Stierlin v. Teschemacher

64 S.W.2d 647, 333 Mo. 1208, 91 A.L.R. 121, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 677
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 647 (Stierlin v. Teschemacher) 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
Stierlin v. Teschemacher, 64 S.W.2d 647, 333 Mo. 1208, 91 A.L.R. 121, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 677 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*1210 ELLISON, P. J.

In May,- 1919, one William A. Mosberger,. since deceased, conveyed certain real estate in St. Louis County to the appellant Julius G-. Teschemacher by his sole warranty deed for a recited consideration of $2500. Thereafter, in December,. 1919, the said Teschemacher, to secure-the payment of an alleged promissory note for $2,000, executed a deed of-trust on-the property to the-defendant Richard Iiord as trustee for the appellant C. F. Beehler. This suit in. equity, brought by four of the heirs of the deceased grantor, Mosberger, complains that, both of said transactions were fraudulent,- and seeks: (1) to cancel said deed of trust; (2) to-have the appellant grantee, Julius G-. Teschemacher, declared a trustee ex maleficio, and to establish a trust in the land in favor of all the heirs of Mosberger; (3) or to have said warranty deed set aside so that the land will pass to said heirs by descent, and for partition. The chancellor canceled both the deed and the deed of trust and Teschemacher, grantee in the warranty deed, and Beehler, beneficiary in the deed of trust, have appealed..

The foregoing introductory, statement does. not, however, give an accurate picture of the full scppe.of the petition,, of the parties, or of the issues. It will be necessary to state further ■ facts. The warranty deed, assailed- is recorded in Book 451, page 10, office of. the Recorder of .Deeds of St. Louis County; the deed.of trust, in Book 469, page 24, said recorder’s office. The real estate involved is described as follows:

“Dots numbered five (5) and seven, (7) of block four (4) of the J. F. Meyer Subdivision in Midland Heights a subdivision of. U.. S. *1211 Survey 912 -and 1920, township forty-six; (46) -north; range six (6) east, according to plat thereof recorded in plat book three (3), page fifty-seven (57), of the St. Louis County Recorder’s Office.” .

After making the warranty deed on May 19, 1919, the grantor, William A. Mosberger died in 1923, leaving no lineal descendants, father, mother, brother, sister or their descendants. His only collateral heirs were uncles and. aunts, -they being brothers and sisters of his deceased mother, to-wit: the appellant Julius G. Teschemacher, the defendants ■ Hugo M. Teschemacher. and Minnie Loertcher, and Julia, Straube. The aunt Julia .Straube died in 1925 after instituting this -suit and the cause was revived in the circuit court in the names of her four children, the present plaintiffs and-respondents, who were, as will be seen, cousins of the -deceased Mosberger. The petition impleads three defendants named Hesse, who are alleged to claim some interest in the land as-heirs-of Mosberger. ' The record recites thejr were grandsons of Julia Straube.- -The chancellor’s decree- found they had no interest in the title. Why they were not -heirs of Mosberger as much as the four plaintiff children -of Julia Straube the record does not disclose. ; ' ■

Mosberger had married the defendant Amy Mosberger in 1911. They lived together only five weeks. -After- the separation he went to -live with-his mother on the land here involved. She died in 19.1-7, and, it seems, devised, the land to him in-her will. Prior to that,,.in November, 1916, Mosberger’s-wife had instituted a suit against him in the Circuit Court of the City of-St. Louis for separate maintenance. In January, 1917, she obtained an allowance in- that proceeding of $150 suit money and $50 per month maintenance pendente Ute. Mosberger appealed from this order to the St.-Louis Court of Appeals, where the judgment was affirmed in November, 1919, Mossberger v. Mossberger, 202 Mo. App. 271, 215 S. W. 760. During the pendency of this appeal on April 28-, 1919, the circuit court allowed her $1400 and costs for maintenance and suit money awaiting the appeal, and awarded execution therefor. On May 14, 1919, Mosberger filed a motion in the circuit court to set aside-the above $1400 allowance and to quash the execution. Five .days' thereafter on May 19, while this motion was pending and undetermined, Mosberger ■executed to his uncle Julius G.- Teschemacher the warranty deed attacked in this case. Such is the background behind the making of the deed.

Mosberger’s motion- to -set aside the -$1400- judgment in the separate maintenance suit was sustained and the judgment set- aside on May 26, 1919. This left that proceeding with the .original, order made in January, 1917, allowing $150 suit money and $50 per month maintenance pendente lité, still standing, and with- unpaid installments accumulating. In October, 1920, Mosberger filed - a divorce suit- in the -St.-Louis County Circuit Court against his wife, Amy. He ob *1212 tained a default decree in February, 1921, based on service of process by publication.

Mosberger died, intestate on July 29, 1923. About two months before his death he transferred to his uncle, the appellant Julius G. Teschemacher, stocks and bonds of the face value of about $6000. The defendant Edward W. Terry, Public Administrator of St. Louis County was appointed administrator of Mosberger’s estate in September, 1923. Three months later, in December, 1923, Mrs. Mosberger filed -a suit in St. Louis County against the administrator, Terry, to set aside the aforesaid default divorce decree obtained against her by his intestate, the deceased Mosberger. The circuit court held the divorce valid and in November, 1927, the St. Louis Court of Appeals affirmed that decree dismissing her bill. [Bennett v. Terry, 299 S. W. 147.]

Early in February, 1924, the defendant administrator Terry instituted a proceeding in the Probate Court of St. Louis County against the appellant Teschemacher to discover assets of the estate of Mosberger. Several hearings were held in that proceeding during the month of February, in which the appellant Teschemacher admitted by oral testimony and answers to interrogatories, that the $6000 in securities transferred to him by Mosberger a month or so before the latter.’s death had been made over to him by Mosberger on the agreement that he (Teschemacher) was to reimburse himself therefrom for a $600 indebtedness due him from Mosberger, pay the income from the remainder to Mosberger for life and then divide the corpus between himself, his brother the defendant Henry Teschemacher, and his two sisters, the defendant Minnie Loertcher and Mrs. Straube. However, we do not find anywhere in this testimony that Teschemacher admitted the land here involved was deeded to him on the same terms. The probate proceeding was concerned only with personal property in the form of securities transferred to Teschemacher in about June, 1923, whereas the deed to the land was made four years before in May, T919. In this probate proceeding to discover assets, $3465 was recovered from Teschemacher for the estate of Mosberger, on a date not shown by the record here.

While Amy Mosberger’s suit to set aside the divorce decree was pending, and perhaps also before the termination of the proceeding instituted by the administrator Terry against Julius Teschemacher to discover assets, Amy Mosberger filed a demand in the Probate Court of St.

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64 S.W.2d 647, 333 Mo. 1208, 91 A.L.R. 121, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stierlin-v-teschemacher-mo-1933.