Shroyer v. Shroyer

425 S.W.2d 214, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1024
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 11, 1968
Docket52943
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 425 S.W.2d 214 (Shroyer v. Shroyer) 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
Shroyer v. Shroyer, 425 S.W.2d 214, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1024 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Bill in equity to cancel a warranty deed on the ground of nondelivery and for an accounting of royalties received from the operation of a stone quarry on the land, an 80-acre farm in Mercer County. Plaintiff is Jessie Shroyer, mother of the defendants J. Wesley and Wayne Shroyer. The trial chancellor cancelled the deed and ordered the grantees to pay $1,392.82 in royalties. Defendants appealed.

The common source of title is Jennie Peters, a widow, who acquired the farm by deed in 1935. Jennie’s brother, Virgil Shroyer, helped her run the farm for many years, until his death in July, 1960. At the time of Virgil’s death Jennie’s family consisted of her brother George Shroyer and his wife Beulah; Virgil’s widow (Jessie Shroyer, plaintiff herein), and Jessie’s five daughters and two sons (Wayne and Wesley, defendants herein). On October 15, 1960 Jennie made and executed a will, properly witnessed, leaving the 80-acre farm to Virgil’s widow, Jessie Shroyer, reciting that Virgil had kept up the farm for 30 years and that Jessie, his wife, “has been more than a sister to me in that time and all without compensation of any kind.” (At that time Jessie owned or had an interest in farms totalling 663 acres, and a house in Mercer, subject to a mortgage of between $10,000 and $11,000, facts of which Jennie whs aware.)

Jennie Peters was a strong-willed woman with a mind of her own. “You just didn’t tell her what to do.” She was generous with her relatives and from time to time made gifts to or paid bills for them. She gave one of her nieces $500 when the niece’s husband died. She gave Wesley Shroyer $240 to pay for new dentures. She was “in the habit of making up deeds” and would dispose of her property, change her mind and make another disposition of her property, then change her mind again. In the six years before her death she made three different dispositions of her property. Jennie preferred secrecy about her property affairs and wanted to keep peace in the family. After executing the will dated October 15, 1960 Jennie turned it over to her niece Betty Daily with the request that Betty put it in her bank box and “not ever say anything about it.” Jennie said she thought it would “keep down trouble in the family” if nobody knew about it. The will remained in Betty’s safety deposit box in Peoples Bank of Mercer until Jennie died. After giving Betty possession of the will Jennie did not thereafter discuss the will with Betty, or request of Betty that she return the will or destroy it. After Virgil’s death Wayne and Wesley would come out to Jennie’s farm about once a week. They would chop ice and perform other chores, such as throwing hay down for the cattle, cleaning out the barn, repairing fences, etc.

Robert and Rachel Jones were close neighbors with whom Jennie had almost daily discussions about her business. For a period of 3 or 4 months prior to December 1, 1964 Jennie discussed with the Jones-es the deeding of the 80-acre farm to Wayne and Wesley Shroyer. She stated *217 that she wanted to deed the property to them; that “she wanted Wayne and Wesley to have the farm and that was her intentions.” Jennie told the Joneses during this period that Betty Daily (sister of Wesley and Wayne) had asked Jennie to deed the farm to her since she (Betty) was the one who was taking care of her mother Jessie, but that Jennie had refused to do so. Robert Jones suggested that Jennie get a lawyer to prepare the deed but she wanted him to prepare it, so finally he “gave up” and he and his wife prepared the deed. Jennie made it known to Jones that the purpose of preparing the deed was “to pass title before she died so it wouldn’t be probated as a part of her estate.” Jones explained that Jennie was “a saving sort of person” and that she did not want too much property to “go through Probate Court.” When asked whether she had any other papers “out” Jennie answered that all of her papers had been brought back to her and “everything was destroyed”— that there was no will or “anything else of that- matter”; that her wills “had been destroyed” and “there is no other.” In their discussions Jennie stated that she wanted to make sure that the farm stayed with one or the other of the boys; that if either wanted to sell, the other should have first chance to buy. The deed was drawn to make such a provision. She did not want it known that she was deeding the farm to the boys. She wanted “to keep it quiet,” and said “I just don’t want trouble, Bob, in the family.” She felt that the others in the family would be disturbed if they knew that she intended Wesley and Wayne to have the farm. The deed to Wesley and Wayne bears date December 1, 1964. It was notarized on December 8, 1964. Wayne Shroyer told the notary public that Jennie wanted her to come out to notarize some papers. The notary refused to drive out to the farm because of bad weather conditions. Wayne then offered to drive her out and bring her back, to which she consented. When the notary first saw the paper to be notarized it was lying on a table in the kitchen. Jennie asked the notary if she would notarize her signature “on that.” The notary surmised that it was a warranty deed. Jennie folded it so that the notary could not see whose names were on the deed. Jennie did not identify the grantee. The notary considered that Jennie knew what she was doing but that for some reason Jennie wanted to keep the name of the grantee to herself. Only Jennie and the notary were in the room when the paper was notarized. Wayne was in another part of the house. The deed was not handed to Wayne in the notary’s presence. It was lying on the table when the notary left.

Afterward Jennie told the Joneses that she had signed the deed; that she had conveyed the farm to Wayne and Wesley and that they were the owners; that “it belonged to the boys”; that she had consulted with them about selling the farm; that she did not want them to ever sell' the farm and told them that “if it were she, she would not sell.” In the weeks and months that followed and up until the time of her death Jennie “conveyed the attitude” to the Joneses “that the boys were the owners of the farm.”

George Shroyer testified that about six months before Jennie’s death he had a conversation with her at her home in which she told him that she had deeded the farm to Wayne and Wesley, and that “she told Wayne to take that deed and read it and he took it * * * ”; that she “actually gave” the deed to Wayne and “told him it was his, but she wanted to keep it in her possession until she died”; that “she was going to keep the deed until she died” — “she was going to keep it in a safe place.” When asked whether she told him why she didn’t want Wayne to take the deed and put it of record he testified, “She wanted to keep it in the safety — to save any more trouble.” Jennie did not say whether she might want to change the deed again. With reference to the will he testified that Jennie told him she had given Betty a will to keep; that the will was put in a bank box and kept for some time *218 and that the will was outstanding, hut “it was to be destroyed.” She did not tell George that she had asked for the return of the will or had taken any steps on her own to see that the will was destroyed. Neither Wesley nor Wayne ever said anything to George Shroyer to indicate that they were making claim -to the land.

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
425 S.W.2d 214, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 1024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shroyer-v-shroyer-mo-1968.