Whitney Holmes Organ Co. v. Petitt

34 Mo. App. 536, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 115
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 Mo. App. 536 (Whitney Holmes Organ Co. v. Petitt) 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
Whitney Holmes Organ Co. v. Petitt, 34 Mo. App. 536, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 115 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This controversy grows out of a garnishment proceeding on execution. In January, 1887, plaintiff recovered a judgment in the Audrain county circuit court against John Petitt, issued an execution thereon, and one M. Y. Duncan was summoned as garnishee to appear in said circuit court and make answers touching his indebtedness to John Petitt. On the fourth day of February, Duncan appeared in said court and filed his answers to the usual interrogatories. To the first he denied having in his possession or under his control, property or effects belonging to the execution defendant. To the second he denied owing the defendant in execution, but continued : “that at the time of the garnishment he was indebted in a note of about two hundred and thirty-one dollars * * * which note he executed to Sylvia Petitt, the wife of John Petitt, as a part of the consideration for the land bought by garnishee of said Sylvia Petitt, known as the Crews land, and for which, she with her husband conveyed said land to him by deed. That said note is overdue being made payable one day after date,” etc.

Plaintiff filed reply to the answer of the garnishee denying that said garnishee was not indebted to John Petitt, admitting that the note was executed in name of Sylvia Petitt, but alleged it to be the property of John Petitt, and further alleging that the real estate mentioned in answer of garnishee, and which was the consideration for the note, was the property of John Petitt, [540]*540and that when the same was purchased from the former owner, it was paid for with the money and property of the defendant in execution, John Petitt, but that the deed therefor was taken in the name of his wife, Sylvia Petitt, for the purpose of hindering and delaying and defrauding the plaintiff and other creditors, from the collection of their debts, that said land was transferred to Sylvia Petitt without consideration by her paid, and after the contraction of the debt to plaintiff.

It appears that, on motion filed by plaintiff, Sylvia Petitt was ordered to appear and interplead. She appeared by attorney and filed her interplea, claiming the debt owed by Duncan as her separate property ; the plaintiff took issue with her plea, and on the issues thus formed the cause proceeded to trial.

The plaintiff offered evidence tending to establish the following facts: That in 1875 and prior thereto John Petitt, and Sylvia, his wife, resided at Jackson, in the State of Michigan, that at that time John Petitt was engaged in selling organs, and that in December, 1875, he executed to plaintiff his promissory note for one hundred and thirty-three dollars, the purchase price of an organ, that in July, 1876, plaintiff sued John Petitt on this note, and in.May, 1877, obtained a judgment against him, in the circuit court of Jackson county, Michigan, that some time during the year 1876, John Petitt quit business, and his wife Sylvia commenced the business which he had been following, and continued to sell organs up to the year 1881. The business being conducted in her name. Evidence was introduced tending to show that the husband assigned to his wife about three thousand dollars’ worth of organ contracts; that she bought property in Jackson, Michigan, built a house, etc. That in 1882, the parties moved to Missouri and purchased of one C. 33. Crews six hundred and twenty-three acres of land, taking deed in Sylvia’s [541]*541name, paying fifteen hundred dollars in cash and executing a note for fourteen thousand five hundred dollars to cover the unpaid purchase money, it to be paid in installments of twelve hundred dollars per year. That they lived on this land from 1882 until 1885. That in 1885, they sold four hundred and twenty-three acres of this land to one Duncan for thirteen thousand five hundred dollars.

In N ovember of this year they borrowed of one Belle Herron two thousand dollars, securing its payment by a mortgage on the remainder of the six hundred and twenty-three acres, and that in same month they purchased of one James P. Crews eighty acres of land for seventeen hundred and fifty dollars, a part of the two thousand dollars borrowed of Belle Herron. That in December, 1885, they sold this last named eighty acres of land to the garnishee, and that the note mentioned in his answer was given for the unpaid purchase money therefor.

Plaintiff offered C. B. Crews, who testified, among other thing, that he sold the six hundred and twenty-three acres of land to John Petitt * * *, that after making the contracts, witness and John Petitt went to Mexico to have the deeds drawn, that on the way Petitt said he wanted the land deeded to his wife, that he, witness, told Petitt that the trade was with him and not with his wife, that Petitt then told him that the money was his, that he had property in Michigan worth fifteen thousand dollars, but he had gotten into trouble with an organ company up there, and had put everything in his wife’s name to keep them from getting it. The defendant interpleader objected to such evidence on the ground that Petitt’s statement not made in his wife’s presence could not be admitted against her.

The court overruled the objection and the defendant properly excepted. Plaintiff introduced other evidence [542]*542tending to show that John Petitt was in debt and that he placed his property in his wife’s name to avoid his creditors.

The theory of the interpleader shown by her evidence which is abstracted as follows: “I live in San Diego, California, was married to John Petitt in 1862. I had then two thousand dollars, and loaned it to Mr. Petitt. Mr. Petitt was in the music business at Jackson, Michigan, from 1869 to 1874. In 18 75 I commenced the music business in Jackson, Michigan, in my own name and continued it until 1881. In April, 1876, I bought two lots in Jackson, Michigan, of Mr. Shoemaker, and afterwards built a house and barn on them. I paid for the lots and buildings with money out of my business. In 1875 and 1876 I bought two lots in Vandalia, Missouri. In 1882 I bought a section of land in Audrain county, Missouri, paying fifteen hundred dollars down and the rest in deferred payments. Afterwards, I sold a part of that section of land to M. Y. Duncan, he gave me my notes for it, the same notes I had given when I bought the farm of Mr. C. B. Crews, amounting to about fourteen thousand five hundred dollars. I then bought eighty acres of land adjoining the C. B. Crews land of J. F. Crews for seventeen hundred and fifty dollars. I sold that eighty acres to M. Y. Duncan. The note garnished herein was given to me in part payment of that eighty acres. That money belongs to me. I have been doing business in my own name since 1875. I never did any business with plaintiffs, 1 have never sold any of their organs.”

The deposition of John Petit, introduced without objection, was to similar effect. The court instructed for the plaintiff as follows :

“1. If the jury believe, from the evidence in the case, that the land purchased from C. B. Crews in 1882 was paid for by money belonging to John Petitt and [543]*543that the title thereto was taken in the name oí Sylvia Petitt in order to hinder, delay and defeat creditors, and that the land bought of James P. Crews was paid for by money arising from a mortgage on the land bought of C. B. Crews, they will find for the plaintiff.

“2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Mo. App. 536, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-holmes-organ-co-v-petitt-moctapp-1889.