168 Mo. 99 | Mo. | 1902
— This is a suit in equity by plaintiff, who is the widow of Columbus T. Rice, deceased, against the de
The answers deny the allegations of the petition and set up a marriage contract by which said Rice was to convey certain real estate to plaintiff and give her certain moneys in lieu of her marital rights in his property.
The facts developed are substantially the following:
Columbus T. Rice and the plaintiff Carrie Y. Rice were married about six o’clock on the evening of February 24, 1897, at Kirksville, Adair county, in this State. Plaintiff was at that time about thirty-six years of age. Columbus T. Rice was a widower past seventy years of age, his first wife having died in March, 1896. The defendants Charles Rice, Edward A. Rice, Mary S. Rice and Augusta Waddill, are the children of Columbus T. Rice by his first marriage. Defendant James E. Waddill is the husband of Augusta Wad-dill. Defendants Annie M. Rice, Catherine Rice, and Francis Rice are the children of Edward A. Rice.
The plaintiff and Columbus T. Rice became engaged to marry in October, 1896. At the time of the engagement Columbus T. Rice was reputed to own and did own real and personal property in Adair county of the value of from $12,-'000 to $15,000, and a fifth interest in the estate of a deceased brother in Chicago, Illinois, of the value of $75,000. At the time of his death his estate inventoried property of the value of $2,319.32, of which $325 was a note on his son Edward A. Rice who was insolvent.
After their marriage plaintiff 'and Columbus T. Rice
About this time Erank Grant, a nephew of Columbus T. Rice, visited the latter, and during this visit Columbus T. Rice and said Erank Grant entered into a contract by which said Columbus T. Rice sold to said Grant his undivided one-fifth interest in the estate of his deceased brother James H. Rice, for $40,000, one hundred dollars of which was to be paid in cash and the balance $39,900 in forty days from May 13, 1897, and if not. then paid the $100 was to be forfeited by said Grant as liquidated damages. This option was after-wards by mutual consent extended for forty days from June 22, 1897. This contract was finally executed and consummated on July 7, 1897, at Chicago, Illinois. To this original option contract Charles Rice, Mary L. Rice and Augusta Wad-dill, children of Columbus Rice, were witnesses and signed , the same as such, but plaintiff knew nothing of said contract or its execution, and George Rice, a brother, who owned an equal share in the estate of the deceased brother James H. Rice, was kept in ignorance of said trade.
On July 7, 1897, Columbus T. Rice received the $40,000 from Grant, $15,000 of which was paid out of money received from the executors of James H. Rice out of the share of Columbus T. Rice. . On the same day Columbus T. Rice disposed of said $40,000 as follows: He gave his son Charles Rice, ' $8,000; his daughter Mary Rice, $8,000; Augusta Waddill, a daughter,-$8,000; and the balance he deposited in a Chicago bank on a time deposit for one year, but on August 16, 1897, he gave his son-in-law, James Waddill, $7,531.08, and Charles Rice, his son, $8,000, out of said time deposit. All these gifts were by drafts purchased in Chicago and sent by mail to the said donees in their own names. Columbus T. Rice, however, enjoined upon three of his children to whom he sent said drafts, to-wit, Charles, Mary and Augusta, that they should each expend $1,800 of the amount sent him or her, for th^ benefit of his son and their brother, Edward Rice. This trust
On August 11, 1897, Columbus T. Rice also gave J ames E. Waddill, his son-in-law, $1,722, and to his grandson, Ovid Waddill, $300 in bank stock.
By warranty deed dated February 9, 1897, Columbus T. Rice conveyed 160 acres of land in Adair county to his grandchildren, the children of Augusta Waddill and Charles Rice, for the nominal consideration of $500 and love and affection; and on February 24, 1897, he deeded to his children Mary and Charles Rice and Augusta Waddill two lots in the city of Kirksville. These deeds were delivered to his son-in-law, James E. Waddill, a few hours before his marriage to plaintiff on February 24, 1897, but were not recorded until July 2, 1897.
His bank account in Kirksville showed a good balance until July, 1897, when it dwindled to $12.29, the balance which passed to his administrator when he died in October, 1897.
In 1897, Columbus T. Rice was past seventy years of age. That he was weak, feeble, and slightly paralyzed; had varicose veins, and was constantly under the care of physicians, does not admit of doubt, under the evidence in this record.
