White v. Spencer

117 S.W. 20, 217 Mo. 242, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 20 (White v. Spencer) 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
White v. Spencer, 117 S.W. 20, 217 Mo. 242, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 274 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

IN BANC.

PER CURIAM:

Upon a consideration of this case by the Court in Banc, the opinion in Division was slightly modified in language, and adopted as the opinion of the Court in Banc,

all the judges concurring therein.

IN DIVISION ONE.

CRAVES, J.

The facts pleaded and proven in this case can be stated in small compass, which when considered leaves but one sharp issue of law. William E. Cibson was the owner of the west ten feet of Lot 32, and all of Lots 33 and 34, in Block 6 in Carbry’s Addition to the city of St. Joseph, Missouri, which tract made a parallelogram sixty by one hundred and forty feet. The frontage of sixty feet was on Beattie street and that of one hundred and twenty on Twentieth street. Upon this tract was the residence of Cibson, and the whole was fenced as one tract and held, used and claimed by him as his homestead up to May 24, 1902, he being the head of a family. May 1, 1902, the plaintiff herein recovered judgment against Cibson in the circuit court of Carroll county, Missouri, for $3,217.83. On the 3d day of May following, a transcript of such judgment was filed with the clerk of the circuit court of Buchanan county, wherein was situated the property of Cibson, described as aforesaid. On May 24, 1902, Cibson being indebted to defendant for legal services in the sum of $400, did, for [246]*246and in consideration of that debt, deed to defendant the west ten feet of Lot 32, aforesaid, and thirty-three feet off of the north end of Lots 33 and 34, aforesaid. On May 12, 1904, plaintiff in this canse had a general execution issued upon his transcript judgment and the land previously conveyed to defendant Spencer was levied upon and sold to plaintiff, the consideration at the sheriff’s sale being five dollars. The record also shows that' prior to the deed to Spencer, Gibson’s homestead, had never been admeasured or set off to him out of the tract first described herein above. It also stands admitted that the tract remaining and at the time of the trial held and claimed by Gibson as his homestead was a little in excess of eighteen square rods. . In describing the transaction when this deed was made, Mr. Gibson, as a witness, said:

“Q. You say that you owed Mr. Spencer at that time? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And you made him this conveyance to pay his debt? A. I did.
“Q. State whether or not. you figured up the size of the homesteád which you would be allowed at that time and undertook to convey him the excess? A. I did not, but another man did.
“Q. That was your purpose? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And what you undertook to retain there, what you did retain there, you now hold as your homestead? You undertook to release that? A. I did.
“Q. Now, Mr. Gibson, what is the value of that land which you retained there? A. The land I retained?
“Q. Yes, with your house and improvements on it? A. I suppose it is worth twenty-four or five hundred dollars.
“Q. Do you recall what you scheduled it at when you filed an application to be adjudged a bankrupt? A.' I think it was three thousand dollars.
[247]*247“Q. At that time you had already sold off this to Mr. Spencer? A. No, I think not. I don’t recollect.
“Q. You remember you made your deed to Mr. Spencer in the same month the judgment was rendered against you down there? A. I guess I did.
“Q. You did not apply for a discharge in bankruptcy until some year or two afterwards? A. I don’t recollect what I scheduled it at, but I newer valued the place as a whole at three thousand dollars and I will take to-day $2,500 for what I have got there.
“Q; Now, at the time you made this deed to Mr. Spencer, you expected Mr. White to undertake to levy upon this excess, and have it set off? A. I suppose so.
“Q. And it was for the purpose of giving it to Mr. Spencer instead of him? A. For the purpose of paying a just debt instead of what I considered an unjust debt.
“Q. It was for the purpose of giving it to Mr. Spencer instead of letting Mr. White get it? A. The man I justly owed.
“Me. Spenceb: We object to that.
“The Cottbt: I don’t see the relevancy of it.
“Q. You say it was for the purpose of paying a just debt instead of an unjust one? A. One I recognized as my debt.
.“Q. Instead of one you thought was unjust? A. Yes, sir, instead of one I thought then, and think now, and always will, was unjust.
“Q. The judgment Mr. White had? A. Yes, sir.
“Direct Exmnination, by Mr. Spencer.
“Q. Was there anything done by you, or for you,, towards setting out your homestead prior to the making of the deed by you and your wife to me of your homestead?
“Objected to by plaintiff.
[248]*248“Objection overruled.
“Q. "Was there anything done by you, or any one for you, towards setting out a homestead there prior to the making of the deed to Richard L. Spencer? A. No, sir.
“Q. What was done and said at the time of making the deed with reference to it?
“Objection.
“The Court: State what was done.
“Plaintiff objects.
“The Court: He is not undertaking to prove the contents of the deed, he is undertaking to find out when the homestead was set out.
“The Witness: It was set out immediately preceding the deed.
“The Court: Was it set ont preceding the deed?
“The Witness: I said immediately — I mean before the making of the deed Mr. Spencer come to me and told me that I owed him justly, and that he would take the excess of my homestead for the fee, and he figured it out.
- “The Court: What did you do about setting off your homestead before this deed was made?
“The Witness: Didn’t do anything, only just at the time it was made, I made the deed immediately.
The Court : Then what did you do ?
“The Witness: Made the deed.
“Q. Were there any measurements staked off or division made of the property prior to the making of the deed? A. No, sir.
“Q. Was there anything done at the time of making the deed except at the time of making the deed a measurement was made there of what you would grant me, and that there was a homestead and a little in excess left there to you? A. Yes, sir.
“Q, Was that all that was done? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Up to the moment of making the deed was [249]*249that all made -under one enclosure, and held and claimed by you as a homestead? A. Yes, sir.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 20, 217 Mo. 242, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-spencer-mo-1909.