Stewart v. Jones

118 S.W. 1, 219 Mo. 614, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 1 (Stewart v. Jones) 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
Stewart v. Jones, 118 S.W. 1, 219 Mo. 614, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 242 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

LAMM, P. J. —

Prom a decree, executing and terminating an alleged trust under a will determining the interests of certain parties in the corpus of the alleged trust estate (consisting of a homestead tract), finding that the land could not be divided and allotted in kind equitably, and decreeing a sale by a special commissioner and a division of the proceeds, certain defendants appeal.

There is little or no dispute on the facts. Questions made here arise on the law applicable to those facts.

Attending to the ease made, it is this:

In 1891 Patrick Henry Jones died testate, a resident of Boone county, seized of a considerable estate in lands and chattels, leaving a widow (a second wife) and one daughter (Cora N.) by a former marriage, surviving him. Cora intermarried with the codefend-ant, Ed. E. Tillery, and one child was born of this marriage after Patrick’s death, to-wit, the defendant Mary, now an infant. The will of Patrick nominated his brother, Aquilla H. Jones, as executor, who qualified and took on himself the burden of administra[623]*623tion. He is impleaded as a defendant under the name of A. H. Jones. Patrick left surviving him certain nieces and nephews, the children of two married sisters, Mrs. Carson and Mrs. Murray. As presently seen, the Murray children have a contingent, the Carson children had a vested, interest in Patrick’s homestead. The Murrays are made defendants, hut we cannot make out that they answered or took any part in the trial, nor do they prosecute an appeal.

Patrick’s will was probated in common form in 1891 in the probate court of Boone county. No contest of it was ever made. After providing, in item 1, that he desired to be buried by the side of his first wife and children at Mount Zion Church in Boone county, item 2 reads:

“I devise to my beloved wife, Eliza K. Jones, the homestead upon which I now live consisting of 52 60-100 acres, and being situated immediately west of the corporate limits of the town of Columbia, Missouri, to have and to hold the same during* her natural life. This device is in lieu of and in absolute bar and discharge of her right of dower in all my real estate.”

After providing in item 3 that $2,000 be paid Eliza by his executor and that said sum and certain specific chattels are bequeathed to her in absolute bar and discharge of her dower in his personal property, item 4 reads:

“I direct that at the death of my said widow, Eliza K. Jones, my executor shall sell the aforesaid homestead at public vendue, at the courthouse door in the said town of Columbia, after giving such notice of said sale as the law requires in sales of real estate under deeds of trust with power of sale, and after paying the expenses of sale, the proceeds thereof shall be divided equally per capita between my daughter, Mrs. Cora N. Tillery and the children of my sister, Mrs. Louisa Carson. In the event that my said [624]*624daughter shall have died prior to the distribution of the proceeds of said sale, then her share therein shall descend to her bodily heirs, if any survive her, and if she shall have died without bodily heirs surviving her, then her aforesaid share shall descend and be equally divided between the children of my sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Murray.”

After bequeathing to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, at Columbia $1,000 in trust for the benefit of superannuated ministers and their widows and orphans, within the jurisdiction of the conference to which the Columbia church belonged at the time, and directing it to be loaned and the income used (under certain safeguards) as indicated, item 6 reads:

“I devise and bequeath to my beloved daughter, Mrs. Cora N. Tillery, all the residue of my estate, real, personal and mixed, to have and to hold the same absolutely in fee simple.”

The widow elected to take under the will, and, in 1899, the executor having made final settlement of his accounts, distribution and his discharge were ordered by the probate court.

Patrick’s widow continued to reside on the homestead until, finally, contracting a second marriage with D. R. Vivion, she moved away and for several years the premises were rented out at an annual rental of $400.

On March 13, 1905, Mrs. Yivion quitclaimed her interest in the homestead to the plaintiff, Stewart, in consideration of $5 and “other considerations”- — • the “other considérations” being his agreement to pay her an annuity of $360'. A few days before her deed, Stewart, who is a real estate dealer, acquired the interests of the Carson children under item 4 of the will. Their deed by apt narrations refers to the will and recites that grantors sell their interests in the homestead, describing it, to Stewart for $5,000 paid [625]*625them by him. It not only grants, bargains and sells tbeir right, title and interest to the described homestead, bnt has this clause:

“And for said consideration we do further assign, transfer and set over nnto the said John A. Stewart all onr interest in and to the proceeds of said real estate, in the event of a sale thereof by the executor or under the provisions of said will and do authorize and empower him to have, demand, collect and receive and receipt for all the proceeds of said real estate in the event of such sale, that may be due us or either of us, so that said John A. Stewart shall by these presents be invested with any title that we may have to said real estate and be substituted to all our right, title and interest in the proceeds of the sale of the said real estate in the event the same shall be sold under the terms of said will.”

It stands conceded that there are five of the Carson children. Under the per capita clause in the will these children would share in the proceeds with Cora in the proportion of five to one.

Stewart put the Yivion deed on record on May 31, 1905, and the Carson deed shortly before. We infer these several deeds were part and parcel of the same transaction. He owns land adjacent to the homestead and is exploiting his holdings on the markets as residence property, laid out in lots and blocks, streets and alleys, and is selling to purchasers.

At the death of Patrick, his homestead was worth from eight to nine or ten thousand dollars. At the time of the trial, the residence parts of Columbia having shoved on west, the homestead is now partly in the city limits and is about to be taken in wholly, and has increased in value to twenty thousand dollars or upward. Some real estate experts gave it as their opinion at the trial that certain favored parts of it [626]*626were worth so much, as $1,000 per acre, and that certain other parts were depreciated hy a ravine and the proximity of a cemetery. These gentlemen also hazarded an opinion that the land was not susceptible of division in kind without serious detriment to the parties in interest, and that the present real estate market at Columbia bid fair to result in a good sale if the tract was put oh the block at public vendue.

Going back a little before her sale to Stewart, Mrs. Vivion commenced a suit in the Boone Circuit Court against the executor of Patrick’s will and the Tillerys, the Murrays, and the Carson children — her petition in two counts. By the first she pleads the terms of Patrick’s will, that she had accepted it, and had intermarried with Yivion.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 1, 219 Mo. 614, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-jones-mo-1909.