Mrs. Kinsel testified: “In March (1897) he said he didn’t think he was going to live long; he was complaining of his head, said it was killing him; said he could see dark things before him all the time, and that it was a bad sign.”
Mr. Ringo, his banker and friend, testified: “I regarded him as a feeble old man ever since he had that stroke of paralysis. I don’t think he ever did or would recover from that stroke.”
His son-in-law and children testified he had a stroke of
In July, 1897, he spoke of the death of his brother and said two or three of the family had died within the last year and he did not expect any of them would be alive in a year from then.
About the first days of July, Columbus T. Eice went to Quincy, Illinois, ostensibly for piedical treatment.
On July 6th he wrote to his wife, the plaintiff, from Quincy, as follows: “My Dear Wife: We arrived, here safe. I have been to see the doctor. He wishes me to stay here a few days to see how the medicine affects me. I will be home as soon as possible.' O. T. Eice.” To this letter was appended this postcript: “I leave for Chicago at 7 p. m., etc, Frank W. Grant.”
Both the letter and postcript were in Grant’s handwriting except Mr. Eice’s signature to the letter. Again on July 8, 1897, Mr. Eice wrote plaintiff: “My Dear Wife: I am still in Quincy. I am doctoring my eyes and also my paralysis. C. T. Eice.”
Between .the time of mailing these two> letters and while his wife supposed he was still in Quincy, he had gone to Chicago and disposed of his share in his brother’s estate, worth $76,000 for $40,000, and given away the bulk of it to his children without an intimation to his wife of what he had done or that he had been to Chicago.
On the day of her marriage to Columbus' T. Eice, to-wit, February 24, 1897, he gave her a deed to lots 7 and 8 in block 16 in the city of Kirksville of the value of $1,500, to take effect at his death, or rather reserving to himself a life estate therein.
Other facts may be noted, if necessary, in the opinion.
The circuit court found that Columbus T. Eice was an old,, diseased and infirm man, and with the fraudulent purpose of depriving the plaintiff, his wife of her marital inter
In due time a motion for new trial was filed and over-' ruled, and an appeal taken to this court.
I. Upon the foregoing statement of facts we are asked to affirm the judgment of the circuit court, which decreed that Columbus T. Rice fraudulently disposed by gifts of his large estate with the purpose and design of defeating his widow’s dower therein. The jurisdiction of a court of equity to grant relief in such cases has been maintained by this court from a very early period in the history of this State, beginning with Davis v. Davis, 5 Mo. 183, reaffirmed in Stone v. Stone, 18
These cases were all bottomed upon the proposition that a conveyance of land or personalty by a husband, in contemplation of death, without consideration, and for the purpose of defrauding the wife of her marital rights, is fraudulent and void as to her, and gives ground for equitable relief.
Defendants, however, strenuously insist that three essential conditions are absent in this case. They insist the deeds and gifts of personalty were not made in the last sickness of Columbus T. Rice, and that there was no evidence of fraud, and furthermore, that by reason of an antenuptial contract between said Columbus T. Rice and plaintiff she was barred of claiming dower in his estate.
Before proceeding to a discussion as to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the charge of fraud, it is proper to state that there was no express provision in the deed of Columbus T. Rice to his wife, that said conveyance was a provision for her by way of jointure and in lieu of dower, so as to bring the same within the provisions of section 4529, Revised Statutes 1889 (sec. 2950, R. S. 1899). This statute requires that if a provision is made by the husband with a design to exclude her dower or put her to an election, it must be expressed on the face of the instrument to be in lieu of or in.full' discharge of her dower. [Perry v. Perryman, 19 Mo. 469; Dudley v. Davenport, 85 Mo. 462.]
That these gifts and deeds to his children by Columbus T. Rice were voluntary and wholly without consideration is established by the evidence of the defendants themselves, and that they were made secretly and with a deliberate purpose to keep the plaintiff ignorant of their execution, does not admit of a reasonable doubt. Counsel for defendants insist, however, that the gifts were complete and absolute gifts inter vivos, such as Columbus T. Rice had a perfect right to make,
An examination of the evidence shows that Columbus T. Rice was a man over seventy years of age, and had suffered a stroke of paralysis; was ruptured, had varicose veins; was so feeble that he required support to get across the streets to avoid teams; that he complained of pains in his head which he said were killing him; that he constantly had dark things before his eyes which he said was a bad sign; that several of his family had died that year and he did not expect to be living at the end of the year. He married February 24, 1897, and disposed of the bulk of his very large estate by gifts to his children in July and August, and died about October 1, 1897.
