Travelers Insurance v. Beagles

62 S.W.2d 800, 333 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 629
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 12, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 800 (Travelers Insurance v. Beagles) 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
Travelers Insurance v. Beagles, 62 S.W.2d 800, 333 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 629 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

This is an appeal from a judgment in ejectment against appellants and a decree vesting title in respondent to the following described real estate situated in Audrain County, Missouri:

"The East Half of the Southwest Quarter and the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 2; The Northeast Fourth of the Northeast Quarter and the South Half of the Northwest Fourth *Page 571 of the Northeast Quarter of Section 10; The North Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section 11, all in Township 52 North, Range 8 West of the 5th P.M."

Respondent's, plaintiff below, petition was in two counts, the first in ejectment and the second to try, ascertain and determine the title of plaintiff and defendants to the land in controversy. Appellants, defendants below, are husband and wife. They filed separate answers consisting of a general denial and a claim that a part of the land described in plaintiff's petition constituted a homestead; that Monroe Beagles, the husband, was entitled to an inchoate right of dower in the lands and that a part of the lands was owned by defendants as an estate by the entirety.

The cause was tried before a jury and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff on the first count, for the possession of the land and $190 as damages for the occupancy and detention thereof. The rental value was fixed by the jury at $30 per month. The jury also returned a verdict for plaintiff on the second count declaring that plaintiff was the owner of the land described. After unsuccessfully moving for a new trial defendants appealed from the judgment entered in accordance with the verdict.

Plaintiff to sustain its claim introduced in evidence a quitclaim deed from E.R. Locke and wife and William F. Atkinson conveying the land to defendant, Grace Beagles. This deed was dated February 14, 1903. It purported to convey the land described in plaintiff's petition and other lands for a consideration of $12,000. Plaintiff next introduced a deed of trust executed by defendant, Grace Beagles, alone, conveying the land described to Charles W. Reeves in trust to secure the payment of certain notes to respondent, The Travelers Insurance Company. This deed of trust was dated December 13, 1924. Plaintiff then introduced in evidence a trustee's deed, dated January 24, 1930, executed by Charles W. Reeves as trustee, conveying the lands to respondent. Respondent also offered in evidence a demand for possession which was served upon appellants on April 23, 1930. There was evidence of the rental value of the land and of damages sustained for the wrongful detention thereof by defendants.

Appellants offered evidence that they, as husband and wife, had occupied the land since the year 1903; that a granddaughter, age nine years, had made her home with them for the past seven years. Appellants then offered to introduce in evidence certain deeds, which the court on plaintiff's objections rejected. These deeds were a warranty deed dated May 6, 1926, whereby appellants conveyed a part of the lands described to one R.D. Rogers and a quitclaim deed dated the 6th day of May, whereby the land was conveyed by R.D. Rogers to appellants, James Monroe Beagles and Grace H. Beagles, husband and wife, as an estate by the entirety. Plaintiffs also offered and the court rejected a warranty deed, dated the 12th day of April, 1929. *Page 572 By this deed Grace H. Beagles deeded to Monroe Beagles, her husband, an undivided one-half interest in one hundred and twenty acres of the land.

Under this evidence the trial court instructed the jury to find for plaintiff on both counts of the petition. The two principal questions presented on this appeal are: First, was the evidence sufficient to support a judgment for plaintiff as against defendants? Second, did Grace Beagles have the power to convey good title by the deed of trust without her husband joining in the conveyance? We will treat these in the inverse order.

[1, 2] By the quitclaim deed offered in evidence, dated February 14, 1903, E.R. Locke and wife and William F. Atkinson conveyed whatever title they had at that time to the lands in question and other lands to Grace H. Beagles for a stated consideration of $12,000. This deed recites that the consideration was paid by Grace Beagles. No evidence was offered to contradict the recitals of the deed. The point made by appellants that there was no proof that the recited consideration or any consideration was paid with her money or means is without merit. Unless there is proof to the contrary the recitals in a deed must be taken as true. Grace Beagles, by her deed of trust, conveyed to a trustee all of her title to the lands to secure the payment of certain notes. If she had the power to convey the title by deed without her husband joining therein then she had the right to convey the title by deed of trust. Section 2998, Revised Statutes 1929, of the Married Woman's Act, provided that:

"A married woman shall be deemed a femme sole so far as to enable her to carry on and transact business on her own account. . . .

Section 3003 of the same act provides that:

"All real estate . . . belonging to any woman at her marriage, or which may have come to her . . . by purchase with her separate money or means, . . . shall . . . remain her separate property and under her sole control. . . ."

So far as the record discloses the real estate in question was bought and paid for by appellant, Grace Beagles. This made it her separate property with the right to convey without her husband joining in the deed. The case of Farmers' Exchange Bank v. Hageluken, 165 Mo. 443, 65 S.W. 728, is directly in point. There a married woman executed a deed of trust without her husband joining in the deed. In a suit to foreclose the deed of trust the defense was made that a married woman could not, without her husband joining therein, execute a valid deed of trust. In an opinion by SHERWOOD, P.J., adopted by the court en banc, it was held that the wife could convey a legal title without her husband signing the deed. The court in summing up the case declared that the wife "received a full, complete legal title by reason of the quitclaim deed made to her; and that she conveyed *Page 573 a title of like nature when she executed the deed of trust; and further that her husband was not a necessary party in this litigation."

The Farmers Exchange Bank case, supra, was quoted from at length and approved in Brook v. Barker, 287 Mo. 13, 228 S.W. 805, l.c. 809. After a full discussion of the question the court speaking through DAVID E. BLAIR, J., said:

"It appears from the above cases that there is a strong trend of opinion of this court toward the view that the Married Woman's Act has completely emancipated married women in respect to their separate property and that they now have full power under the Married Woman's Act to dispose of their separate real estate without joinder of the husband in the deed of conveyance. This is the ruling in the Hageluken case clearly and unqualifiedly. Some subsequent decisions have thrown some doubt about the rule laid down in that case without in any wise overruling or even seriously criticising it.

"It is difficult to understand how full force and effect can be given Sections 8304 and 8309, Revised Statutes 1909 (Secs. 7323 and 7328, R.S. 1919), without holding that, where the wife during her lifetime has conveyed her separate real estate, the estate of the husband, both by curtesy initiate and by the curtesy consummate, in such property is thereby completely wiped out, regardless of his failure or refusal to join in her deed of conveyance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 S.W.2d 800, 333 Mo. 568, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-v-beagles-mo-1933.