Nichols v. Wirts

270 S.W.2d 801, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 750
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 13, 1954
DocketNo. 44029
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 270 S.W.2d 801 (Nichols v. Wirts) 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
Nichols v. Wirts, 270 S.W.2d 801, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 750 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge.

By this action plaintiff, Emory C. Nichols, seeks to set aside two deeds and a bill of sale conveying to defendant Edith May Nichols his interest in an eighty acre tract of real estate in Vernon County, Missouri, and certain personal property situate thereon, then owned by plaintiff and defendant Edith May Nichols as husband and wife in a tenancy by the entirety, upon the ground said instruments were obtained by duress. The duress alleged is that defendant Edith May Nichols threatened plaintiff with criminal prosecution for forgery of her name as a comaker with plaintiff on two promissory notes given by plaintiff to the Barton County State Bank at Lamar, Missouri. Wayne Wirts is joined as a'party defendant solely because he acted as a conduit in effecting the transfer of title to the real estate.

The trial court found the issues in favor of defendants and so rendered its decree, [802]*802from which plaintiff appealed, contending that the finding and decree is against the weight of the evidence. Unless otherwise specified, Edith May Nichols hereinafter will he referred to as though she were the sole defendant.

Prior to and at the time of their marriage in September, 1947, plaintiff and defendant resided in Pittsburg, Kansas. Both were employed and defendant continued her employment for nine or ten months after their marriage. They purchased for the sum of $1,800 and took title by the entirety to a home in Pittsburg in February, 1948. Defendant paid most of the purchase price. That home was sold.

In August, 1949, plaintiff and defendant purchased the farm here in question for the sum of $2,400. Title was vested in them in an estate by the entirety. As a part of the purchase agreement, they placed $1,000 in escrow pledged for use in improvements on the farm. The purchase price of $2,400 was borrowed under a repayment plan whereby the loan was to be liquidated by monthly remittances of $93.75, which plaintiff expected to receive under the Vocational Agriculture Training Program. Shortly after moving to the farm in September, 1949, they bought three cows, a calf and three brood sows. The $1,000 placed in escrow and other money spent in equipping the farm came mostly from the sale of the home in Pitts-burg, Kansas. They lived together upon the farm and operated it through their joint efforts. In February, 1950, the first payment of $270 was made on the loan by a check drawn on the joint checking account in the Pittsburg Bank. Plaintiff became finally enrolled in the Vocational Program in April of 1950. Continuously thereafter through February, 1952, all of the checks, except two, received by plaintiff under that program were paid on the loan, a total of about $2,000.

In March, 1951, plaintiff arranged for a loan of $130 from the Barton County State Bank. A note was prepared at the bank for that amount and given to plaintiff for the purpose of procuring defendant’s signature thereto. Several days thereafter plaintiff signed his and defendant’s names on the note as comakers and mailed it to the bank. In September, 1951, plaintiff renewed the note and again signed defendant’s name as a comaker. In October, 1951, defendant filed a suit for divorce.

Plaintiff testified: He and defendant had domestic troubles “off and on right along but it began to get bad * * * about September, 1951.” He several times told defendant if she would give him the amount of the Government checks he had paid on the farm, that was all he wanted. On the day he renewed the note at the bank in September, 1951, defendant asked him, “Who signed my name this time ?" to which he replied, “I did.”

Plaintiff further testified: He was served with a summons in the divorce action on a Saturday in October. The suit had been filed on Friday. Shortly after the summons was served, defendant came to the field where plaintiff was working and handed him a letter from the Barton County State Bank. The letter stated that an emergency had arisen about the $130 note and it would have to be taken care of immediately and that “I should be there not later than nine o’clock Monday morning.” Later that day, plaintiff told defendant he would go immediately and pay the note, to which defendant replied, “That won’t do any good. My attorney has the papers up there and it don’t make any difference if you pay it a dozen times.” “She said she was the only one that could save me.” She said, “Now, listen, you can be bull-headed if you want to but I am the only one that can save you now. If you want me to save your neck why, you just go down to the bank with me and deed all this property over to me and I will give you the cancelled note and all your papers back and you can go or stay, it don’t make any difference.” “She said that Mr. Wagamann [the Bank President] said that President Roosevelt had spent years and a lot of money getting that protection for the banks and he said I could get 10 to 20 years.” She said that “Mr, Wagamann was as mad as she ever seen anybody and if it hadn’t been for Jack [Leavell, defendant’s brother,] he (Waga-[803]*803mann) would have sent the sheriff right out there Friday afternoon”; that “Jack talked him out of it.” She said, “Just deed everything over to her and she would give me back the papers and the cancelled note.” Plaintiff replied, “No, I won’t do it.”

Over the objection of defendant, plaintiff was permitted to testify that on Saturday evening he went to the home of his neighbor and friend, Laurence Mackey, and told Mackey of the above narrated conversation with defendant, and further told Mackey that if he had to go to jail “they would take all of my personal property off of me and * * * she was going to send me there”, and that witness gave Mackey $80 to keep for him.

Plaintiff further testified: On Sunday defendant said to him, “You just deed this property all over to me and we will go down to the bank Monday and you deed this property all over to me and put everything in my name and we will go ahead and try to make a go of it or I will give you all your papers back and the cancelled note and you can go on your way, whichever you want to do.” Defendant further said to plaintiff that he had treated “her family awful dirty” and he would have to apologize to them. Plaintiff and defendant then went to Jack Leavell’s home. While there defendant said to plaintiff, “You sure ought to thank Jack because he saved your neck down at the bank.”

On Monday, plaintiff, defendant and Jack went to Lamar. Plaintiff’s version of the events there was: Defendant and Jack went to Gordon Boyer’s office. Plaintiff went to the bank. Mr. Wagamann told him that the thing he had done was “awful bad” and “reprimanded me heavily”. When plaintiff asked how he could straighten it out, Mr. Wagamann said plaintiff should either pay the debt today or give a good note. Plaintiff said to Mr. Wagamann, “I’m going to fix this §tuff up today. They will fix you up a good note — they will be over in a little bit and then we will fix you up a good note.” Defendant had told plaintiff that after all the papers were signed she would sign the note, but not before. Defendant and Jack came into the bank and the deeds and bill of sale were then signed. A new note was made. Defendant signed it. Plaintiff asked for the old note but Mr. Wagamann said it should go with the other papers in the bank. Nothing was said at the bank about any criminal prosecution.

On cross examination, plaintiff admitted: “Q. At the time you were there on the farm did you tell Edith that By God she had to get a divorce within 10 days or you were going to? * * * A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hylton v. Hylton
716 S.W.2d 850 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1986)
Wilson v. Wilson
642 S.W.2d 132 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1982)
Pike v. Pike
609 S.W.2d 397 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1980)
Rosenfeld v. Glick Real Estate Co.
291 S.W.2d 863 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 S.W.2d 801, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-wirts-mo-1954.