159 Mo. 399 | Mo. | 1901
In January, 1895, John R. Shipley died testate, seized of two contiguous tracts of land in Oass county, Missouri, one containing eighty and the other sixty acres, described in the petition. He had been twice married. The defendants are his second wife and widow, and her child, devisees of said real estate under the will, and the adminstrator cum testamento annexo of his estate. The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of Louise O. Shipley, the first wife of said testator, who died in November, 1887, intestate, being the children and their descendants of that marriage.
John R. and Louisa O. Shipley were married about the year 1850, in the State of Pennsylvania, and continued to reside there until the year 1870, when they moved with their four children, Emma, Virginia, Louisa and Albert, to .Oass county, Missouri, where the said John R. Shipley purchased the eighty-acre tract of M. M. and Isaac Wagner, who by deed dated March 19, 1870, for the recited consideration of $2,960, conveyed said tract to him. Afterwards the said John R. purchased the sixty-acre tract of W. J. R. Bailey, who by warranty deeds, dated October 21, 1874, and March 26, 1877, conveyed the same to the said Louisa O. Shipley. Afterwards by deed dated January 21, 1887, the said Louisa O. and John R. Shipley conveyed the sixty-acre tract to Erank L. Rice, who by deed dated January 22, 1887, conveyed the same to the 'said John R. Shipley.
On the fifth of March, 1895, the plaintiffs instituted this suit, ^he petition is in two counts. The gravamen of the charge in the first count, is “that the eighty-acre tract was purchased by the said John R. Shipley with the money of his
The charge in the second count is that the deeds from the said Louisa and husband to Rice, and from Rice to the said John R. Shipley to the sixty-acre tract, were without consideration, and were made for the purpose of vesting the title in him in trust for the benefit of the children of the said Louisa C., born of her marriage with the said John R., and that she was induced to execute the deed by the persuasions and promises of her husband at a time when she was in such a condition of body and mind as to be incapable of transacting any business whatever; wherefore she prays like relief as in the first count, as to that tract.
Issue was joined by answer on both counts, and on the trial, the court found the issues on the first count for the defendants, and on the second count for the plaintiffs. To the action of the court in finding for the defendants on the first count, the plaintiffs excejDted and in due time filed their motion for a rehearing and for judgment in their favor on the first count, which motion being overruled, they duly excepted. To the action of the court in finding for the plaintiffs on the second count, the defendants excepted, and in due time filed their motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, which motions were sustained by the court “on the ground that the finding and judgment of the court as to the second count is contrary to the evidence.” To this action of the court the plaintiffs also excepted, elected to stand upon their judgment on the second count, and perfected their appeal.
The practical effect of the final action of the trial court
So without noticing in detail the several objections and exceptions saved to the action of the court upon the admissibility of the evidence, it will be sufficient to say that in 'reviewing the case, the evidence of one of the plaintiffs, Mrs. Sillex, to facts by which if is sought to establish the title of herself and her co-plaintiffs as heirs of her deceased mother, against the devisees of her deceased father, will have to be excluded from our consideration. [R. S. 1889, sec. 8918; Messimer v. McCray, 113 Mo. 382; Teats v. Flanders, 118 Mo. 660.] And that, seeing no good reason why the depositions of Lydia Pfieger and Ida M. Pfleger, a sister and niece of Mrs. Louisa Shipley, should have been excluded as was done in the court below, so much of their evidence as is legal will be duly considered. The evidence of these two witnesses, taken in connection with a deed and other evidence in the case, tended to prove that in the year 18'70, a short time before John E. Shipley and his family left the State of Pennsylvania for Missouri, his wife, Louisa C. Shipley, had in her possession $900 which she had received from the estate of her father, derived from property devised in 1856 by her grandfather to him and his wife for life, and remainder to their children. The evi
There is not a particle of evidence tending to show that the title to this money was ever transmitted to her husband by gift or contract; on the contrary all the evidence tends to show that it came into his possession with her consent for the sole purpose of buying land for a home for them and their children, and that with this money the eighty-acre tract was in fact purchased and paid for. Although he took the title thereto in his own name, thereafter during her life from time to time, under variant circumstances, he continuously declared, in one form or another, in the presence of many witnesses whose evidence is before us in this record, that this tract was paid for with his wife’s money that came from her estate in Pennsylvania, and that it belonged to her, and when a few years after its purchase, he bought the sixty-acre tract apparently with his own money, he caused the deed to that tract to tiating the sale at the time, mat be wanted that sixty acres of land conveyed to his wife, to pay her in part for what she had paid for the eighty-acre tract. A county road separated these two tracts, the eighty-acre tract or home place being on the south, and the sixty-acre tract on the north side of the road,
It follows that the finding of the circuit court for defend
In Banc.
PEN OUNIAM. — The foregoing opinion delivered in Division Number One, is adopted as the opinion of the court in banc, and judgment will be entered as therein directed.