Stover v. Snow

287 S.W. 1042, 315 Mo. 1046, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 779
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 1042 (Stover v. Snow) 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
Stover v. Snow, 287 S.W. 1042, 315 Mo. 1046, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 779 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

RAGLAND, P. J.

The petition in this case is in two counts. The first states a cause of action under the statute for the determination of title to real estate. The second is in ejectment. The answer after setting forth certain matters as grounds therefor seeks affirmative *1049 equitable relief.. The issues as made by the pleadings will be more definitely indicated after the facts have been outlined.

In 1912 the defendant, Martin R. Snow, acquired title m fee simple to the land described in the petition, namely: Lot two of the northeast quarter of Section 26, Township 46, Range 28, containing 91.8:3 acres, more or less, in Johnson County, Missouri. Snow and his wiir. defendant Daisy D., lived on the land More or less continuously from the time of its acquisition until about the beginning of the year 1917. At that time he rented the farm, and with his family moved to Holden, where they continued to reside until April, 1919. While living at Holden he engaged in various business activities, principally that of retailing coal, and he sent his children to school there. Through some arrangement with his tenant he kept two or three head each of horses and cows and a few articles of household furniture on the farm. He did not purchase a house in Holden, but he did buy a coal yard.

In April, 1919, Snow entered into an agreement with one J. L. Angelí for the exchange of the farm, subject to an incumbrance of $2,500 then against it, for a residence property in Holden. For the purpose of carrying out that agreement he went to a notary’s office and had prepared a deed for the conveyance of the farm. Not knowing whether Angelí wanted the land conveyed to himself, or to his wife, the deed was left blank as to the grantee, and m tnat condition it was signed and acknowledged by Snow at the time of its preparation, and subsequently by his wife Daisy D., the instrument in the meantime being left with the notary. A few days after the deed was signed and acknowledged by both Snow and his wife, Snow appeared at the notary’s office and directed that the blank that had been left be filled by the insertion of the name, ” J. L. Angelí.” Shortly afterward by mutual agreement the contract between Snow and Angelí for the exchange of properties was canceled, and Snow took up the deed that had been left with the notary.

Soon after the trade with Angelí had fallen through Snow traded his farm to the Stewart Farm Mortgage Company of Kansas City for a small tract of land in southern Texas. (There were two Stewart Companies operating together. One was the Stewart Farm Mortgage Company and the other was the Stewart Land Company. It is alleged in the answers of defendants that the one was the alter ego of the other. "We will so treat them and hereinafter refer to them indiscriminately as the Company). For the purpose of conveying the farm he delivered to the Company the deed he had had prepared for Angelí, but from which the name of the grantee had been erased. About the first of May, 1919, he went to Texas, took possession of the land for which he had traded and set about putting in a crop. He took with him two of his children (small boys); and about the first of July following, he was joined by his wife and the remaining child or children.

*1050 The farm was exchanged subject to a lease to his brother, John Snow, for a term expiring March 1, 1920, and by the terms of the exchange the defendant, Martin Snow, was to receive the rents accruing under that lease. He left a team of horses, two cows, two calves, and a bed on the farm in his brother’s custody. When Mrs. Snow left for Texas she stored their household goods in Holden.

About the first of October, 1919, Snow’s land in Texas having been overflowed and the crop thereon destroyed, he abandoned it and returned to Missouri. Mrs. Snow and their children had returned a month earlier. Upon his return he accepted employment from the Company, pursuant to which he solicited buyers not only for irs Texas lands, but also for those which it had acquired in this State, including the land which lie had traded it. He continued in that employment until May, 1920, when he went to work in the post-office at Kansas City. His family lived in the meantime first at Independence and then at Kansas City. About the first of December, 1920, he came to the conclusion that the deed he had given the Company had not passed the title and he thereupon took his family and moved to the farm, a brother who was occupying the land as the tenant of the plaintiff yielding him possession.

• Shortly prior to March 1, 1920, the Company negotiated a sale of the land in controversy to one Ayler, and its representative and Ayler went to the office of O. G. Boisseau, a real estate agent at Holden, to have drawn a contract evidencing the terms of the sale. The Company’s agent directed that the contract provide that Ayler would accept as a sufficient instrument of conveyance a deed signed and acknowledged by Martin R. and Daisy D. Snow, but blank as to grantee, which he then and there exhibited. Boisseau examined the deed and discovered, as he thought, that the name of a grantee had been written in the deed and subsequently erased; he thereupon advised Ayler that the contract should require a new deed from the Snows. The Company’s agent declined to obligate his principal to furnish such a deed and the negotiations thereupon came to an end.

After the deal with Ayler had fallen through the Company caused its name to be inserted as grantee in the deed just referred to, recorded the deed and then set about to find a new purchaser. Thereafter and in the early part of March, 1920, a representative of the Company took plaintiff and her husband, L. Stover, to the farm with a view to selling it to them. A sale, or rather an exchange of lands, was immediately effected. The Company conveyed the land in controversy to the Stovers, husband and wife, subject to the incumbrance of $2,500; and the Stovers conveyed to the Companv land which they valued at $4,000, and in.addition to such conveyance paid the Company $1,000 in cash. Within a few days after they had bought the land the Stovers leased it to John Snow. Through an arrange *1051 ment with the latter, James Snow, another brother, went into the actual occupancy of the premises and so continued until the defendants took possession in the following December.

This suit was commenced April 12, 1921, in the Circuit Court of Johnson County, by L. Stover and Carrie Stover as plaintiffs against Martin R. Snow as defendant; it was removed to the Circuit Court of Jackson County on change of venue. Pending the action plaintiff, L. Stover, died; on the application of Daisy D. Snow she was made a party defendant.

The separate answer of the defendant, Martin R. Snow, alleges: That long prior to the first day of May, 1919, he and his wife, Daisy D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 1042, 315 Mo. 1046, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stover-v-snow-mo-1926.