153 Mo. 606 | Mo. | 1900
This is a suit in equity to set aside a deed of trust on the ground of fraud.
The petition states substantially that defendant Martha Busch was indebted to plaintiff Crothers in the sum of $1,000, and to his co-plaintiff Gotten in about the same sum; that in March, 1896, Crothers obtained judgment on his debt and in September following Gotten obtained judgment on her debt; that on February 10, 1896, while the suit on the Crothers debt was pending, Martha Busch executed a deed of trust,
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to show that on February 10, 1896, the suit of plaintiff Orothers, in which his judgment was afterwards obtained, was set for trial, and while there was some talk of a compromise it was by consent passed for a few weeks, and on February 11, this deed of trust and two other deeds of trust by the defendant Busch were filed for record; the note on which the Gotten judgment was afterwards obtained was then in the hands of lawyers for collection and Busch knew it. Martha Davis, one of plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that defendant Busch told her that she had made these deeds to keep the plaintiffs from getting their money, because she said that Orothers’ debt was unjust and the Gotten debt had been paid. Phillis Lewis a servant for Meisner testified that he told her that he had gotten all of Mrs. Busch’s property made over to him, that he had been wanting to get it so for a long time, and it was then fixed so that “Old Bell” (referring to the woman who owned the debt held by plaintiff Orothers) would not get anything, that she and Mrs. Gotten had sued “the old woman” (referring, to defendant Busch) but that they would not get anything.
On the part of defendant the testimony tended to show that the deed of trust in suit was given to secure a debt owing by defendant Busch to Meisner, and the other deeds of trust were given to secure debts she owed the parties interested; that they were made under the advice of the mutual attorney of Busch and Meisner, who was also named as trustee in the Meisner deed and was the beneficiary in one of the other deeds. He testified that he made up the amount for which the Meisner deed was given from data furnished by them at the time, and from his own knowledge as their attorney, and that the object was to secure Meisner. The testimony of the witness Dixon showed that he had loaned Meisner $1,200 on a mortgage on his farm, of which sum he had, at Meisner’s request, given to defendant Busch $700, and something over $100 to Meisner, which, with commissions witness charged on the transaction, and something deducted to pay a previous loan, made up the $1,200. This $700 and $240 which the attorney testified Meisner had previously paid him for Busch, and interest and some other smaller items
Tbe testimony on both sides shows that the transactions involved in this suit are those of disreputable people. The defendant Busch was the keeper of a house of prostitution and TIenry Meisner was her paramour, they living together in open defiance of decency. Bell Wilson was connected with Martha Busch in the disgusting business, Josie Titus was her housekeeper, Martha Davis and Phillis Lewis were servants in the household. It was out of the mouths of such witnesses, and concerning the business dealings of such people, that the chancellor was required to find the true facts of the case. He found that the defendant Busch executed the deed assailed in the petition and the other deed mentioned in the evidence, for the purpose of defeating plaintiffs in the collection of their debts and to give preference to Meisner and the beneficiaries in the other two deeds, but that she owed the debts for which the deeds of trust were given, and that the evidence failed to show that either the beneficiaries or the trustee in those deeds had any other purpose in view than securing their own debts. Therefore, the finding and judgment were for the defendant. The plaintiffs after due proceedings have brought the cause here on appeal.
There is very little difference, if any, between the counsel as to the law of this case. On both sides Alberger v. White, 117 Mo. 363, is cited, wherein it is said per GIantt, J.: “A creditor has a perfect right to take security for an honest debt from his debtor, although he may know that the effect of taking it will be to delay or hinder the other creditors of his debtor in the collection of their debts, and though he may also know that the debtor thereby intends to hinder, delay or defeat his other creditor, provided, always, the creditor so preferred does not participate in the fraudulent purpose or intent of Ms debtor.” Citing Shelley v. Boothe, 73 Mo. 74; Holmes v. Braidwood, 82 Mo. 610; Albert v. Besel, 88 Mo.
But appellants contend that if the attorney under whose advice the debtor acts becomes the trustee in the deed, that fact renders the deed fraudulent upon the theory that the participation of the trustee in the fraud is chargeable to the preferred creditor and Crow v. Beardsley, 68 Mo. 435, is relied on to support the contention. In that case it is decided, and the decision is sound, that although the creditor may be ignorant of the fraud, yet if there was fraud and if the trustee participated in it, the creditor would take the security tainted with the fraud and it would be invalid. In that case it is said; “There was evidence — we will not say how much — tending to prove fraud on the part of the grantor and the trustee.” There the trustee seemed to have acted in the absence of the creditors who were attempted to be preferred, and if there was fraud it was either that of the debtor alone, or of the debtor and the trustee'. In the case at bar there is no evidence of any fraud on the part of the trustee unless as contended by appellants the debtor’s purpose was fraudulent and the trustee’s knowledge of it and the fact that the deed was executed under his advice amounted to fraud on his part. The charge in the petition is that this deed was made without consideration and for the sole purpose of defrauding the creditors of the grantor. But the charge as to want of consideration was disproven by satisfactory evidence and there was really no proof to sustain it. The only proof as to her purpose to defeat the plaintiffs in the collection of their debt was the testimony of Martha Davis above mentioned which was to the effect that defendant Busch told her that she had thus deeded her property to prevent the plaintiffs from getting their money; but this the defendant
Tbe suit to collect tbe debt of plaintiff Orotbers was pending and set for trial, and tbe note representing tbe debt of plaintiff Gotten was in tbe bands of attorneys for collection, and those facts were well known to defendant Buscb and to Meisner and their attorney tbe trustee in tbe deed, and there can be no doubt that whatever other ultimate purpose Buscb may have bad, Meisner and the attorney knew that tbe effect of this deed and tbe other two deeds in evidence would be to at least binder and delay tbe plaintiffs and prevent them from obtaining tbe preference that they would otherwise have when they should get their judgments, and they knew that defendant Buscb knew it and designed it, still, if their purpose was only to give Meisner tbe preference tbe deed does not come under
These deeds of trust were executed February 11, 1896. Meisner made his will on March 20 following, naming defendant Busch one of his devisees, and he died shortly after-wards. There was no evidence to connect the making of the deed of trust with the making of this will, and nothing to justify the inference that the deed and the will were the result of one and the same agreement or understanding; and so far as the record shows, the will was not an unnatural or unreasonable one.
The whole evidence in the case does not lead to a finding of any purpose on the part of Meisner or that of the attorney more' injurious to the plaintiff’s interest than giving him the preference over them.
The chancellor reached the correct conclusion and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.