Swon v. Huddleston

282 S.W.2d 18, 55 A.L.R. 2d 205, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 677
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 12, 1955
Docket44649
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 282 S.W.2d 18 (Swon v. Huddleston) 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
Swon v. Huddleston, 282 S.W.2d 18, 55 A.L.R. 2d 205, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 677 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

EAGER, Judge.

This is a suit in equity denominated “Petition to Have Deed Declared a Mortgage,” but the prayer was for a decree declaring also that title to 360 acres of land was vested in the plaintiffs, for possession, and for general relief. The trial court found generally for plaintiffs on all issues, and entered á decree divesting defendants of title. Appeal has been duly taken. The action directly involves the title to real estate and jurisdiction is properly here; it was filed in the Circuit Court of Callaway County, where the land is located, but was transferred to Audrain County and tried there. -

The record is long and the facts complicated. We shall only be able to recite those facts which-are definitely material. John Swon died in 1905, leaving four children surviving him and leaving also considerable property, both real and. personal. These children were John E., Allie Mae, Georgia Belle and Ella (who later married Maryin Wallace, and .is referred to herein as Ella Wallace.) By his will John Swon disposed of sundry real and personal property; we are concerned here only with the interest of the son, John E. Swon, therein. By this will the land here in questiqn and .other property was devised, to a trustee for John E. Swon; upon his death his, widow, .Ida ■Swon, if living, was to ha.ve a life estate, in a specified.tract of approximately 165 acres, and the other portions were to be conveyed by the trustee in fee simple to “the children of John E. Swon” (as was.likewise directed with, reference to the “life estate” tract on the death or re-marriage of Ida Swon). The original trustee declined to act; Don P. Bartley was appointed and continued to act until 1934, when he resigned and was succeeded by Wilmer C. Huddleston, a brother of Ida Swon. Huddleston acted as trustee for approximately five years. The defendants here are the surviving sons of Huddleston. John E. Swon (the deviseeson) died on October 9, 1938, leaving surviving him his widow, Ida, a son, John H. Swon, and four children of a deceased daughter (Ethel Bell). The son and four grandchildren of John E. Swon are the plaintiffs in this case. The widow, Ida Swon, died in June, 1950.

*21 Following the death of John E. Swon, Wilmer C. Huddleston, as Trustee, filed in the Circuit Court of Callaway County, his petition for authority to.make final settlement of the trust estate, with his accounts attached, setting out sundry facts, and listing the property remaining (all consisting of real estate), and he prayed an order.,approving his final settlement and ordering distribution. An order was entered on July 18, 1939, reciting that the deed of- the trustee had been examined .apd it was ordered that the deed be recorded and delivered and that the trustee W. C. Huddleston and his sureties “be, and they are finally discharged herein.” No such deed was in evidence, nor was its absence accounted for.

Somewhat out of chronological order,.we must pick up the following facts: on January 2, 1930, a judgment had been entered for $1,903.30 in favor of The Peoples Bank of Auxvasse against John H. Swon and his wife in the Circuit Court of Callaway County. Execution was issued and levied on the interest of John H. Swon in this land, and that interest sold at public sale on February 17, 1930, to J. R. Baker on a bid of $500; it was deeded to him'on March 31, 1930. At this time John E. Swon, the father, was still alive. By mesne, conveyances this interest of Baker later vested,in J. C. .Smith (two-thirds) and Frank Baker (one-third). Since these latter persons also acquired the same interest by a subsequent levy and sale, we do not think it necessary to consider the validity of the 1930 levy and sale. After the death of John E.. Swon (October 5, 1938), J. C. Smith procured judgment against John H. Swon in the same court in the amount of $2,853.97 on March 1, 1939; again, execution was issued and levied on the interest of John H. Swon in the lands in question, and a sale had on June 17, 1939; on a bid of $50, this irítérest was conveyed by the sheriff to J. C. Smith and Frank P. Baker. Although counsel for respondent refer to this latter sale as “unconscionable,” there was never a direct , attack upon it, and at the trial counsel' conceded that John H. Swon had, in fact, lost his title by reason of these execution sales.

At. the September 1939 term of the Circuit Court of Callaway County J. C. Smith and Frank P. Baker (holders o.f the execution titles) instituted a suit in two counts: (1) to try and determine -title to the land in question, and (2) to partition it; named as defendants were tire present plaintiffs, Ida Swon, .W. C. Huddleston, Trustee, and Nellie Tompkins, the holder of a note and deed of trust executed by the previous trustee. The ¡proceedings in that case are not completely shown, but the petition, one answer and the decree appear in full; no appeal was tákén, and there is no attack here on the jurisdiction of that court. We may also note that the-appellants here are claiming title solely under the sale in that proceeding. The record recites that' a guardian ad litem was there appointed for the minor-defendants. In the decree the court found that John 'H. Swon had been completely divested of all interest in the land, that Ida Swon was entitled to a life estate in a specified tract thereof, and that the owners in common were: J. C. Smith, one-third; Frank P. Baker, one-sixth; and the four grandchildren of John E, and Ida Swon (plaintiffs herein) one-eighth each. The court ordéred: that title be quieted accordingly; that John H. ‘Swon was “forever .barred”; -that a partition sale of the land be had, subject to the life estate of Ida Swon; and that the note and deed of trust (in the amount of $1,237) be paid out of the proceeds of sale. At this time there were back taxes of approximately $1,100 against the land. A , public sale in partition was had on December 3, 1939, and all the land was then struck off to W. C. (Wilmer C.) Huddleston on a bid of $2,675. There was direct, evidence by one witness that one tract of 160 acres was offered first and the bid was $2,650; that all the land was then offered and it brought $2,675. Two days after the salé Huddleston and Ida Swon executed their note and deed of trust to Nellie Tompkins for $2,000, presumably as a method of raising most of the purchase price. Three of the grandchildren testified that so far as they knew they received none of the proceeds of this sale. The sale was approved by the' court and deed executed *22 and delivered. Out of that sale and the surrounding circumstances arises the present controversy. Huddleston immediately entered into possession of all the land except that of the life tenant, and farmed it, receiving whatever rents and profits there were for a period of ten years until his death on January 20, 1950; since his death the defendants have continued in possession, and since the death of Ida Swon (June, 1950) they have presumably occupied and farmed all the land.

The plaintiffs contend that Huddleston, by previous arrangement and agreement, bought the land for them at this sale, to hold it for them, use it, and convey it to them when he had reimbursed himself for his outlay and expenses.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W.2d 18, 55 A.L.R. 2d 205, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swon-v-huddleston-mo-1955.