Reed Bros. v. Nicholson

88 S.W. 71, 189 Mo. 396, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 84
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 88 S.W. 71 (Reed Bros. v. Nicholson) 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
Reed Bros. v. Nicholson, 88 S.W. 71, 189 Mo. 396, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 84 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a bill in equity to set aside a deed made by the defendant, R. D. O. Nicholson, to his wife, Nancy E. Nicholson, on the 27th of March, 1896, conveying to her the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 26, township 29, range 25, and the west half of the northeast quarter, and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 35, same township and range, in Lawrence county, Missouri, on the ground that it was made to defraud the creditors of the husband, the plaintiff among the number.

The circuit court entered a decree in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed.

The case made is this:

On the 16th of October, 1895, the husband executed his note for $360, to one J. A. Fretwell or bearer, payable at six months, the consideration being the right granted to him to sell in Greene county, Missouri, a certain patented bed brace. The note was not paid, but before maturity had passed into the hands of the plaintiff herein, who, on the 7th of July, 1896, instituted suit against the husband thereon, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the pláintiff, on the 28th of August, 1896, for $381.60. In the meantime the husband had made this deed, here sought to be set aside, to his wife, and after the return of the execution nulla bona, the plaintiff instituted this suit to set the same aside on the ground that it was fraudulent as to the husband’s creditors.

Upon the trial of this case, the plaintiff introduced the deed in question, and the records and files in the case of the plaintiff against the husband on the note aforesaid, together with the execution and the return thereon.

The plaintiff then called the defendant, Nicholson, the husband, and had him identify a statement sworn to by him before appraisers who had been selected by the sheriff to appraise and set apart to him such prop[401]*401erty as was exempt under the law, in which he stated that he had no property at all. Thereupon the'plaintiff rested. The defendants then called R. D. O. Nicholson, the husband, who testified that he- married the defendant Nancy on the 29th of July, 1866; that when they were married his wife’s father deeded eighty acres of land in Greene county to her (on cross-examination he stated that the deed was made to himself and his wife jointly), and that her father also gave her a mare, ten hogs, eight head of sheep, a cow and a calf; that they afterwards sold the eighty acres of land in Greene county for $800, and her father having died, she received from his estate $450, and, later, -personal property to the value of $200; that she sold some of the personal property for $40; that with the proceeds of such sale, to-wit, $800 for the land, $450 received from her father’s estate, the $200 worth of personal property, the sale of the mare for $130, and $500 realized from the sale of a wagon and team of mules, together with what had been earned on the farm, they purchased 120 acres in Lawrence county, and 80 acres in Greene county for $2,500 or $2,600, paying thereon $2,000; that there was a, vendor’s lien on the land for $500 or $600, which was afterwards discovered, in consequence of which the purchase was rescinded, and they received bach nearly all the money they had paid therefor; that afterwards, in 1874, they purchased 120 acres, being the west half of the northeast .quarter of section 35 and the southwest quarter of the’ northwest quarter-of section 35 in Lawrence county, a part of the land here in controversy, and paid therefor $2,600; that they afterwards purchased 40 acres additional from the railroad, being the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 26; that he took the deeds to the land in his own name; that his wife had always kept the money, keeping it some times in her bosom, and at other times, in other places, but that he generally [402]*402conducted the trades; that at the time of his marriage he had no property at all, except a horse., a saddle and a bridle, and had acquired none thereafter, except such as was made from farming the land. Immediately upon acquiring the land in 1874, being the land in question here, he and his wife moved on to the same, occupied it and used it as a homestead and have continued so to do ever since.

The house is located on the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 35. The total land consists of 160 acres. __

The husband testified that he had never reduced the wife’s money or property to hi's possession, hut that when it was invested in the land, the title was taken in his name, and the understanding between him and his wife was, that she should have her money or the land at any time she saw fit. The consideration expressed in the deed from the husband to' the wife, here sought to be set aside, was $4,500. The defendant husband testified that he figured up the amount of money which belonged to his wife, and which had gone into the purchase of the land, added 8 per cent interest thereto, and that it aggregated $4,800, and that, in order to make that sum good to her, he conveyed the land to her, at a valuation of $4,500, and turned over to her, personal property, consisting of cattle, mules, etc., to the value of $300. He testified that the land is worth seventeen to eighteen dollars an acre, and it was shown that there is a valid deed of trust on the land for $1,400.

The defendants called two other witnesses, one of whom said that the land was worth $17.50 an acre, aggregating $2,800, and the other said it was worth $20 an acre, aggregating $3,200. In rebuttal the plaintiff called four witnesses, three of whom said the land was worth $25 an acre, aggregating $4,000, and one of them said it was worth $30 an acre, aggregating $4,800. It was further shown that the land lies a quarter of a mile [403]*403south of the road on the north, and a mile north of the road on the south.

The trial court found that the conveyance from the husband to the wife was fraudulent, and set the same aside. The court further found that the defendant husband is entitled to a h omestead in the premises, to the value of $1,500, and that the wife is entitled to the sum of $450, which she received as a gift from her mother in 1895, and which had never been reduced to possession by the husband with the written consent of the wife, and further found that there was a valid deed of trust on the 120 acres which lie in section 35, for $1,400, with interest at 6 per cent thereon. The court thereupon ordered that the land be sold, subject to said deed of trust, and that out of the proceeds there be first paid to the wife the sum of $450 and then to the husband $1,500 as his homestead interest in the premises, and out of the balance, if any, there be paid the costs and the plaintiff’s judgment. The court further ordered that unless the premises should bring the sum of $1,500, the homestead interest of the husband, subject to the deed of trust as aforesaid, then the premises, or any part thereof, should not be sold.

After proper steps the defendants appealed.

I.

It is a conceded fact, which was also found to be a fact by the trial court, that the land in controversy constituted the homestead of the defendants. The total tract does not exceed 160 acres. There was a conflict in the evidence as to the value of the land. The defendant husband and his witnesses valued it at less than $2,900. There is a valid mortgage, covering 120 of the 160 acres, and embracing the part on which the house stands, for $1,400.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.W. 71, 189 Mo. 396, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-bros-v-nicholson-mo-1905.