Poole v. Campbell

289 S.W.2d 25, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 12, 1956
Docket44724
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 289 S.W.2d 25 (Poole v. Campbell) 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
Poole v. Campbell, 289 S.W.2d 25, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 635 (Mo. 1956).

Opinion

STORCKMAN, Judge.

This is an action for specific performance of an oral agreement to convey real estate situated in Milan, Missouri, on the west side of the public square and improved with three business buildings. The chancellor’s judgment and decree was in favor of the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.

By their written stipulation the parties agreed: On and prior to April 20, 1933, Joannah Poole owned the premises in question which were encumbered by a mortgage debt of $3,000 which was in default. A foreclosure sale was being advertised for April 21, 1933, in accordance with the terms of the deed of trust. *27 Joannah Poole was in straightened circumstances and had been trying to make a loan on the premises or to find a buyer for the property. On April 20, 1933, she executed and delivered to A. Byron Poole,- her brother-in-law, a warranty deed to the premises for the express consideration of $9,000 and said deed was duly recorded in the recorder’s office of Sullivan County. At her direction A. Byron Poole paid the amount due under the note and deed of trust and some other obligations of Joannah Poole and actually paid her the sum of $3,166.13 in cash, which made the total paid to her and for her benefit the sum of $9,000, the consideration expressed in the deed. Joannah Poole died June 18, 1944, leaving as her sole and only heir the plaintiff, Solomon M. Poole. Plaintiff’s father, John Poole, a brother of A. Byron, predeceased Joannah. A. Byron Poole remained in possession of the premises from and after April 20, 1933, to the date of his death on March 12, 1948. He made no conveyance during his lifetime and the record title to the premises was in his name at the time of his death. He was 82 years of age at the time of his death and died seized of property valued in excess of $70,000. He left no widow or children or deceased children or other descendants but only nephews and nieces and a brother. The will of A. Byron Poole was admitted to probate on March 22, 1948. Within a year thereafter plaintiff brought suit in two counts. The first was to contest the will of A. Byron Poole and the second was for specific performance. There was a separate trial of Count 1, the will contest, which resulted in a finding that the purported will was the last will and testament of A. Byron Poole and said order and judgment was not appealed. Since the will created a charitable trust khown as “The A. Byron Poole Foundation,” the attorney general was made a party to the suit. Arthur D. Campbell qualified as trustee and entered upon the discharge of his duties and as such was made a defendant in the case. Mrs. Poole’s first name is “Johanna” in the transcript, but her signature on the warranty deed is “Joaímah”; she is sometimes referred to in the record as Jo or Jose. A. Byron Poole is often referred to as By.

Count 2 of the fourth amended petition upon which the case was tried, is asserted by plaintiff to be an action solely for the specific performance of an oral contract to convey lands. This remaining count will be referred to as the petition. Paragraph 8 pleaded the alleged contract or contracts between Joannah Poole and A. Byron Poole in the alternative. The second’ alternative was that “said A. Byron Poole offered to pay her $9,000 for said properties and when the said interest and everything was paid he would return the buildings to plaintiff and keep the expenses out.” This alternative was eliminated from the case by the plaintiff’s election at the end of plaintiff’s case. Plaintiff submitted his case on the first alternative in said paragraph 8, which is: “That on or about the 20th day of April, 1933, the said A. Byron Poole contacted the said Johanna Poole and offered if she would deed him the buildings that he would pay her the sum of $9,000 and as a further inducement to the said Johanna Poole to convey said buildings and property the said A. Byron Poole orally agreed that if the said Johanna Poole would convey said property to him that he would, when he was through with said property, turn the said property to her, the said Johanna Poole, if living, if not to Mac (being the name that this plaintiff is commonly known) or that when he was through with said property he would turn said property to this plaintiff * * # »

Prior to answer defendants by motion sought a dismissal of plaintiff’s petition on the ground it failed to state a cause of action. Each of the defendants objected 'to the introduction of any evidence on the same ground.

The judgment and decree recited that the court found “the issues against the plaintiff, Solomon M. Poole, and in favor of the answering defendants on Count Two of plaintiff’s Fourth Amended Petition,” and further ordered, adjudged and decreed that “the Trust set out in the Last Will and *28 Testament of A. Byron Poole, deceased, is in all things confirmed, and that the fee simple title in and to the lands in question * * * is vested in the A. Byron Poole Foundation, a charitable trust, as defined in said Will and subject to the terms and conditions therein set forth.”

The plaintiff testified in substance and effect as follows: In the latter part of March or the first part of April when the buildings were being advertised for sale, the plaintiff had a conversation with Martin Wunderlich in the office of Higgins and McDuff. Mr. Wunderlich was a road builder who was keeping company with Jane Poole, a cousin of plaintiff. Those present were Albert Poole, Ralph McDuff, Jack Handy, Martin Wunderlich and the plaintiff. The discussion was with reference to Mr. Wunderlich’s buying the buildings. No agreement was reached; Wun-derlich said he would like to talk to plaintiff later. The conversation stopped when By Poole came in. On defendant’s objection this court ruled that plaintiff was incompetent to testify to any conversation with By Poole, deceased, or any statement made by him in plaintiff’s presence. No complaint is made on appeal with respect to such ruling.

John W. Stanley, 84 years old, a brother of Joannah Poole and uncle of the plaintiff, testifying by deposition with respect to a conversation he had with By Poole about 1945, just before leaving Milan for Kansas City, stated: “Just before I left here I was talking to him over there, he asked me what I wanted, and we went around the corner of the building and I said I was going away and just wanted to know —I had heard so much about it — what he was going to do about that, and he said, T always was a man of my word; I promised them and I’ll do it.’ What did he promise? To turn them back to her if she was living, and if not to turn them back to Mac.” The witness also testified to a conversation he had with Thee Poole, a brother of By, at the hardware store in By’s presence. This exchange was: “Now, Uncle John, you mentioned another conversation in the hardware store? Yes. About when was that? That was — I don’t know — just a little bit after he bought the buildings. Who was present? Thee said — ■ he was present — Thee said to me, ‘John, I guess By has got all the money he wants. I offered him a thousand dollars for his bargain and he said he couldn’t sell it.’ By didn’t say nothing. I said ‘Why couldn’t he sell it?’ Thee said, ‘He said he had a contract he couldn’t sell it.’ ” The witness testified that By Poole was an honest man and always did what he agreed. He had never seen a written contract of any such agreement.

John F. Handy, a resident of Milan thirty years, testified that he was present in Ralph McDuff’s office when the buildings on the west side of the square were discussed.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.2d 25, 1956 Mo. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poole-v-campbell-mo-1956.