288 S.W. 54 | Mo. | 1926
This is an action to determine title to real estate and for equitable relief, under Section 1970, Revised Statutes 1919.
The land which is the subject of the controversy is the west half of the northeast quarter of Section 19, Township 47, Range 28, in Johnson County. James M. Welborn is the common source of title. He acquired the title by deed dated March 18, 1905, and which he filed for record July 29th of the same year. At the time he obtained the title he moved onto the land, accompanied by his wife and an infant daughter. He at once set about farming, and put in a crop. Presently he was advised by a physician that he had tuberculosis, and that an immediate change of climate was the only thing that offered hope of prolonging his life. He thereupon had a public sale at which he sold *876 all of his property except the farm and growing crop, and then went to Colorado, taking his wife and child with him. The altitude there affected him adversely, he brought his family back to Johnson County, left them with relatives and then went to Texas in search of favoring climatic conditions. His health did not improve and he started home, dying on the way, February 3, 1906. He left surviving him a widow, Drucie M. Welborn, and one child, Gladys — the plaintiff in this case.
On August 16, 1905, Welborn, being joined therein by his wife, Drucie M., executed a deed of trust on the land to secure to one Jennie E. Smith the payment of a promissory note for $600, due five years thereafter, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum payable annually. The instrument was recorded the same day it was given. A brother-in-law gathered Welborn's crop for him during his absence in the fall of 1905.
On February 12, 1906, letters of administration on Welborn's estate were granted to his widow by the Probate Court of Johnson County. She thereafter filed an inventory and an appraisement, from which it appeared that the estate of the decedent consisted of the land in controversy and personal property of the value of $297.50. The personal property being within the amount allowed the widow as her absolute property by statute, she made an appropriation of it. On the 27th of February, 1907, she filed a claim against the estate of her husband for $485. The claim paper, after setting out the items of the claim, recited: "The above money so reported and set out here was loaned to my deceased husband in his lifetime and on the 18th day of March, 1905, and for the purpose of buying the west half of the northeast quarter of Section 17, Township 47, Range 28 (the land in suit) and that her money is still invested in said land." An administrator pendente lite was appointed, a hearing had and the claim allowed and classified as a demand of the fifth class. In addition to the above, demands in the aggregate sum of $120.90 were allowed. At the May term, 1907, of the probate court, at the time of making her first annual settlement, the administratrix applied for an order to sell the real estate. The order was made. Eliminating recitals it was in this language:
"It is therefore ordered that the said administratrix do sell, at private sale, and for not less than three-fourths of its appraised value (first having the same duly appraised according to law), the said real estate in said petition mentioned and subject to the homestead right of said widow, and that she report her proceedings to the court at its next regular term."
Following the making of the order of sale the administratrix caused the land to be appraised. It was appraised, "subject to all the homestead and dower rights of the widow of said deceased in and to *877 said land, at the sum of $800." At the August term, 1907, of the probate court the administratrix made report of a sale as follows:
"That in obedience to the order of this court, made at its May term A.D. 1907, directing her to sell, at private sale, the real estate in said order described, as follows, to-wit:
"The West half of the northeast quarter of Section Nineteen, in Township Forty-seven, Range Twenty-eight, in Johnson County, Missouri, subject to the dower and homestead of the widow and all encumbrances, she did, on Thursday the eighth day of August A.D. one thousand nine hundred and seven (having first had the same duly appraised by Charles Necessary, William T. Windsor and Charles T. Noland, three disinterested householders of said county, they having been first duly sworn, as appears by the affidavit herewith filed, marked Exhibit A), sell the said real estate as follows, viz:
"The west half of the northeast quarter of Section Nineteen, Township Forty-seven, Range Twenty-eight, subject to the dower and homestead of the widow and all encumbrances, to S.I. Longacre for the price and sum of eight hundred dollars, cash.
"And the said S.I. Longacre has fully complied with the terms of said sale, and has paid to me the sum of eight hundred dollars in cash, as required by said Order of Sale; and I certify that said real estate was sold for not less than three-fourths of its appraised value. All of which is respectfully submitted."
The sale so reported was confirmed and the administratrix ordered to execute a deed to the purchaser. A deed was executed in conformity with the order. The deed itself is not set out in the record; the abstract recites parenthetically: "Said deed is ordinary form of administrator's deed conveying the described land to defendant reciting order as above."
S.I. Longacre, the purchaser, was a brother of the administratrix. On September 11, 1907, he executed a quitclaim deed wherein he purported to convey the land to her individually, for a consideration of $800. The deed of trust which had been given by Welborn and his wife to secure the Smith note for $600 was satisfied of record May 26, 1908.
