Springfield Engine & Thresher Co. v. Donovan

49 S.W. 500, 147 Mo. 622, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 7, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 500 (Springfield Engine & Thresher Co. v. Donovan) 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
Springfield Engine & Thresher Co. v. Donovan, 49 S.W. 500, 147 Mo. 622, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 192 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.-

— Ejectment for the possession of a piece of ground, one hundred and twenty, by one hundred and twenty-three feet, being part of lot 1 in block 2, Sloan’s addition to the city of Palmyra. The petition is in the usual form, and the original answer a general denial.

The case was in this court on a former occasion (120 Mo. 423), when the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. After its reversal and remand, defendants filed an amended answer in which they admit the possession, but deny all other allegations in the petition It then avers that the notes and deed of trust given to Thomas Cocke to secure their payment under which plaintiffs derive title were signed by defendant, Daniel Donovan,- in pretended consideration of [625]*625the purchase by him and one Crane of a certain engine and thresher manufactured by plaintiff, and they say that said Daniel was induced to make said purchase and to execute said notes and deed of trust by fraud, misrepresentations and deceit. They say that said plaintiff “by its agents in that behalf in order to procure the execution thereof by said Daniel Donovan, fraudulently induced said Daniel to drink intoxicating liquor until he was drunken and his judgment was overthrown, in which condition.......he was induced by plaintiff’s agents to sign said notes and deed of trust. And defendants further state that said Daniel being so drunken by force and threats of violence forced defendant Josephine, his wife, to sign and acknowledge said deed of trust, that she was unwilling so to„do and thus incumber their homestead, and so to do refused until forced as aforesaid by her said codefendant.” And it was further averred in said answer that Daniel Donovan was incompetent to transact business when he signed said notes and deed of trust, and was induced to do so by the fraudulent representation of plaintiff as to the value of the machinery bought by him and the profits to be received therefrom, and they were not therefore binding on him in law, and that, as their execution was obtained by fraud and they were not binding in equity, the court was asked to set aside the deed of trust and cancel the notes. It was further averred that Donovan and Crane also executed a chattel mortgage on the machinery bought, to secure the payment of the three notes given therefor; that said machinery had been sold by plaintiff and $1,250 realized at such sale, which amount had not been credited on the notes, and which,'if so credited,would have left but a small amount due thereon, and that the real estate had been sold as if nothing, or very little, had been paid by the sale of the machinery; that the real estate was of the value of $1,500; that there were no .bidders at the sale; that appellant sent a bid of $500 by mail with the request to the trustee to consider such bid and if no one bid more to knock [626]*626off the premises to plaintiff 5 that no other bid was made and the trustee considered the $500 as a bid, and declared the premises sold to plaintiff for that sum, and made it a deed reciting therein that consideration, and the court was asked to set aside said pretended sale and deed because there was no bid made at the same, or if the $500 be considered a lawful bid, then it was entirely inadequate and asked that the sale and deed be set aside for that reason and that defendants be granted general relief.

On September 2, 1895, plaintiff filed its motion to strike out all of defendants’ amended answer except that part which admits the possession of the property sued for and alleges that it is their homestead, upon the ground that it is immaterial, constitutes no defense to plaintiff’s action, and sets up matter as a defense not included in the former answer. This motion was overruled and exceptions to the ruling of the court duly taken and saved.

On September 3, 1895,plaintiff filed reply to the amended answer denying all new matter therein contained.

The court submitted six issues to the jury, but as all of them were withdrawn except the third and sixth, only those will be further noticed.

The third directed tbe jury to find as to whether or not there was realized from the private sale of said engine and thresher by the plaintiff the sum of $1,250.

The sixth issue was as follows: The defendants affirm and plaintiff denies that the defendant Daniel Donovan, by acts of violence forced defendant Josephine Donovan to sign and acknowledge said deed of trust and that she was unwilling so to do and refused to do so until she was forced to do so, as aforesaid, by the defendant Daniel Donovan.

The jury found on issue number three that the engine and thresher sold at said private sale for the sum of $1,176, and on the sixth issue for defendants.

The court then found that at the alleged sale of the land [627]*627by tbe sheriff of Marion county as trustee, plaintiff was not a bidder for the land, and that no bid therefor was made by any one, and rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff against Daniel Donovan for the sum of $1,075.50 and rendered a decree setting aside the deed of trust as to Mrs. Donovan, and foreclosing it as a mortgage as to Daniel Donovan and directing a sale of his interest in the property to pay the judgment.

After unsuccessful motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals.

. Plaintiff showed title to the property from defendants under deed of trust executed by them, and deed from the trustee therein named, and was entitled to judgment for its possession unless the case made out by it, was overcome by the evidence on the-'part of defendants. The evidence adduced by defendants to sustain the fifth issue was to the effect that plaintiff had offered $500 by letter to the trustee before the day of sale of the property under the deed of trust which was accepted by him at the sale which the court held not to be a bid, and to sustain the sixth issue the evidence tended to show that Mrs. Donovan was induced to sign the deed of trust against her will by threats of violence and intimidation by her husband.

On the issues submitted the plaintiff ashed the following instructions which were refused.

“If the jury find from the evidence that the defendant, Josephine Donovan, acknowledged the deed of trust of date of June 29, 1886, read in evidence, to be her free act and deed, the jury should find for plaintiff on issue number six, although the jury may further believe from the evidence that her husband Daniel Donovan coerced her, the said Josephine Donovan, into the signing and acknowledgment of said deed of trust.
“If the jury find from the evidence that the defendant Josephine Donovan acknowledged before Mathew Fletcher, a justice of the peace for Marion county, that she executed [628]*628the said deed of trust of date of June 29, 1886, read in evidence, they should find for plaintiff on issue number six.”

Over the objection of plaintiff the court at the instance of defendants instructed the jury as follows:

“3. The finding on the sixth issue should be for the plaintiff, unless the jury find from the evidence in the cause that the defendant Josephine Donovan at the time of the execution of the said deed of trust was unwilling to execute said deed of trust, and was by threats of violence on the part of Daniel Donovan, forced to execute the same, and that she would not have executed the same had it not been for said threats of violence.”

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 500, 147 Mo. 622, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-engine-thresher-co-v-donovan-mo-1899.