Zehnder v. Stark

154 S.W. 92, 248 Mo. 39, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 92 (Zehnder v. Stark) 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
Zehnder v. Stark, 154 S.W. 92, 248 Mo. 39, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 6 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Plaintiff sued under former section 650 (now 2535, R. S. 1909) to try, determine and adjudge title to the south one-half of the southeast quarter of section 27, township 25, range 6, in Butler county, and clear away the cloud of two sheriff’s deeds purporting to convey it to defendant. From her decree, defendant appeals.

The form of the bill is not challenged.

The answer denies plaintiff’s title and avers that defendant’s sheriff’s deeds mentioned were operative to convey the land and vest title in him. It then, in [45]*45twelve specifications, sets np estoppel and fraud to defeat plaintiff’s title and prays for affirmative relief, viz.: to clear away the cloud of a certain deed under which plaintiff claims. As the sufficiency of the answer is unchallenged, the specifications of fraud and estoppel may be passed by with the remark that they were definite and substantial enough to admit proofs educed in support of- them.

The replication was conventional.

A brief preliminary outline of the case is this:

Name: Husband and Wife: Same initials. Other Facts. Plaintiff is the wife of John G. A. H. Zehnder and has been during all times in hand. It will be observed that her name is Anna PI., and that, by dropping the “John Gr.” from his surname, his and ber name have the same initials. Now, ., . .. .. n ' the testimony shows her husband dropped the “John Gr.” part of his name in use and signed as “A. H. Zehnder,” that he was known by that name; that he did business under that name except apparently in the matter of taking title to the land in question and in conveying it, when he used his full cognomen. Of the significance of this similarity of names, when so clipped, and the convenience of the use of the same name by both, we will speak again. John Gr. A. PL Zehnder was a butcher and plied his trade in St. Louis and then, from 1889 or 1890 onward, in Poplar Bluff. On the 19th of August, 1891, he took title to the land in suit by warranty deed from one Nickey. The consideration expressed is $1100 in hand. In fact, however, but $200 was paid down and $900 of the purchase price was evidenced by his individual notes for $100 each, payable one every six months, secured by a deed of trust on the land, notes and deed of trust executed only by himself signing as “John G-. A. H. Zehnder.” These notes were severally paid as they matured and the lien of the deed of trust lifted. The Nickey-Zehnder deed was kept off record for about. [46]*46one year and then spread thereon. Nearly thirteen years later (the land being in the meantime always assessed to him) he conveyed to her by a warranty deed for an expressed consideration of $500, which deed was recorded four months after it bore date. This is the deed challenged by defendant in this suit and relied on by plaintiff to confer title on her. The consideration nominated in the deed was wholly simulated, i. e., nothing, not even the traditional ‘‘peppercorn” of the old books, was paid. According to her own testimony, as we read it (of which more presently), plaintiff knew for, say, nine years that title stood in her husband’s name and with that knowledge she did not request a deed to be made to her at any time, nor was it made as the result of any negotiation between her and him disclosed by this record. In other words, she rested content. Nor if her testimony is to be given credit, did she know of it, when it was made, for some time afterwards. She merely adopted his act, when she found it out. Whether it was delivered, other than by the constructive delivery springing from its record, is also dark.

Notice ofDescription, Between the time Zehnder took title from Nickey and the date of his conveyance to his wife things happened we will now relate. Zehnder, it seems, had two ends in view in buying the land, viz.: a site for a slaughter house appurtenant to his trade as a butcher, and to grow a great orchard. Shortly after getting title, but before the record of his deed, he entered into three several written contracts with Stark Brothers, nurserymen of Louisiana, Pike county, for fruit trees. The contracts were drawn by a field agent of Stark Brothers and forwarded to them for acceptance and signing. The deed not being recorded, Stark Brothers are not charged with notice of the true land description, nor with culpable negligence in trusting Zehnder to give it correctly. These contracts were made at different dates [47]*47within'a limit of a few months, and (mutatis mutandis) were in the same terms. Zehnder owned no other land in the county and in order to get said trees from the nurserymen he offered to give them a lien on the land in suit and this offer was accepted. It is clear he assumed the office of giving the land numbers to the scrivener, who (without information of his own) relied on him for them, but in doing so Zehnder put the land in section “25” instead of 27, as the fact was. As tall oaks from little acorns grow, so the great trouble in this case arose from changing a “7” to a “5,” whereby the wisdom of Solomon’s hint in his “Song” is confirmed about the little foxes that spoil the vines. The contracts were executed with this misdescription, and gave a lien on the misdescribed land to secure the purchase price of the fruit trees in annual payments covering ten years, aggregating the rise of two thousand dollars. They were signed “A. H. Zehnder,” and duly acknowledged and promptly recorded. Why he took title in one name and assumed to give a lien on the land in another is left unexplained. The contracts further described the land as “his home farm,” with “a perfect title,” etc., and confessedly on the strength of those contracts he got from Stark Brothers on credit some eight or ten thousand fruit trees to be planted on the land thus acquired fro,m Nickey. They were received by him and delivered and planted (not on the land described in the contracts, but) on “his home farm,” the right land.

(Note-. There was some contention that these fruit trees were not as represented, that some were defective and did not grow, the details of which are immaterial because the indebtedness of Zehnder to Stark Brothers has been merged in a judgment and fhe amount is no longer open to reagitation. It has passed into a thing adjudged. Stark v. Zehnder, 204. Mo. 442.)

[48]*48Zehnder, in default in paying, in 1903 was being-pressed therefor and then, for the first time, Stark Brothers discovered said land misdescription — a thing known to Zehnder, if not from the start, at least for six or seven years, and kept to himself, he says. Refusing to pay, they brought a suit in equity against him to correct the misdescription, reform the contracts in that particular, foreclose the contract lien as reformed, and for a money judgment for the price of the trees with interest accrued, properly filing at the same time á statutory notice of lis pendens.

Some three months thereafter, Anna H. Zehnder made application to be made a party defendant and was allowed to come in in that suit. Thereupon on the 18th of February, 1904,- she filed an answer.

(Note: It will be observed that after suit brought and notice of lis pendens filed, her husband, as said, conveyed to her).

In that case her position was that her husband purchased the land acting “as her agent” (Stark v. Zehnder, 204 Mo. l. c. 447), that her money having paid for it, it belonged to her as against his creditors, that, he took title in himself without her knowledge or consent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 92, 248 Mo. 39, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zehnder-v-stark-mo-1913.