Welch & Harvey v. Dameron

47 Mo. App. 221, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 452
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 Mo. App. 221 (Welch & Harvey v. Dameron) 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
Welch & Harvey v. Dameron, 47 Mo. App. 221, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 452 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

The facts of this case are complicated, and the record on some points is obscure, but there is a concurrence of evidence establishing tho following facts with reasonable certainty:

James Harvey died in the year 1860, leaving a will which, after making liberal provision for his widow, Malinda, endeavored to make equal distribution among his eleven children, charging them respectively with advances made to them. He appointed three of his oldest sons as executors of his will, but, by the terms of the will, left it in doubt whether the widow or the [223]*223>execntors were chargeable with the distribution of his assets within certain limits. The will was inartificially •drawn, and it would seem that, by common consent of the children, the widow was left in charge of the estate without any interference on the part of the executors. The matter was still further complicated by the fact that :a great part of the estate consisted of slaves, who ceased tobe property shortly after the testator’s death. The widow, Malinda Harvey, remained in possession of the estate until her decease, regarding herself, as would seem from all the evidence, as a trustee under her husband’s will. She died intestate in 1878. During the interval between her husband’s death and her own, she made advances to her. children, presumably under the impression that, in so doing, she was acting in the interest of the estate, and carrying out her husband’s wishes. In some cases she took the notes of the recipients payable to herself, in others she marked the •amounts in a book. The distributees of her estate, and those of her husband, were the same parties, to-wit, their children and their descendants.

Por a number of years prior to the decease of Malinda Harvey she made her home with the defend-, ant, who was her son-in-law, and there is uncontradicted •evidence tending to show that, át the date of her demise, •she was indebted to him for board in a sum of at least .$50. When she died, one of the present plaintiffs, then her administrator as well as the administrator of James Harvey’s estate, called upon the defendant, and obtained from him or from his wife a package of papers, consisting mostly of notes, among which was a note which is the foundation ■ of the present action. This note was executed by the defendant, bears date October 15, 1874, •and is for the sum of $120, payable to the order of Malinda Harvey one year aft.er date with ten-per-cent, interest, and the proviso that, if not paid at maturity, •each annual interest was to become principal, and the interest was thus to be computed with annual rests. [224]*224Tlie defendant himself at the time prepared a receipt which was signed by the ad ministra tor, and which recited this note as one of the papers belonging to Malinda Harvey, received by the administrator from the defendant. The note was inventoried as an asset of the estate of Malinda Harvey, but was subsequently and prior to-the institution of this suit, upon request of her admin- . istrators, transferred from the estate of Malinda Harvey to that of James Harvey, the administrators of the two-estates, as well as the distributees of the two estates, being the same persons.

N othing was further done with this note until the-fall of 1884. The administrators seemed to have been of opinion that it could be used as an asset to be distributed in kind upon final distribution, and did nothing towards its enforcement. In October, 1884, however, when the note was about to be barred by limitation, one-of the plaintiff administrators called upon the defendant, and called his attention to that fact, and requested him either to make a payment on account of it, or to-indorse a credit upon the note. The defendant thereupon indorsed a credit of $10 upon the note, conceding at the same time that the note was executed by him, and was a subsisting obligation, unless it was paid by credits for board of Malinda Harvey, but claiming in the most emphatic terms that the note was not only paid, but also greatly overpaid, by such credits. Upon the defendant’s refusal to pay the note thereafter, the plaintiffs, as administrators of Malinda Harvey, brought suit thereon, but were defeated on the ground that her estate had been finally wound up. They thereupon took out administration on her estate de bonis non, and were again defeated on the ground that, in the meantime, the probate court of Lincoln county had made its order transferring this asset to the estate of Francis Harvey, and that the plaintiffs as administrators of Malinda Harvey had no title to the note. The present action is the third suit upon the note, and is. [225]*225defended on the ground that there was no delivery .of the note in the lifetime of Malinda Harvey, and that the note is still an asset of Malinda Harvey’s estate, as the order of the probate court of Lincoln county was beyofid the jurisdiction of that court and ineffectual to change the title to the note, and also on the ground that the note has been fully paid. The cause was tried before a jury, who, under the instructions of the court, found a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs on the nineteenth day of November, 1889, for the sum of $877.14.

We may add, in explanation of this long-protracted and unfortunate family litigation, that the administrators and distributees are divided in opinion as to the propriety of carrying on the litigation, and that the evidence adduced at the trial, which consisted mainly of the testimony of the interested parties, bears strong evidence of that fact, but that the administrators consider it their duty, as long as some of the distributees insist on it, to carry the suit toa final determination.

The assignments of error which are argued on this appeal are, that the court misdirected the jury in its instructions on the question.of delivery of the note, and on the question of the title of the plaintiffs to the note. On the last proposition the defendant asked two instructions, as follows:

“The court instructs the jury that the testimony in this case shows that the plaintiffs, as administrators of the estate of Francis Harvey, deceased, have no title to the note sued on, and the verdict will be for the defendant.”
“The court instructs the jury that, under the pleadings and evidence in this case, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and their verdict must be for the defendant.”

These instructions the court refused to give, and the defendant excepted.

[226]*226These instructions were properly refused in any view of the case. Irrespective of the question of the jurisdiction of the probate court of Lincoln county to transfer the note from the inventory o£ the estate of Malinda Harvey to that of James Harvey, on which we need'express no opinion, there is evidence tending to show that Malinda Harvey never had any title to this note otherwise than as a mere trustee for the distributees of her husband’s estate. The erroneous inventory of the note could not affect the quality of her title, and, if the note was the property of the plaintiffs as administrators of James Harvey, it is immaterial whether they obtained possession of it as such administrators, with or without the intervention of any order of the probate court.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. App. 221, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-harvey-v-dameron-moctapp-1891.