How can it be said in view of these facts, that this old man who was constantly under the care of physicians all this time; who had never until that year shown any generosity toward his children, but ,had concluded, as he stated, that he wanted to see his children enjoy his property in his lifetime^ and by gifts to them denuded himself of an estate worth $90,000, reserving to himself only a pittance of about $2,500, was not doing these things in contemplation of an early demise and really in his last sickness ?
And that it was done .with a view to defeat his wife’s dower we can not doubt. . After his engagement to marry plaintiff, on the very evening of their marriage, he secretly delivered the deeds to all his Missouri estate except the small .property he gave his wife, to his son-in-law for the children
No other rational deduction can be drawn from the conduct of Columbus T. Rice in his disposition of $40,000 he received from his brother’s estate in 1897, than that it was a deliberate purpose to defeat his wife’s dower therein, and the evidence abundantly supports the inference that it was done with the full knowledge of his adult children that such was his purpose. The contract with his nephew Grant was entered into at the residence of one of his children and signed by three of them as witnesses.
The deception he practiced upon his wife in regard to his visit to Chicago with Grant when he disposed of at least $70,000 for $40,000 strongly corroborates this conclusion, and fearful lest some marital right might attach to this money if he brought it into the State of Missouri in his own name, he carefully mailed drafts from Chicago in favor “of the several children and impressed a trust to the amount of $5,400 so that the title to his son Edward and his children should not pass through his name. Columbus T. Rice, however, selected the farm, bargained for it and directed the deed made to Edward’s children.
While Edward was insolvent and it was perhaps only natural that he should desire to save his bounty to him from Edward’s creditors, the query propounds itself, what reason could there have been for Columbus T. Rice, who was wholly free of debt, the owner of at least $40,000, resorting to occult methods like these ? By his own deed he could have settled these lands upon his grandchildren or created a spendthrift
To avoid the logical effect of all these contrivances counsel for the defendants urge that there was no fraud designed because they say that before the death of his first wife, when he learned of the death of his brother arid that he would receive a large share of his estate, he promised his first wife to give this property to his children and at that time had never met or seen plaintiff.
But that promise was utterly without consideration and incapable of enforcement either in a court of law or a court of equity. Subsequently and before he receives the estate from his brother his wife dies and he marries plaintiff. A new obligation is assumed. Whatever his duty to his first wife, and his children, the law casts upon him the duty of supporting his second wife, and the law attaches her right of dower to his estate. Granting, however, that he expressed an intention to give his children the share he should receive from the brother’s estate in Chicago, there was no promise to denude himself of his Missouri lands and moneys, amounting to near $15,000, neither was there a promise to give James Waddill nearly ten thousand dollars in addition to the eight thousand
The explanation found in this family talk during the life of his first wife falls far short of exculpating Columbus T. Rice from his subsequent conduct in endeavoring to defraud plaintiff of her lawful dower. It is true as said by Judge McGirk, in Davis v. Davis, 5 Mo. loc. cit. 189: “I admit that, so "far as the mere form of right is concerned, they were not his. Here the form hides the substance, and was intended to do it. ■ But in a court of chancery, no matter how cunningly and deeply covered and concealed the right may be, the deep searching justice of the chancellor, with his argus eyes, will' uncover it. The chancery commands the right to remain where it should have been till all the purposes of justice are accomplished.” So in this case, while formal deeds and instruments abound conferring the property of this decrepit-old man upon his children and son-in-law so that apparently there is nothing of which his widow can be endowed, a court of conscience will treat these formalities as mere covers of a cunning scheme to defeat her dower and will require .the voluntary donees to bring it into court until her dower is apportioned to her, and they can not complain, because they were ■cognizant of his sick and enfeebled condition and of his old age, and they were keepers of his secret machinations, while his wife was utterly ignorant of them and they were hound to know that by receiving his estate in this manner they were depriving her of her lawful dower.
If the disposition of his property by Columbus T. Rice under the facts disclosed in this case can be upheld, then in the oft-repeated language of this court, “the efficacy of the statute conferring dower to personalty would depend on the whim and caprice of the husband,” and it might as well be repealed. [Davis v. Davis, supra; McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, 16 Mo. 242; Tucker v. Tucker, 32 Mo. 464; Ibid v. Ibid, 29 Mo.