Two or three years after the death of her husband, Drucie Welborn married one Shepherd. On October 4, 1913, she and her husband executed a deed of trust on the land in question to secure to one Carmichael the payment of a note for $700, due five years thereafter, with six per cent annual interest thereon. A few days later a second deed of trust to one Tevis, as trustee, was executed to secure the payment of a note for $375 due one year thereafter. In June, 1916, an execution, sued out on a judgment for $200 against Shepherd and his wife and in favor of the defendant, Bank of Kingsville, was levied upon the land. On November 3, 1916, the land was sold at a foreclosure *878 sale under the Tevis deed of trust to defendant Longacre for $675 and he thereupon received a trustee's deed. On December 16, 1916, Longacre obtained from the defendant bank a loan of $1500 and gave a deed of trust on the land to secure it; out of the proceeds of the land he satisfied the Carmichael deed of trust and the outstanding judgment lien held by the bank. So that the record title to the land at the commencement of this suit appeared to be in defendant Longacre, subject to the lien of a deed of trust to the bank securing an indebtedness of $1500.
Mrs. Shepherd died in the year 1916. Plaintiff must have been about eleven years of age at that time. After her mother's death she was taken into the home of her uncle, defendant Longacre, and there cared for as a member of his family until she married. When this suit was commenced she was but sixteen years of age.
There was evidence on the part of defendants tending to show that James M. Welborn at the time of his marriage was wholly without means; that property of his wife was sold and the proceeds invested in a store in a little town or village known as Robbins; that this store was subsequently sold and the money realized from the sale was used to purchase a half interest in a similiar mercantile enterprise at Chapel Hill, in Lafayette County; and that that interest was exchanged for the land in suit. The land at the time of Welborn's death did not exceed in value $1500.
The petition alleges that James M. Welborn died the owner in fee of the land in controversy; that the same was his homestead; that he left surviving him a widow and a minor child; that plaintiff is his only heir; and that the purported sale of the land by the administratrix was void: (1) because it was an attempt to sell the land to herself and (2) because the debts upon which the order of sale was based were not legally charged thereon in the lifetime of the homesteader. It further alleges the remarriage of the widow, the execution by her of the Carmichael and Tevis deeds of trust; her death; the foreclosure of the Tevis deed of trust and the purported purchase of the land by defendant Longacre; and the execution by him of the deed of trust to the defendant bank. It prays that the court ascertain and determine the right, title and interest of each of the several parties; that plaintiff be adjudged to be the owner in fee simple; that the deeds under which defendants claim be cancelled and set aside; and that plaintiff have general relief.
The defense pleaded by the defendant Longacre sufficiently appears from the following paragraphs of his separate answer:
"Further answering, this defendant says that although the legal title to said real estate vested in James M. Welborn at the time of his death, said Welborn was not the owner of said land, but held same in trust for said Drucie M. Welborn, his wife; that said land was in *879 truth and in fact bought with the separate money and means of Drucie M. Welborn, the proceeds of the sale of her own real estate, owned by her prior to her marriage with James M. Welborn, and was in fact her own property. That following her appointment as administratrix, and as means of procuring in her the legal title to her own land, she presented and had proved against the estate of her said husband as a debt, a claim for part of her funds which had gone into the land, and when same was reduced to a judgment, she obeyed the order of the probate court duly and properly made thereon, and sold said land; the title thereto was taken by her brother Stanley I. Longacre, this defendant, as trustee for her, rather than to have the deed made by the county clerk, as in such cases provided by law, and that thereafter this defendant conveyed the land to her; that as a result thereof she the said Drucie M. Welborn procured in herself the title to which she was originally entitled, of the full legal title to said land, subject to the lien of a deed of trust of date August 16, 1905, shown at deed book 146, page 50, securing a debt of $600, which had been incurred by said Welborn and his said wife for that portion of the purchase money for said land which had not been furnished by her, the said Drucie M. Welborn; that thereafter, she the said Drucie paid off and discharged the lien of said deed of trust.
"That it is not true that the land described was a homestead of James M. Welborn at the time of his death; that in addition to the facts hereinabove stated by reason of which it was not a homestead, long prior to the death of James M. Welborn he and his said wife had abandoned and removed from said land with the intention not to return to it, and that he never did return thereto.
"That even though said Welborn had had a homestead in said land and had died with such right therein, yet said Drucie M. Welborn by reason of her advancements of all her separate means for the purchase of said land, and her payment of the said purchase money mortgage and the money by it secured, was entitled to be subrogated to the rights which plaintiff may have as an heir of James M. Welborn in said property and that this defendant, who is the owner by mesne conveyance of whatever right and title Drucie M. Welborn had therein, is entitled to such subrogation in her place and stead. . . .
"And further answering, this defendant says that from and prior to the death of James M. Welborn, and for a period of more than ten years, this defendant took plaintiff into his home, as a member of his family, and furnished her her means of subsistence, her living, clothing, lodging, medical care and attention, and her education and in all things cared for her as his own child; that all of said care and attention was of the reasonable value of more than $200 per year, and that even though the court should find that James M. Welborn had a right of homestead in said land and that plaintiff has any rights therein, *880 such rights if any as she may have should be charged with the value of the care, maintenance, upkeep, attention and education for said period of more than ten years, to the amount of twenty-five hundred dollars."
