49 Mo. App. 188 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
This case was before the court on a former appeal, and is reported in 39 Mo. App. 672. On that appeal we reversed a judgment for the plaintiff on the ground, that the evidence failed to show that the defendant, Emehne.Cohick, had any separate estate at the time of the making of the contract creating the debt, which was there and is here sought to be charged upon her separate estate. After the cause had been thus remanded the plaintiffs filed, without any objection on the defendants’ part, an amended petition, in which they sought to charge the alleged debt of Mrs. Cohick not on the same but upon another piece of real estate which was held in trust for her sole and separate use, the legal title being in George M. Cohick. The court rendered a decree establishing the debt of the plaintiffs against Mrs. Cohick, and charging it upon this piece of property, but without charging, it upon the piece of property which had been the subject of the charge from which the former appeal was prosecuted. It is not questioned that Mrs. Cohick stood seized to her sole and separate use, through George M. Cohick, her trustee, of this piece of property, at the time of the making of the contract alleged in the petition. It thus appears that the question under consideration in the former appeal has been entirely ehminated from the case. The assignments of error on this appeal may all be reduced to one, which is a challenge of the propriety of the decree upon the whole evidence in the record.
The petition alleges, that, on the thirteenth day of October, 1888, the defendant, Emeline Cohick, agreed with the plaintiffs, who were partners in the practice of the law, that if they would recover for her the sum of