Willoughby v. Brandes

297 S.W. 54, 317 Mo. 544, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 612
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 54 (Willoughby v. Brandes) 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
Willoughby v. Brandes, 297 S.W. 54, 317 Mo. 544, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 612 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*548 RAGLAND, J.

This is a suit in equity to cancel and set aside a deed alleged to be a cloud on plaintiffs ’ title to a certain tract of land in St. Louis County, consisting of 147.98 acres. The facts out of which the controversy grows are substantially as follows:

James Willoughby, who died on the 26th day of February, 1875, at the time of his death owned the land in fee and with his family occupied it as a home. Willoughby left surviving him a widow, defendant Mary Ann, and six children, all minors. Two of the children died without issue or surviving spouse. The four remaining are the plaintiffs in this case. The defendant, Mary Ann Willoughby, died after the institution of the suit and pending the appeal. By his will James Willoughby devised to his wife “her dower portion under the provisions of the statute,” and to his children the remainder of his estate in equal parts. No executor was named and one Withinton was granted letters of administration with the will annexed.

Shortly before his death, on January 12, 1875, Willoughby and wife gave a deed of trust on the land in question to secure the payment of his notes therein described, one being a principal note for $3,000, due three j^ears thereafter, and six being interest notes, each for $150, due 6, 12, 18, 24, 30 and 36 months after said date. In the course of the administration of Willoughby’s estate all of these notes were presented by the holder, Charles L. Jones, and were allowed and classified as demands of the fifth class. Pending an order to sell the real estate to pay debts, made by the probate court, the widow petitioned the court to appoint commissioners to assign her dower and to set out the homestead of herself and the minor children. *549 Commissioners were appointed and in due course made report of their proceedings. That report on exceptions filed by certain creditors of the estate was disapproved and the widow thereafter appealed from the order of disapproval to the circuit court. "While this appeal was pending, Jones, the holder of the notes heretofore referred to, caused the land to be sold at public sale by the trustee in the deed of trust in conformity with the provisions of that instrument. At such sale, had on April 14, 1879, Jones became the purchaser for the sum of $5010, which seems to have been the amount of his debt plus the expenses of the foreclosure. On the same day he received a deed of conveyance from the trustee. Two days later Jones, by quit-claim deed and for the expressed consideration of $6,000, conveyed the premises to the widow, Mary Ann Willoughby. On the same date, April 16, 1879, Mrs. Willoughby executed a deed of trust on the land to secure a cash loan of $4800 made to her by one Nitzsehmann, as evidenced by a promissory note of that date, due two years thereafter and bearing interest from date at the rate of ten per cent per annum. Following these transactions the widow dismissed her appeal in the dower and homestead proceeding. On November 26, 1879, she borrowed $600 more and gave a second deed of trust on the land to secure it. On March 6, 1880, she conveyed the land by a general warranty deed to defendant William Brandes. The consideration named in the deed was $6,866.65. On May 26, 1923, Brandes and his wife for the expressed consideration of one dollar conveyed the land by general warranty deed to their daughter, defendant Dorothy Brandes, who on the same day and for a like consideration reconveyed to her father and mother.

Upon receipt of the deed from Mrs. Willoughby, in March, 1880, Brandes went into immediate possession of the land in controversy and has ever since occupied it, visibly exercising all the rights and prerogatives of exclusive ownership. And of these facts the plaintiffs have during the intervening years been at all times fully cognizant. This suit was instituted August 27, 1923. At the time of the trial, in October 1924, plaintiffs-’ ages were as follows: Lucy Briqueleur, sixty years; Joseph H. Willoughby, fifty-eight; Ben Wil-loughby, fifty-six; and Laura Budde, fifty.

Brandes paid off and discharged, at their maturity, all of the notes secured by the Uvo deeds of trust given by Mrs. Willoughby and with which the land was encumbered at the time she conveyed to him.

Defendant, Mary Ann Willoughby, testified as a witness for plaintiffs.' From her testimony we glean some additional facts" now to be stated.

Pending the publication of the notice of sale of the land under the deed of trust heretofore adverted to, an arrangement was reached whereby Jones was to buy the land at such sale for Mrs. Willoughby, *550 take a deed from the trustee in his. own nam® and then,..convey;.to. her. This was done. She did not pay Jones $6,000, the consideration named in the deed from him to her, but $5010, the amount he bid for the land; and the greater part of that sum was realized from the proceeds of the $4800 loan, which had been negotiated for her by Jones. All of these things she told William Brandes prior to making him a deed. She did not receive from Brandes, $6,866.65, the consideration named in her deed to him, but only $1460. In this connection it should be said that plaintiffs offered to prove by Mrs. Wil-loughby that Brandes bought and she intended to convey to him her dower and homestead interest only. This proof' on objection by defendants was excluded by the trial court. There was evidence tending to show that at the time of the conveyance to Brandes the value of the land had been variously estimated at from $8,000 to $14,000.

Other evidentiary facts will be noted, if necessary, in the course of the opinion.

The petition alleges in substance: that James Willoughby died on February 26, 1875, owning in fee simple the land in controversy; that said land .was the home farm of deceased upon which he and his family were residing at the time of his death; that the reasonable value of said farm at said time. exceeded $25,000; that plaintiffs, who were minors at the time of their father’s death, are the surviving children and heirs at law of said James Willoughby, deceased; that defendant, Mary Ann Willoughby, is the surviving widow of said deceased and the mother of said children; that said Mary Ann was in possession of and managed and controlled said land from the death of said deceased until March 6, 1880; that the will of said deceased, which was duly probated, devised to his widow her dower as provided by statute, and to his children equal portions of his estate; that letters of administration were duly granted to “the parties entitled thereto;” that on the 8th day of July,. 1880, said estate was finally settled and an “order of no further process” was made and entered of record by the probate court; that the widow’s dower was never assigned; that Mary Ann Willoughby was the guardian of her said children; “that none of the right’ title or interest of said plaintiffs in and t.o . . . said real estate, or to any part thereof . . . has ever been conveyed by them, or,either of them, to any of the defendants . .

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 54, 317 Mo. 544, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willoughby-v-brandes-mo-1927.