State Ex Rel. Goehler v. Ladriere

189 S.W.2d 986, 354 Mo. 515, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 538
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39568.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 986 (State Ex Rel. Goehler v. Ladriere) 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
State Ex Rel. Goehler v. Ladriere, 189 S.W.2d 986, 354 Mo. 515, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 538 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

This is an original proceeding in prohibition instituted by relator to restrain the respondent, Judge of the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri, from proceeding in a cause pending in his court, wherein Charles A. Meredith is plaintiff and Anna Goehler Meredith; Taylor R. Young; Anna Marie Goehler; James Goehler, an infant; Henry Kronsbein; Laura Kronsbein; North Side Bank, a Corporation and Webe H. Naunheim, as Trustee for said North Side Bank are defendants. A preliminary writ was issued to which respondent filed a return. Relator filed a reply. The case was submitted upon the pleadings and the record as made in the circuit court.

From the record we learn that relator, James Lewis Goehler, a minor, defendant in the case pending before respondent judge, filed an application for continuance on the ground that he was then in the military service of the United States. Sec. 201 of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of Congress of 1940 was relied upon as ground for the continuance. Respondent judge, after hearing the parties on the motion to continue, denied the same, whereupon Goehler applied to this court for a writ of prohibition. A short history of the events [987] leading up to this lawsuit will be necessary for an understanding of the issues as they were at the time respondent judge refused the continuance. On December 24, 1936, plaintiff, Charles A. Meredith, and the defendant, Anna Goehler Meredith, entered into an antenuptial agreement. They were married the same day. By this agreement they intended to settle all of their property rights. The *Page 518 agreement provided that a certain parcel of real estate, being the home of Meredith, should be held by them as joint tenants and be a home for them, or the survivor, so long as they should live. It was further agreed that by deed the property was to be conveyed to them for life and to the children of Anna Goehler, that is, Anna Marie Goehler and relator herein, James Goehler. Deeds were executed pursuant to that agreement and the deed conveying the property to James Goehler and Anna Marie Goehler was delivered to Taylor R. Young in escrow to be delivered to the grantees when both Charles A. Meredith and his wife had departed this life. Taylor R. Young signed that agreement and agreed to keep the deed in escrow. The antenuptial agreement, instead of settling the property rights of the parties, became fertile seed from which a number of lawsuits soon grew. Within a short time Anna Goehler Meredith, the wife, began court proceedings. See Meredith v. Meredith, 151 S.W.2d 536 and Meredith v. Meredith, 166 S.W.2d 221. The record discloses that there were a number of other suits which did not reach the appellate courts for determination. One of the suits involved the validity of the antenuptial contract. The contract was sustained by a judgment. Taylor R. Young, who held the deed in escrow and who had signed that agreement, represented Mrs. Meredith in those lawsuits. The home place of Meredith, which by the deeds was made the property of Meredith and his wife jointly, was encumbered by a deed of trust. This deed of trust was foreclosed. The title to this property was, at the time plaintiff brought this suit, in the name of Henry Kronsbein and Laura Kronsbein. Plaintiff, Charles A. Meredith, in his petition alleged that the Kronsbeins held title to that property as trustees for the benefit of himself and his wife. Meredith further alleged that his wife had breached the terms of the antenuptial contract in many respects, setting forth in his petition the particulars as to the alleged breaches. He also alleged that his wife married him merely as a business venture and in bad faith and only for the purpose of obtaining his property. It was alleged that the consideration for the antenuptial contract failed and therefore the title to the property, that is, the home place, should be revested in him. Meredith in his petition enumerated the various lawsuits that had been tried between his wife and himself.

In an answer filed to this suit Mrs. Meredith alleged that the property in controversy was foreclosed under a deed of trust and that pursuant to an agreement between herself, her children and the Kronsbeins the title was placed in the name of the Kronsbeins to be held in trust for herself and her children. By way of cross-bill Mrs. Meredith alleged that plaintiff, Charles A. Meredith, had breached the antenuptial contract. She asked that the contract be canceled and that she be declared to be entitled to all of her marital rights as *Page 519 the wife of Meredith, which she had agreed not to claim in the antenuptial contract.

A guardian ad litem was appointed for James Lewis Goehler but up to the time of his application for a writ of prohibition no answer had been filed for him. However, an answer was not essential because all the issues necessary for a complete determination of the case had been joined by Meredith's petition and the answers filed by his mother and the Kronsbeins. If Mrs. Meredith loses her lawsuit then her children will have no interest in the property. At the time of the alleged agreement between the mother and children and the Kronsbeins, the minor, James Lewis Goehler, was twelve years of age.

The suit which was stayed by the writ of prohibition was filed in August, 1943. On October 22, 1943, defendant, Anna Goehler Meredith, filed an answer and cross-bill. On February 18, 1944, she dismissed her cross-bill as to certain parties. On January 10, 1945, at plaintiff's suggestion, a guardian ad litem was appointed for the minor. On April 23, 1945, the defendants, Anna Marie Goehler and Taylor R. Young filed an answer. On the same day Anna Goehler Meredith filed a supplemental answer. Likewise on that day the defendants Kronsbeins filed an answer. Also on this day the defendant James Lewis Goehler, who had not filed an answer, filed his motion to stay the suit because he was in the military service. During the hearing on this motion it developed that the case had been set for trial for March 28, 1945, [988] and that Taylor R. Young, attorney for the defendant, had the case continued because he desired to have the defendant, James Lewis Goehler, present at the trial or take his deposition. The case was then set for April 23. The defendant, James Lewis Goehler, was in St. Louis county at his home for several days during the week preceding April 23. He left before the day the case was set for trial. The young man was at the office of Mr. Young during those days. Note what transpired before the trial judge at the time the motion for continuance was being discussed:

"Mr. Young: Except that the boy did — I saw him on Friday. He came in for a few minutes and brought the affidavit back to my office, and went over and got a photostatic copy of that certificate and I attached it. Your Honor will see I didn't have that certificate when I prepared the affidavit, and didn't know anything about it, so that had to be inserted in the motion after it was prepared. That is all I know about it.

"Mr. Nolan: Mr. Young, you didn't contact me on Friday for the purpose of finding out whether it was agreeable to take the boy's deposition?

"Mr. Young: No, because the boy wanted to be with his folks. There isn't any question but what Mr. Nolan would have taken his deposition on Friday or Saturday, I am sure, but the boy didn't want to do it; he wanted to be with his folks. *Page 520

"The Court: Do you want to make a statement for the record?

"Mr. Nolan: Well, I will just say this, your Honor; At the last setting of this case in this division, which was on the 28th of March, 1945, Mr. Young made a statement to the Court at that time that this young man, this defendant, was in .

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 986, 354 Mo. 515, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-goehler-v-ladriere-mo-1945.