised by three qualified appraisers in the year 1874 to be of the value of $1,600. At the October term, 1874, of the Adair- circuit court, the defendants caused said lands to be advertised for sale in pursuance to their said fraudulent and collusive agreement aforesaid to procure it to be sold under the cloud of a former administrator’s deed, and they agreed in said written agreement that they would not bid against each other; that one of them, defendant DePrance, might bid off the lands, and then afterwards they would divide them pro rata between themselves. And to enable them to carry out their said fraudulent plan and scheme, and to prevent bidding at the sale, they published and reported at and before the sale that their claims far exceeded the value of the land and no bidder would get a title against them; and by the use of these and other means they were enabled to entirely suppress bidding at the sale. And defendant DePrance did bid off all said lands at the grossly inadequate price of $100; that the then administrator of the estate refused to report the sale of land to the probate court unless defendants would make his commission on the sale reach the figures it would have been if they had bid $1,000 as they agreed; and defendants did give administrator $50 to induce him to report the sale to the probate court of Adair county, and ask that it be approved, and make to defendant DePrance a deed; and it was all done in due time and the - administrator’s deed was delivered to DePrance for the received consideration, $100. And shortly afterwards defendant DePrance made a deed to defendant Dodson for an undivided forty-four-hundredths of all said lands, and both deeds are duly recorded, and they claim title to all said real estate thereunder against plaintiff, and are in the actual possession of a part thereof since about the year 1884. [59]*59Plaintiff says in truth and in fact defendants were no creditors of the estate of his ancestors, nor did they represent any such; that DeFrance is an active, practicing and licensed attorney, and in all his meddlings in the affairs of the estate, and in the written agreement with his codefendant, he claimed and pretended to be a trustee for creditors of the estate, when in fact he was no such trustee, and in law and equity could not be; that in fact he has not paid any creditors he pretended to represent anything.
“That, by their said fraudulent collusion of oppressive and illegal agreement aforesaid, they, proposed to and have withdrawn all the assets of the estate from its proper and legitimate course of administration in the hands of the administrator to go to creditors or the heirs, and to have taken it in charge to administer between themselves in rhe forum of their own conscience, which is illegal, contrary to public statutes and policy, and in fraud of the whole administration law of the state, and the heirs Of the estate. And plaintiff says that he and bis grantors have only within the last year learned of the existence of said written agreement between defendants and the other fraudulent acts as herein stated, and he asks decree that the said administrator’s deed made to defendant DeFrance and the deed made by him to his codefendant Dodson both be declared and decreed to be null and void, and for naught held; and that title to said real estate be quieted and vested in plaintiff as between plaintiff and defendant, and for general relief and costs of this suit.
“Stephen A. D. Murphy.
“By Attorney O. D. Jones.”

The defendant below, appellant here, pleaded the statute of limitations of ten years, and, further answering, denied all the fraud charged, and set up that, although the estate had been finally settled, there were large judgments and allowances that were liens on this land; that defendants, DeFrance and Dodson, owned [60]*60and controlled, as attorneys, all these allowances ; that DeFrance, in his own right and as attorney for the various parties who had judgments and allowances, had purchased these lands and taken his deed; that his purchase was in good faith at public auction ; that since his purchase he had conveyed to Dodson forty-four-hundredths of said lands, — that being the proportion Dodson’s judgment bore to the sum of all the judgments ; that five and one-half acres of the sixteen acres had been assigned as dower to Mrs. Murphy ; that she was in possession of all the improvements; that he and Dodson were in possession of the remainder, and had paid all taxes.in good faith; prayed that, in any event, the said judgment be declared a lien on said lands, and for general relief.

The reply pleaded the statute of limitations to all the allowances ; charged that the court had no right to sell the lands after ten years ; denies generally all the allegations of the answer.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Mo. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-defrance-mo-1891.