State ex rel. Hunt v. Grimm

148 S.W. 868, 243 Mo. 667, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 389
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 148 S.W. 868 (State ex rel. Hunt v. Grimm) 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. Hunt v. Grimm, 148 S.W. 868, 243 Mo. 667, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 389 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

LEAVES, J.

Action in prohibition, the purpose of which is to determine the right of Hon. Hugo Grimm, one of the judges of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, to proceed further with a case pending in his court, entitled, Greer Real Estate & Investment Company, plaintiff, v. Daniel D. Hunt and Mabel R. Hunt, defendants.

In the case pending in the circuit court the plaintiff therein filed its amended petition. To this petition the defendants in that cause, relators here, filed a demurrer challenging the jurisdiction of that court, and said demurrer being overruled by the respondent [670]*670in this cause, an application for a writ of prohibition was made to this court and an order to show cause was made. Respondent filed his return to our preliminary rule, and relators thereupon moved for judgment upon the pleadings, and the questions of law thus raised have been argued and submitted for our decision.

The facts charged and pleaded in the petition in the circuit court case become of essence here. The petition is long, but the facts pleaded are few. These facts are: that the Greer Real Estate & Investment Gompany was the owner of certain lands in Albermarle county in the State of Virginia; that by certain named fraudulent acts the defendants in that case, relators here, induced the said company to make a deed for said lands to Mabel A. Hurt, for the agreed consideration of $16.000; that defendants, in that case, relators here, after the delivery of that deed, and before its record, fraudulently changed the name of the grantee from Mabel A. Hurt to Mabel A. Hunt; that thereafter such fraudulent deed was placed of record in Albermarle county, in the State of Virginia, by the relators in this cause; that the name Mabel A. Hurt, grantee in the deed by the corporation, was fictitious and known to be so by the relators in this cause, but not known by the corporation at the execution of the deed; that the relators here fraudulently devised this scheme to get the title of the land in question in the name of the relator Mabel R. Hunt; that the corporation has never received the consideration of $16,000; that the relator Daniel D. Hunt was a stockholder in the corporation, and having its confidence was enabled to perpetrate the alleged fraud upon the corporation. After charging these facts the petition in the circuit court thus concludes:

“And that the said conveyance as placed upon the records of conveyances of Albermarle county, Virginia, constitutes and is a cloud upon the title to plaintiff’s said property; that the plaintiff has the posses[671]*671sion of said property and has no adequate remedy at law to redress the wrongs and grievances complained of:

“Wherefore and by reason of the premises plaintiff prays for an order cancelling the said deed aforesaid; that the said deed made by the plaintiff to said property be ordered surrendered up and impounded in the records of this court in this case; and the plaintiff prays for such further and other orders, judgments and decrees in the premises as may be just' and proper, together with its costs in this behalf expended; and for this it will ever pray.”

In the application for the writ of prohibition it is charged that the said plaintiff in the action pending in the circuit court had since the filing of the petition in this State as aforesaid, had filed a similar petition in the proper court of Albermarle county, State of Virginia, and had procured service upon these relators, as defendants in that action, and that thereby these relators were called upon to defend two actions covering the same subject-matter and seeking the same relief. This allegation stands, in effect, admitted by the return of respondent, and was admitted in oral argument.

This sufficiently outlines the facts.

I. A reading of the petition on file in the court over which respondent presides shows beyond doubt that the action is one to annul and cancel a deed and thereby remove the apparent cloud upon the plaintiff’s alleged title to the real estate described in the petition. It is true the prayer of the petition asks for the impounding of the alleged forged deed, but this does not change the legal effect of the petition. Impounding a deed already of record would avail plaintiff nothing. But we need not pursue this further at this point. The only fair interpretation of the petition and its purpose is as above indicated. The question [672]*672then is, has the circuit court of the city of St. Louis jurisdiction to hear and determine a case, the purpose of which is the cancellation, for alleged fraud, of a deed to lands in the State of Virginia. This question we discuss next.

II. The petition in respondent’s court states a cause of action, but it goes further and states facts which show that such cause of action is not cognizable by the courts of this State. A court of equity in Missouri has no jurisdiction to cancel for fraud a deed to lands in the State of Virginia. Nor has such court any greater right to cancel such deed because there is an allegation of a fraudulent change in the name of the grantee. Fraud of any kind, if proven, would obviate and vitiate the deed, but the hearing of the question of fraud or no fraud, forgery or no forgery, must be in a court having jurisdiction of the particular case. We say “forgery or no forgery,” because the changing of the name of a grantee in a deed is not only a fraud, but by law is forgery. The cancellation of a recorded deed is an act which affects the title to real-estate. Such cancellation is the destruction of a muniment of title. It involves directly the title to real-estate. The decree annulling the deed acts directly upon the land and the title thereto. A cloud upon the title as alleged in this petition is “a title or encumbrance apparently valid, but in fact invalid.” [7 Cyc. 255.]

In such case the courts of one State have no jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the suit, where it is alleged in the petition that the land to be affected lies within the jurisdiction of another State. The jurisdiction of the subject-matter of such action is in the proper court of the State wherein the land is situated.

And this is true notwithstanding the general rule that courts of equity act in personam. This exception [673]*673to the general rule is recognized by statutes in many states, as well as by the common law.

In this State the case of Castleman v. Castleman, 184 Mo. l. c. 438, is in point. That was an action to cancel two deeds to land lying in Cooper county. The suit was brought in Cooper county where the land was, but where defendants did not reside. Defendants challenged the jurisdiction of the court in this equitable action. Through Valliant, J., we then said:

“The position of appellant on this point is that this is a personal suit and could be brought only in the county of his residence or ‘where the plaintiff resides and the defendant may be found.’ Appellant is correct in his general proposition that a court of equity acts in personam.

“And since the suit is personal in its character it must seek the person to be affected in the county of his residence regardless of where the thing in controversy may be. [State ex rel. v. Zachritz, 166 Mo. 313.] But our statute (Sec. 564, R. S. 1899) has en-grafted one exception to that rule. It is said: ‘Suits for the possession of real estate, or whereby the title thereto may be affected, shall be brought in the county within which such real estate, or some part thereof, is situated.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 S.W. 868, 243 Mo. 667, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hunt-v-grimm-mo-1912.