Peeters v. Schultz

254 S.W. 182, 300 Mo. 324, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 31, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 182 (Peeters v. Schultz) 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
Peeters v. Schultz, 254 S.W. 182, 300 Mo. 324, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 255 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*330 •GRAVES, P. J.

— This is an action in equity to cancel a judgment of the Probate Court of St. Louis County, by which judgment Emma ’Schultz had an allowance made her of some $9,837 against the estate of Frederick Schultz, deceased. The plaintiff, Ida Peeters, and defendants Emma Schultz, and William Schultz were the surviving sisters and brother of the deceased, and were his sole heirs at law. The personal estate of deceased w'as nominal and inconsequential, but he was the owner (so far as the title record shows) of several small tracts of land, aggregating twenty-two acres or more, which land is of considerable value. William Schultz is the *331 administrator of the estate. The petition charges, that there was fraud in the procurement of the judgment attacked in this action, and these assignments of fraud are as follows:

“ (1) The said claims on the part of the defendant Emma Schultz were each and both of them wholly fictitious, and without any basis whatever in' truth or justice.
“ (2) That said claims were each and both of them barred on their face by the Statute of Limitations.
“(3) That said claim for said money pretended to have been loaned to deceased by said defendant Emma Schultz was also'barred on its face as against the Statute of Frauds.
“ (4) That the attorney who represented the estate and the defendant William Schultz, and whose duty it was to assert said defenses in behalf of said estate and in behalf of the heirs and distributees thereof, was also the attorney for the defendant Emma Schultz in the presentation of said claims, and prepared said claims for her, and procured their allowances for her from the Probate Court of the County of St. Louis against said Frederick Schultz’s estate.
“(5) That the conflict of interest between the claim, or claims of said Emma Schultz and the adverse interest of the estate of Frederick Schultz and of the heirs and distributees thereof, disqualified the attorney of the estate from acting in behalf of said defendant Emma Schultz, and upon his election, to act in her behalf, disqualified him from acting as representative of the adverse interests of the estate and its distributees, including this plaintiff; that the action of said attorney in appearing on both sides of the case constituted and was a fraud upon the court, and. on the rights of this plaintiff, as well as a fraud upon the estate itself, and entitles plaintiff to have said judgment set aside, to the end that the just and valid defenses existing against said claims may be presented.
‘ ‘ (6) That plaintiff at all times relied on her brother, the defendant William Schultz, in his capacity as ad *332 ministrator of her deceased brother Frederick’s estate, not to sacrifice her interest in said estate in behalf of the defendant Emma Schultz, and to do all things necessary and proper to protect said interest against all improper and fraudulent results, and through such reliance she relied on the attorney of said estate in the same manner and to the same extent; that said attorney kept her in ignorance of her rights in-the premises, both as to matters of fact and matters of law; and said claim was allowed and became a judgment without her being present in court; and without her having any opportunity to appear and defend against the same.
£i(7) That said claims were allowed during the May term, 1920, of the Probate Court of St. Louis County; that said term has long since lapsed and the time for taking an appeal therefrom has long since expired; that plaintiff did not learn of the fraud perpetrated, as aforesaid, nor of her rights in the premises, until long after the lapse of said term, and until the opportunity to take an appeal had become extinct.
££ (8) That the claims so allowed in favor of the defendant Emma Schultz and against the estate of Frederick Schultz are large enough to absorb the whole of said estate, and the whole interest of this plaintiff therein, and unless plaintiff is relieved by the decree of this Honorable Court, she will be defrauded of the whole of her interest in her deceased brother Frederick’s estate; that plaintiff believes that her brother William was innocent of any intentional wrongdoing in the premises, and that the wrong was perpetrated solely by virtue of the fraud and covin of the defendant Emma Schultz and her attorney, who was also attorney of record for the estate; but if the court holds that, notwithstanding such adverse interest, said attorney was in law the agent of the defendant William Schultz, so as to make the defendant William Schultz, in his capacity as administrator, liable as principal for the acts of the attorney, then, and in that case, plaintiff alleges that there was a conspiracy between the defendants Emma Schultz and *333 William Schultz, as administrator of Frederick Schultz, acting by and through the attorney of said Frederick Schultz’s estate, to perpetuate and consummate said fraud.”

William Schultz, for himself and as administrator of the estate of Frederick Schultz, admitted and adopted as their answer all the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, save and except he denied “that there was any conspiracy whatever between the defendant Emma Schultz and William Schultz as administrator of Frederick Sphultz, but on the contrary allege the facts to be that’ these defendants (William Schultz and William Schultz, administrator) were victims of the same fraud of which plaintiff complains, as much 'as was the plaintiff herself. ’ ’

Defendant Emma Schultz, after admitting her judgment in the sum of $1),837, and denying generally all other allegations of the petition, thus proceeds in her answer:

“Further answering, this defendant states that the said claim was, and is, a just and meritorious one, and that the amounts .in' said claim constituted and represented money had and received by Frederick Schultz from this defendant, and the interest thereof from the date of the receipt of same by said Frederick Schultz, and the reasonable value of service rendered by this defendant to Frederick Schultz for a period of nineteen years, at twenty-five dollars per month.
‘ Further answering, defendant states that the plaintiff herein is her sister, and that defendant, William Schultz, is her brother; that both plaintiff and said defendant, William Schtdtz, knew at the time her said demand was exhibited against said estate that it would be presented to the probate court for allowance,' that it was a just and meritorious one for mpney had and received by Frederick Schultz from this defendant, and for services rendered said Frederick Schultz by this defendant; that at said time they concurred in and agreed that said demand should be allowed and represented to the judge of the probate court that said claim was a *334

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 182, 300 Mo. 324, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peeters-v-schultz-mo-1923.