91 Mo. 161 | Mo. | 1886
On the fourth of September, 1873, James'N. Jones, with Anthony Harsel, executed and delivered to A. T. Litchfield, their note for eight hundred and fifty dollars, payable in ninety days. On the first of August, 1879, this note was assigned to John A. Dougherty, who, on the thirteenth of January, 1883, instituted suit thereon in the Clay county circuit court, and on the eighth day of March, 1883, recovered judgment thereon for $1,456.32. Failing to make the money on execution, Dougherty instituted this suit in the said circuit court, on the sixth day of December, 1883, against defendant, John Harsel, to set aside a certain deed made to him by Anthony Harsel, his father, on the twenty-sixth day of May, 1874, conveying to him.one hundred and sixty acres of land, in Clay county, partic • ularly described in the petition, and praying that said land be subjected to the payment of his debt. The deed is assailed on the alleged ground that it is a voluntary conveyance, made in fraud of creditors, and that, at the time it was made, Anthony Harsel was insolvent. Upon a trial had, the court found for defendant and dismissed the bill, and from this action of the court plaintiff has appealed.
It appears, from the record, that Anthony Harsel came to Clay county in 1826, and up to 1860 had acquired a landed estate of about seven hundred and sixty acres, a.nd was, at that time, in affluent circumstances and out of debt; that, in that year, he promised the defendant, who is his son, then twenty years of age, ■that if he would improve and make a farm on the land in controversy, it should be his, and that he would make him a deed when demanded. The evidence of Anthony Harsel, who was eighty-one years old at the time he testified, and the evidence of defendant and other witnesses,
Defendant testified that he had no knowledge of the existence of plaintiff’s debt till suit was brought on it in 1883 ; that he did not .call on his father for a deed till in 1874, because he had confidence in him, and believed that he would comply with his agreement when’ called on. The evidence also tends to show that, in 1867, the claim of defendant to this land was somewhat notorious in the neighborhood, and, also, that, in 1867, .Anthony ITarsel, who was suffering from palsy, and not involved in debt, concluded to divide his remaining land among his four other children, on the condition that they would.
At the time the debt to plaintiff was contracted, defendant, in equity, was entitled to a deed, and in the eye of the chancellor the land was then his. The facts in evidence, above detailed, bring the case within the operation of the principles enunciated in the above cited cases, where it is held that an agreement for the gift of
Giving force and efficacy to these principles, which have been established law in this state since the case of Halsa v. Halsa, 8 Mo. 303, we hereby affirm the judgment,