The answer of the defendant bank admits the execution of the deed of trust purporting to secure to it the payment of a note for $1500, which it asserts is a valid lien, and denies all other allegations of the petition.
The trial court found the issues for the plaintiff and adjudged that she is the owner of the land in fee simple, and that neither of the defendants has any interest in or right or title to it. It further cancelled and set aside the deeds of trust given by plaintiff's mother and the one executed by Longacre to his co-defendant. From such judgment defendants prosecute this appeal.
The questions presented on this record are these: Did Welborn hold the title to the land in controversy in trust for his wife? If he owned it in his own right, did he abandon his homestead therein during his lifetime? If it was his homestead at the time of his death, was it subject to sale for the payment of debts in existence at the time he acquired it? If the sale by the administratrix was void, what equities, if any, exist in favor of the defendants or either of them?
I. It is claimed by appellants that the land was purchased by Welborn with the separate means of his wife which he had not reduced to his possession with her written assent, and consequently that a trust resulted in her favor. SheResulting affirmed. however, after his death that she had loanedTrust. him the money, and on the basis of that claim obtained a judgment against his estate as and for a debt. She, if living, would not now be heard to assert the contrary; nor will those who claim under her. "It is a well-settled rule that where money is advanced by way of a loan to be used by the borrower in the purchase of property in his own name no resulting trust arises in favor of the lender." [39 Cyc. 135.] A loan of money without fraud by the borrower merely creates the relation of debtor and creditor, and no rule of equity transforms such a transaction into a trust or creates the relation of trustee andcestui que trust between the borrower and lender. [Cottonwood County Bank v. Case, 125 N.W. (S.D.) 298.] There was no trust in favor of the wife in this case.
II. If there was an abandonment of the homestead, it was because Welborn, at the time he left for Colorado with his wife and baby, had no intention of returning and resuming the use of the property as a homestead. [Kaes v. Gross.
III. After a homestead has vested in the widow and minor children upon the death of the homesteader, is it subject to sale for the payment of his general debts which antedate its acquisition? In many of our decisions, dealing with other features of the homestead law, language will be found which seems to assume as of course that the estate of homesteadSale of is subject to sale for all debts owing at the timeHomestead. the homestead was acquired; but, so far as the writer has been able to ascertain, the question has never been directly passed upon by this court. The question has been pressed many times, but in every instance the decision has been made to turn upon some other point. Its solutions, however, ought not be difficult. We do not have to look beyond the Homestead Statute; for it is a complete "code unto itself, for the purpose of governing rights of creditors and others interested in the statutory estate known as homestead." [In re Rombauer's Estate, 256 S.W. 1066; Armor v. Lewis,
The phrase, "debts . . . legally charged thereon," is of obvious import. While the word "charge" is of broad significance, as used in the statute it clearly means: "A lien, incumbrance, or claim which is to be satisfied out of the specific thing or proceeds thereof to which it applies. [1 Bouvier.] As the debt for which the land was sold was not legally charged on it by Welborn during his lifetime. The probate court was without jurisdiction in the premises and the sale itself was a nullity. [Dennis v. Gorman,
IV. That portion of the cross-bill of defendant, Longacre, which sets up a claim for plaintiff's maintenance and support during a number of years prior to her marriage is not germane to the cause of action pleaded in the petition, and for that reason requires no further attention. [Fulton v. Fisher,
No equities arose in favor of defendant Longacre or Drucie Welborn through the application of the proceeds of the sale of the land to the payment of general debts against the estate of James M. Welborn, for the simple reason that the land was in no way liable therefor. But with respect to the incumbrance which had been placed upon it by Welborn and his wife and which was paid by her after his death a different situation exists. It was a valid and subsisting *883
charge against the land, and it was paid by the widow, not as a volunteer, but for the protection of her own interest; she was entitled, therefore, to be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee. The equitable interest accruing to Mrs. Welborn through subrogation thereafter passed by mesne conveyances to the defendant Longacre, and is now owned by him subject to the deed of trust given by him to the defendant bank. [Valle's Heirs v. Fleming's Heirs,
The equitable charge against the land just referred to can be determined only by taking an account. The accounting should begin as of the date of the remarriage of the widow. Up until that time she was entitled to the possession of the premises and it was her duty as life tenant to pay the taxes and the interest on the incumbrance. In taking the accounting the land should be charged with the amount of the incumbrances, $600, with interest thereon, and the aggregate of the state and county taxes which have been paid by defendant Longacre and his grantors. From the total of those items should be deducted the value of the rents and profits accruing from the land during the period covered by the accounting. The interest should be reckoned according to the terms of the instruments constituting the original encumbrance.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to that court to enter an interlocutory judgment, defining and adjudging the right, title and interest of each of the several parties, and then take an account and proceed to final judgment, — all in accordance with the views herein expressed. All concur, except Graves, J., absent.