Had Columbus T. Rice made his will previous to his marriage to plaintiff, and disposed of his estate to his children just as he did and then married plaintiff, no doubt- could exist as to her right to her dower both in his realty and personalty, and it. is now equally clear and settled that the sense and intent of the statute on this subject applies not only to wills technically hut to deeds made with intent to defeat the widow’s dower. The form of the instrument or the device resorted to is wholly immaterial when the intent to defeat the widow’s marital rights is made apparent to the chancellor.
Counsel for defendants argue, with great earnestness, that these deeds and gifts were not testamentary in their nature, but when we consider the age of Columbus T. Rice, that he had been stricken already with paralysis, and his numerous other afflictions, and his own declaration that he did not expect to live a year; that he was constantly in the care of physicians and that within less than six months before his death he had given his children and son-in-law practically the whole of his estate, whereas previous to that time he was known to be parsimonious and close-fisted and had been exceedingly meagre in his gifts to his children, we can not avoid the conclusion that this sudden and unusual exhibition of generosity was the result of his expressed conviction that his days were numbered, and being thus warned of the approach of death he determined to distribute the estate which he could not hope to enjoy much longer. This was essentially a disposition by will of his property within the meaning of the statute reserving the widow her dowér and meets all the demands of the rule that to avoid a conveyance it must he made in expectation or contemplation of death, but not necessarily in the very article of death as counsel seem to claim. [Tucker v. Tucker, 29 Mo. 352; Dyer v. Smith, 62 Mo. App. 606.]
II. Having discussed the fundamental propositions un
The facts were briefly these.
After plaintiff commenced this suit and before defendant? filed their answer one of their attorneys served notice on her attorneys that'he would take her deposition befox*e a notary public in Kirksville. It was shown beyoxxd contradictioix that plaintiff was brought before the notary, duly sworn, and examined at length by counsel' for defendants, her testimony reduced to writing, and signed by her, and certified by the notary; that James E. Waddill, one of defendants, paid the notary Ms fees, and the notary gave him the deposition, instead of xxxailixxg it to or filing it with the circuit clerk. Jas. E. Waddill testified that he had kept the deposition; that he knew all the time where it was, and while testifying, said it was in his pocket.
This court, in Tomlinson v. Ellison, 104 Mo. loc. cit. 114, held that when a party had taken his adversary’s deposition in the same action it amounted to a waiver of any incompetency of his adversary, notwithstanding he would have otherwise clearly been incompetent, but in order to render the party competexxt it devolved xxpon hixn to show the waiver to- the court. Afterwards when this ruling was directly challenged in Ess v. Griffith, 139 Mo. loc. cit. 329, after a careful reconsideration that ruling was re-affirmed with the additional statement that it would constitute a waiver “though the deposition taken was not used at the trial.” And these rulings
Can it differ in principle that, in this case, defendants took plaintiffs deposition, had it duly certified and thereby, in the language of counsel, “heard what she said and that was all he wanted to know,” and then suppressed the deposition, whereas in the cases cited, the deposition was similarly taken and filed, but not used by the party taking it ? Can a. party thus trifle with the machinery of the law and avail himself of it if it suits his purposes, and reject it if it does not, and yet escape all the consequences of his acts ? We hold he can not. When defendants, forewarned as they were by ulaintiffs’ counsel, that he would not permit his client to testify unless her deposition was to be taken in good faith, and they then proceeded to take her deposition, and after it was duly certified, took possession of it and retained it in their possession in court, when the court was endeavoring to ascertain the facts about it, they waived all objection to her competency and the court committed no error in so holding.
The fourth assignment of error refers us to page 16 of the abstract to support the charge that the circuit court erred in permitting plaintiff to testify to communications between herself and her .husband, but reference to the record shows that plaintiff had merely testified that she only knew her husband went to Quincy by his statement, and at all events the objection was not preserved so that we can review it.
There was no error in overruling the objection to the letters of Columbus T. Rice, as it assigned no ground other than that they were incompetent, immaterial and irrelevant, which we have often held amounts to no more than “I object.”
These letters were introduced to show where Columbus T. Rice was between duly 6, 1897, and July 8, 1897, the day before and the day after he had conveyed away
And on the other hand, the self-serving statements of said Rice to Mrs. Waddill were clearly incompetent.
The findings of the court were sufficient to sustain the decree and the petition stated a case for equitable relief.
The circuit court correctly held that plaintiff could follow the estate into the hands of the grantees and decreed that they should account to her for her dower in the property they received, and its decree is in all things affirmed.