Strode v. Frommeyer

91 S.W. 167, 115 Mo. App. 220, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 403
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 167 (Strode v. Frommeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strode v. Frommeyer, 91 S.W. 167, 115 Mo. App. 220, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 403 (Mo. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

— Plaintiff is the public administrator of the city of St. Louis and as such has charge of the estate of Mary Creghan, deceased, who departed this life September 3, 1903. During five years prior to her death Mrs. Creghan resided in the home of the defendant .Frank Frommeyer, whose wife, Mary, was her daughter. Besides this daughter, Mrs. Creghan left surviving her several grandchildren, daughters of John B. Marquitz and his wife (another daughter who had died at an earlier date). In 1889 Mrs. Creghan owned [222]*222a farm which she sold during that year to a man named Tiemeyer for $2,000. Tiemeyer gave a check for the price of the farm to Frank Frommeyer at the request of Mrs. Oreghan, who desired it written that way because she could neither read nor write. Frank Frommeyer made a loan of $2,000, using $1,950 of the money which went to Mrs. Oreghan for her farm and adding $50 of his own. The loan was secured by a deed of trust and fell due in 1891. Frommeyer collected the interest on it and accounted for the same to Mrs. Oreghan until June or July, 1890, when there was a full accounting between the two, ending in an agreement that Frommeyer then had $1,625 in his hands belonging to his mother-in-law. From the date of this settlement, the original loan of $2,000 was treated by Frommeyer and Mrs. Oreghan as belonging to the former and when the note fell due he collected it as his own. The sum turned over by Frommeyer to his mother-in-law at the settlement was kept by her for a week or so and was then lent by Mary Frommeyer, the daughter, through the agency of Matrom D. Lewis. To whom this loan was made does not appear. It seems that Mary Frommeyer took the Money belonging to her mother with the latter’s consent and adding $375 to it which she procured from her husband, Frank Frommeyer, turned over the total of $2,000 to Lewis and the latter lent it on real estate security. Whether the note taken for this loan was payable to Mrs. Oreghan or to' Mary Frommeyer, we have been unable to ascertain from the testimony; but it was delivered to Mrs. Oreghan, who, after keeping it a while, gave it to Frank Frommeyer for safe-keeping, the trial court found. Frommeyer kept it until its maturity in September, 1904, when he collected the money and used it as his own. At the time the note matured and was collected, Mrs. Oreghan had been dead about a year. The semiannual interest accruing on it had been paid to Mrs. Oreghan bv Frommeyer until she died. Mrs. Frommeyer testified that after her mother’s death her [223]*223husband said the proceeds of the note belonged to him on account of the trouble and expense of taking care of his mother-in-law, but that she protested against her husband’s claim and asserted that she, rather than he, was entitled to the money, because the burden of caring for her mother had fallen on her; that on her demand her husband paid her $1,200 which she invested in her own name. Besides money, Mrs. Creghan owned, at the time of her death, some clothing, spoons, a bed and other small articles of personal property which, after her death, her daughter Mary disposed of or used.

The foregoing statement is based, in the main, on the findings of fact by the trial court. It appears from the findings that Frommeyer had paid out $285 for the benefit of Mrs. Creghan and with her consent, before she died. He also paid, after her death, the expenses of her last illness and funeral, amounting to $335. The trial court allowed him credit for the $285 paid during her life, but refused to allow credit for the payments made after her death. According to these rulings Frommeyer has in his hands to be accounted for to the administrator of Mrs. Creghan’s estate, the sum of $1625, which he had received from her, less $285, disbursed with her consent; that is to say, a balance of $1,340. Judgment was entered against him for said sum with interest thereon from date of Mrs. Creghan’s death; or an aggregate of $2,244.50. The court adjudged that Frank Frommeyer was responsible for none of the articles of personal property which the deceased owned at her death.

This action was instituted against both Frank Frommeyer and his wife, Mary, but after the evidence had been taken the cause was’ dismissed as to the wife.

The original petition was in the nature of a bill of discovery, a remedy which is obsolete under our system of practice. The amended petition sounded in tort, and as it alleged the wrongful conversion by the defendants Frank and Mary Frommeyer of the money and property [224]*224of the deceased, and prayed damages for the tort, it was a complete departure; or rather the first statement of a cause of action; for the original petition stated none at all. The defendants joined issue on the amended petition by answering. It is true that afterwards a motion to strike out the petition was filed; but defendants’ answer was still in, nor was leave asked to withdraw it. We are of the opinion that the judgment ought not to be reversed because' the motion to strike out was overruled. [Matthews v. Perdue, 79 Mo. 149.]

The answer contained a general denial, a plea of misjoinder of parties defendant, that the two defendants were man and wife, and Mary Frommeyer, under the facts set forth in the amended petition, was entitled to judgment, and also a plea of the statute of limitation; that is to say, the five-year statute.

Plaintiff called to the witness stand both Frommeyer and his wife, and all the material testimony in the case was given by them. Against the objection of defendant Frank Frommeyer, his wife was permitted to testify to conversations between them and was practically turned into a witness against him. When an objection was made to this testimony, the court reversed its ruling; but subsequently overruled the objection and defendant Frommeyer saved an exception. Plaintiff made the defendants witnesses by virtue of the statute allowing a party to a civil action to compel an adverse party to testify as a witness under the rules applicable to a cross-examination. [R. S. 1899, sec. 4654.] While Mrs. Frommeyer was a defendant, plaintiff could avail himself of that statute; but her testimony was competent only against herself and not against' her husband. [R. S. 1899, sec. 4656.] There is no showing that she was her husband’s agent in dealings with the deceased, or of any other fact which made her a competent witness against him. Such statements of hers as tended to establish liability on his part and nothing more, were inadmissible; and this was especially true of private [225]*225conversations between the two. In truth, retaining Mrs. Frommeyer as a party until the evidence was in, thereby making it possible to use her as a witness against her husband, was unfair.

Though Frommeyer was called to the stand by the plaintiff’s attorney, his own attorney was denied, practically, the right to cross-examine him in a way which would elicit anything to his advantage. The examination appears to have been conducted on the theory that plaintiff was entitled to make Frommeyer a witness for the purpose of compelling him to testify to transactions and conversations with the deceased so far as what he related was prejudicial to his case, and close his mouth regarding all matters which would be to his advantage. Where a party makes a witness of his adversary, who otherwise would be incompetent because the matter in controversy related to transactions between him and a deceased party, he becomes qualified to testify as fully as any other competent witness. [Borgess Inv. Co. v. Vette, 142 Mo. 560; 44 S. W. 754; Tomlinson v. Ellison, 104 Mo. 105; 16 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 167, 115 Mo. App. 220, 1905 Mo. App. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strode-v-frommeyer-moctapp-1905.