Roethemeier v. Veith

69 S.W.2d 930, 334 Mo. 1030, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 14, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 69 S.W.2d 930 (Roethemeier v. Veith) 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
Roethemeier v. Veith, 69 S.W.2d 930, 334 Mo. 1030, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 510 (Mo. 1934).

Opinions

This action was a proceeding in the probate court against respondent, as administrator of his deceased wife's estate, to compel him to inventory certain property as assets of said estate. Appellants' petition asking for this relief alleged that respondent "wrongfully withholds and conceals, and now has in his possession certain money and property of said estate of the value of eight thousand dollars, which he received from the proceeds of the sale of certain real estate belonging to said deceased, in her own right, and which he has wrongfully converted to his own use." Upon this petition, respondent was cited into the probate court, to answer appellants' written interrogatories. Respondent's answer to these interrogatories asserted his claim of ownership to the property inquired about. There was a jury verdict in the probate court that respondent wrongfully withheld the sum of $8,284 from his deceased wife's estate. Respondent appealed to the circuit court and, upon trial there, the jury returned a verdict for respondent. Appellants have appealed from the judgment entered upon that verdict.

The property about which the controversy arose was the proceeds of the sale of eighty acres of land, which, in 1915, respondent's deceased wife, Emma Veith, inherited from her father. Appellants are her brothers and sister. Respondent and Emma Veith were married in 1910 and had no children. This land was sold in 1921 for $8,000. One thousand dollars was paid in cash at the time of the sale. Respondent in his answers to appellants' interrogatories admitted that he received this money at the time of the sale and he made the following claim to it therein: "$1,000 was to compensate me for the money spent on Emma Veith's farm. . . . . Returned to me $1,000 money that I had paid out on her farm in improving it." For the balance of the purchase price, the purchasers gave a $4,000 note secured by a deed of trust on the land purchased and a $3,000 *Page 1034 note secured by a deed of trust on other land owned by them. Both notes were made payable to Emma Veith five years after date with six per cent interest. The $4,000 note was paid in full during the year it came due. There was paid on the $3,000 note in 1926 $200, in 1927 $200, and in 1928 $1200, leaving a balance due of $1400. There was also paid on each note prior to the death of Emma Veith in 1929 interest in excess of $1200, or a total of more than $2400 interest. Respondent inventoried the note with $1400 balance as belonging to his wife's estate and so stated in his answers to the interrogatories. It was shown, however, by respondent's own evidence that after his wife's death the original $3,000 note was released of record and a new note was made in renewal thereof payable to respondent himself before he was appointed administrator. Respondent's appointment was made ten months after his wife's death, when he was cited by the probate court upon a petition filed by appellants to compel administration.

Respondent claimed a verbal gift from his wife, not of the notes themselves but of all amounts collected upon both notes, prior to her death. These notes were held for safe-keeping, from the time they were made, by the cashier of the bank where both respondent and his wife transacted business, and all payments were made at the bank. This banker testified that he would give a receipt for these payments by signing respondent's name by himself; that the proceeds of all payments of principal and interest were deposited in respondent's name subject to his check; that Emma Veith never told him to do that and never talked to him about it; that the account was handled entirely by respondent; that it remained at all times in his name, and that respondent reloaned the money he thus received to other people. The banker further testified that Emma Veith in 1924 put $100 on time deposit in her own name; that she gradually increased this account each year so that it amounted to $180 at the time of her death; that she told him it was the proceeds of the sale of eggs and chickens; that there was no other account in the bank in her name; that she attended to renewing this time certificate each year; that she did not draw on the money that came from the sale of the farm, and that she never mentioned that to him or said anything to him about that at all. After his wife's death, the cashier allowed respondent to draw out the amount of the time deposit upon his guarantee to the bank against any loss by reason of having to repay it in case it came into court.

Upon the issue of the gift, respondent had the following evidence of declarations made by his deceased wife to witnesses on three separate occasions in the summer of 1928:

First: Respondent's sister-in-law, Mrs. Herman Veith, who told of the following conversation on a trip to Aurora to see a doctor who was treating Emma Veith: "We were driving along, and like all *Page 1035 women do, we got to talking about things, getting things, what you might have and what you could have; and, I told her, `If I had the money you have, I would get me anything that I wanted;' and, she says to me, `Emma, I give my money all to John; whatever he does with it, it is perfectly all right with me.' . . . She told me she give all her money to John. She didn't say how much."

Second: Jake Deschner, who testified to a conversation with Emma Veith while he was stacking wheat on the place where they lived, as follows: "It was rather dry, and looked like we were not going to have any corn; and, we talked that it would be pretty hard to get along; and, we told her she wouldn't have to worry about that, she had sold her place for a good price and John had plenty too; and, she said she gave what she got out of the place to John . . . She said she gave what she got for the place to John. She was speaking about this eighty acres of land."

Third: Mrs. Jake Deschner, who testified to a conversation about the same time, as follows: "I told her she ought to buy a car; and, she said she hadn't, said John didn't care for a car and didn't think he would run it; and I told her she could buy her one; and, she said she didn't have that money anymore, she gave that to John. I had told her she had money from the farm; and, she said, no she didn't have that anymore. . . . She said she give John the money from her farm."

These witnesses also testified that Emma Veith complained that her brothers and sister (appellants) did not visit with them or come to see them.

Upon the issue of the payment of the $1000 to respondent by his wife to reimburse him for improvements which he made upon her land, the only evidence (except respondent's own testimony) was that of Mrs. Herman Veith, who testified that respondent improved the land, after his wife got it, "by building a house and painting a house and drilling a well," but she said she did not know who paid for the improvements. Respondent and his wife never lived on her land, which was rented and farmed by others, but lived with respondent's mother. There was no evidence to show what was done with the rents derived from Emma Veith's land. Respondent, himself, testified over appellants' objections as follows:

"Q. During the time you had it, John, tell the jury what you did and about what you spent on that land in the way of improvements until the time you sold it. (Objections) A. I drilled a well, put in a corncrib, fixed up the house, and painted the house and painted all of the buildings. Q. Now, the digging of this well, did you hire some men to do that? (Objections) A. Yes; I hired somebody to drill it. Q. The improvements you put on there altogether would amount to what? (Objections) A. Amounted to nine hundred dollars, I guess in all, with the well and everything." *Page 1036

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W.2d 930, 334 Mo. 1030, 1934 Mo. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roethemeier-v-veith-mo-1934.