Tate v. Sanders

149 S.W. 485, 245 Mo. 186, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 341
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 5, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 485 (Tate v. Sanders) 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
Tate v. Sanders, 149 S.W. 485, 245 Mo. 186, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 341 (Mo. 1904).

Opinions

ROY, C.

— This is a proceeding to quiet title brought in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner subject to a deed of trust given to secure the payment of $12,500 and interest to Deacon & Lambert, trustees, who are made parties.

The defendant Sanders answered and by counterclaim sought to have the title of plaintiff and the deed of trust to Deacon & Lambert rdeclared invalid. The trial court held that the deed of trust was valid and [194]*194that the title of Tate was subject to that deed of trust; and subject to a judgment lien held by the defendant Sanders who has appealed.

In 1885, Clemens Place in St. Louis was laid out and the plat filed with building restrictions providing that not more than one dwelling should be erected on any one lot therein. Those restrictions, by their own terms, were to expire August 2, 1905.

On January 4, 1901, one Davidson conveyed to Charles Dixon lot 55 in Clemens Place. Ella Manning was the real purchaser. In making the purchase she acted through her agent, M. P'. Hynson, who used Dixoñasa“ straw man. ’ ’ Dixon was an employee of Hynson and insolvent, and was used by Hynson as a straw man in many transactions in which Mrs. Manning was the real owner, and in other transactions in which other parties were the real owners. Dixon, for a small consideration would take the record title to property in his own name, though he had no real interest therein. He would then execute deeds of trust on the property or convey it just as Hynson might desire. Dixon would execute “safety deeds” in blank as to the grantee, dates and even as to the description of the property and deliver them to Hynson to be used in any way he chose. Mrs. Manning fully understood that Dixon was being used in that way by Hynson in buying and selling property for her. The deed from Davidson to Dixon was recorded February 7, 1901. On January 22, 1901, Dixon executed to Mrs. Manning a safety deed for the property, which deed was kept from the record by Hynson and Mrs. Manning with the intention that it should not be recorded until the end of the Sanders litigation hereafter explained, and with the further intention that Dixon should appear to the world as the record owner of the property until the end of such litigation. That deed was never recorded and was subsequently lost.

[195]*195On February 7, 1901, Hynson closed a deal by which Nicholls & Ritter loaned $10,000 on the property, for which Dixon executed a note and deed of trust. At that time Nicholls & Ritter knew that the money was loaned to be used in the erection of a double flat building on the lot.

As soon as it became apparent that such building was to be erected the appellant herein, Sanders, and others who severally owned lots in Clemens Place adjacent to the lot in controversy, on February 18, 1901, began a suit, without bond, praying for three different kinds of relief; first, an injunction to prevent the erection of the flats as in violation of the building restrictions; second, a decree ordering the removal of the flats fin the event of their erection pending the litigation; third, damages for the breach of said restrictions.

In that suit Dixon, Hynson and the contractor, Hunter, were made defendants.

Notice of lis pendens in said suit was filed in the recorder’s office on February 26,1901, and on the same day Sanders served notice in the form of a letter to the defendants in that suit and to G. R. Manning, the husband of Mrs. Manning, and to Nichols and Ritter, telling them of the institution and purposes of that suit and warning them against the erection of such building. All of the money loaned by Nichols & Ritter on that deed of trust was paid over by them in closing the loan on dates beginning August 2, 1901, and ending November 13, 1901. Of that money the sum of $1545 went to pay a prior lien on the property.

The flats were finished sometime in 1901, at a cost of $13,000. Mrs. Manning testified that she bought and built on the property as an investment and that she gave Hynson no authority to sell it.

On February 1, 1902, Dixon and his wife executed two safety deeds to Mrs. Manning, conveying the property in controversy, and differing only in a recital not [196]*196material to this discussion. Both these deeds were intentionally withheld from record by Hynson and Mrs. Manning, until one was recorded as hereafter stated.

On February 3,1902, a decree was entered in Sanders v. Dixon et al., ordering the flats to be torn down, and a great deal of newspaper notoriety was given to the fact. An appeal was taken to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and an appeal bond was given. On October 17, 1905, the Court of Appeals reversed the decree of the circuit court, in an opinion in which it was held that as the restrictions on the building rights in Clemens Place had expired, the flats should not be torn down, but that the damages sustained by the plaintiffs therein should be assessed and judgment given therefor. The mandate was filed in the trial court November 1, 1905.

In May, 1905, Dixon was intending to leave St. Louis, and he and his wife attached their signatures to four ordinary printed blank forms of warranty deeds, which were not filled up in any respect except as to the signatures, and those blanks were left with Hynson to be used by him as he saw proper.

Dixon testified that Hynson had no authority to use those blanks for any property which Dixon had previously deeded.

In October, 1905, after the reversal of the case of Sanders v. Dixon, Hynson and the plaintiff, contriving to defeat any judgment that might thereafter be rendered for damages in that case, made an arrangement by which Tate was to become the owner of the property for a consideration of $12,500. In order to close that deal, Hynson took one of the blank forms of deeds which had been signed by Dixon and his wife, and filled it up so as to make it in form a deed of conveyance from Dixon and wife to one Louis F. Verneuil, dated and purporting to be acknowledged before Hynson as notary public, November 9, 1905, and filed for [197]*197record November 10, 1905. Verneuil was a straw man for Tate. There was much controversy at the trial as to whether the blank on which that deed was written was one which was signed by Dixon and his wife. Sanders contended that it was not. The deed and two others which are conceded to have the genuine signatures of Dixon and wife are before this court for examination and comparison. It is, conceded that Dixon did not acknowledge that deed before Hynson at the time stated in the certificate of acknowledgment. The full amount paid by Tate to Hynson for the property over and above encumbrances was $1914.84. Tate had possession of the property from November, 1905, to November, 1907, when a receiver was appointed. On November 10, 1905, a deed of trust was executed on the property by Verneuil to secure $1000 to John T. Killoren, Jr., which was recorded November 11, 1905. That deed of trust was-in fraud of Tate’s creditors, and was held by Tate. No money was ever loaned on it.

On November 9, 1905, a safety deed was executed by Verneuil for the property with the name of the grantee blank and delivered to Tate, but it was not recorded.

About November 4, 1905, Tate procured from the Title Guaranty Trust Company a certificate of title to the property which contained the following in reference to the suit of Sanders v. Dixon et al.:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 485, 245 Mo. 186, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tate-v-sanders-mo-1904.