79 Mo. 141 | Mo. | 1883
This suit was instituted in the Johnson county circuit court by plaintiffs as residuary legatees under the will of Charles Houts, their father, against defendant, as executor of the estate, to set aside for fraud his annual and final settlements, and praying for a true accounting of
It appears from the record before us that Charles Houts died in November, 1857, leaving a will in which he provided that all the property, both real and personal, should be sold and his debts satisfied; that the sum of $1,500 should be paid to Emma Cockrell; that whatever then remained should be paid to these plaintiffs, his children. Defendant was appointed executor of this will, and as such qualified in December, 1857, and took charge of the estate. It further appears that the entire proceeds of sale of real and personal property and rental of lands amounted to about $4,500; that this small estate, which does not appear
It also appears that the local attorney, supplied with the settlements, entered at once upon the work he was commissioned to do, and was so engaged for about one week without success, when, on the afternoon of the 2nd day of February, about four o’clock, negotiations were resumed, and with the combined efforts of the local attorney and Mr. Shepherd, the latter of whom then, for the first time, appeared, the receipts and acquittances set up in defendant’s answer were procured from each of plaintiffs acknowledging full payment of all demands growing out of the executorship of said defendant of the estate of their father, and releasing him from all claims or demands of every kind, and all suits that had been or might thereafter be brought. There was no sum specified in either of the receipts; both of them were under seal; both were attested by four witnesses, and to each of them was attached the certificate of a notary public certifying that- two of the attesting witnesses had appeared before him and after being sworn stated that the signatures to each one of the receipts were genuine, that they were present when they were executed, and,that the parties executing them had signed the same voluntarily and understandingly for the purposes expressed therein.
It further appears that at the time defendant entered upon the executorship of this estate in 1857, both of plaintiffs were infants, one about three and the other about six years old, that they resided at that time in Virginia, and soon thereafter removed to Washington county, Tennessee, where they have continued to reside, and that they were not informed that a final settlement had been made of the estate till 1876. We think it sufficiently appears from the evidence that plaintiffs were induced to accept the $275.29 and-execute the receipts and acquittances in evidence upon the faith of representations made that the settlements were cor
Why should the defendant, after sleeping for eight years after final settlement, upon being informed in January, 1877, by an attorney at Warrensburg, who was on the ground and personally cognizant of all the facts necessary to he known in order to a fair adjustment, that he had heen employed by plaintiffs to settle their claims against him, and if not settled, to bring suit immediately, send a messenger to plaintiffs in a distant state who were not in a condition to know the facts connected with the settlement? Why resort to the extraordinary methods to procure the receipts of plaintiffs — such as the employment of a local attorney in Tennessee by the attorney sent from Missouri, to get plaintiffs to take $275.29 and give receipts, with the understanding that the presence of the Missouri attorney Avas not to he communicated to plaintiffs ? Why, if conscious of the fairness of the transaction, resort to the unusual step of procuring the certificate of a notary public to the fact that two of the subscribing Avitnesses to the receipts taken testified before him to the execution of the receipts and that they were executed voluntarily and understandingly? We are justified in inferring that its purpose Avas to give the color of fairness to the proceeding, and may say of it, as was said in the case of Baldwin v. Whitcomb, 71 Mo. 651: “ Whenever fraud is the matter in issue, any unusual clause in an instrument, any unusual method of
The judgment will be reversed and cause remanded with directions that the circuit court proceed to take an account as to interest collected and not accounted for by defendant in his settlement, and in said accounting to charge defendant with the sum of $301.66, that sum being in excess of the $1,100 of money lost to the estate, and for which defendant took credit improperly, with interest with annual rests, and to render judgment for plaintiffs for such sum as may be found due on said account.