275 Mo. 565 | Mo. | 1918
This is an action brought in the circuit court of Lewi's County to set aside a deed. Upon a trial before the court without a jury, there was a judgment for plaintiff, from which defendants have appealed. - '
This case had its origin in an effort on the part of the plaintiff to secure satisfaction of a judgment theretofore obtained by him against one of the defendants, Joseph Nunn, the facts concerning which are briefly as follows:
On July 27, 1912, plaintiff brought suit against Joseph Nunn, charging him with having alienated the affections of the plaintiff’s wife. A few days thereafter, while Joseph Nunn was at work with his brothers, who gre the other defendants, he was served with summons in
The instant case “arises,” to employ the language of the act, “in that part of Lewis county lying east of the range line between ranges six and seven.” It is contended, therefore, that it should have been commenced at Canton instead of at Monticello, and, as a consequence, that the' court was without authority to hear and determine the same. While the initial paragraph of said Section 3 attempts, according to a literal interpretation of its terms, to confer original and exclusive jurisdiction as therein stated, this court has held that the language as thus' employed was an act of- supererogation, and that it was not intended thereby to do more than as is provided in a succeeding part of the same section; viz'., to give the circuit court held at Canton, like jurisdiction within the limit of the statute, to that given the circuit court when held at Monticello; and that the jurisdiction conferred by the general law upon the circuit court at Monticello was
II. There remains only the contention that the evidence did not support the judgment. In addition to' the general facts .heretofore stated, it appears that within a month of the filing of the suit for damages by plaintiff against^the defendant, Joseph Nunn, said deed was made by him to his brothers, the other defendant, for his undivided interest in the land he and they had inherited. This deed, made at the request of one of the grantees, was ante-dated, on the ground that its making had been agreed on sometime before. The scrivener ante-dated it in the body of same, as requested, but inserted in the acknowledgment the actual date of the making and execution of the same, to-wit, August 27, 1912. The consideration he was directed to place in the deed is shown to have been largely in excess of the value of an undivided one-third of the land. No explanation of this excessive valuation is attempted. The evidence as to the manner in which the payment of this consideration was made is in the most general terms, and it was stated in defendants’ depositions to have been paid' by the surrender of a note by the grantees to Joseph Nunn, theretofore given them; for what purpose no reason is stated, nor is the amount given, except by implication, in that they paid Joseph $1800 in currency, which they had gotten from the sale of a mine at Joplin. After the purported sale of the land, the three brothers continued to occupy, control and cultivate it as before. Subsequent to the making of the deed a' party desired to rent .a portion of the land, and upon making inquiry of Joseph, in regard thereto, he said: “We have a place which we might rent to you.” So far as the record discloses, the defendants neither owned
.In this finding, we are authorized in presuming that the court, in addition to the force of the affirmative facts themselves, took into consideration, as it was authorized to do, the relationship of the parties, the manner in which their business was conducted before and after the deed, and the continued exercise of authority of Joseph Nunn over the property after the deed was made, in determining as to the existence of fraud. [First National Bank v. Frey, 216 Mo. 1. c. 42; Robinson v. Dryden, 118 Mo. 534; Van Raalte v. Harrington, 101 Mo. 602; Sharp v. Cheatham, 88 Mo. 498; Ridgeway v. Holliday, 59 Mo. 444; Stoffel v. Schroeder, 62 Mo. 147; Stivers v. Horne, 62 Mo. 473; Dickson v.
Under the state of facts, therefore, disclosed by this record, we have reached the conclusion that the evidence is ample to show that the transaction was fraudulent, and we, therefore, decline to interfere with the finding, of the trial court.
This results in an affirmance of this judgment, and it is so ordered.