246 Mo. 377 | Mo. | 1912
As. the residuary legatee of Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., who in turn was the sole heir of Frederick W. Hamburger, Sr., appellant instituted this suit in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis to recover the proceeds of certain realty in St. Louis county conveyed by Hamburger, Sr., to Frederick W. Henze by a deed absolute on its face but alleged to have been in fact a mortgage. Three of the respondents are the executors and the others the devisees of Henze. The
The deed assailed was dated August 11, 1890, and the petition alleges that while it is absolute on its face it was executed by Hamburger solely for the purpose of vesting in Henze the legal title to the Oak Hill property to secure the payment of certain indebtedness of Hamburger, Sr., to Henze, and was for a time recognized and acknowledged by Henze to be simply a mortgage. It is further alleged that at the time the deed was executed Hamburger, Sr., was mentally incapable of transacting business and that Henze induced him to execute the deed by falsely and ■ fraudulently representing to him that there were then on the property two deeds of trust securing $1000, and that the deed executed was intended to secure that indebtedness. It is further alleged that there were, in fact, no deeds of trust outstanding against the property. Other allegations are that Henze did not assert title in himself until after the death of both the Hamburgers, father and son, and then he did so by having the deed to him recorded a second time, January 21, 1897; that plaintiff had no knowledge of the facts set forth until after Henze’s death in 1905; that some of the lots were sold by Henze in his lifetime and the others by those defendants who are legatees of Henze, and prays an accounting and judgment against the executors for the amount realized by Henze from the lots he sold, less amounts found due him, and against Henze’s legatees for the sums realized by them.
Separate answers were filed, one by the executors and one by the devisees under Henze’s will. Each ad
The evidence showed that for some years prior to 1890 Frederick W. Hamburger, Sr., had owned the Oak .Hill propery and another tract known as the Darby Hill property, making his home on the latter. In 1888 he platted the first named parcel. Hamburger, Sr., and Henze were brothers-in-law and as early as 1878 Henze had loaned Hamburger money, taking a deed of trust on the Oak Hill property. August 11,1890', Hamburger, Sr., and wife executed the deed now assailed. It was absolute on its face. Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., also signed this deed as a witness to his father’s signature. November 29, 1892, Hamburger, Sr., died leaving a will (which was subsequently set aside), and the executor thereof filed an inventory of the estate which included none.of the Oak Hill property except one lot. Subsequently the will was set aside and Hamburger, Jr., sole heir of Hamburger, Sr., was appointed administrator d. b. n. and adopted the inventory filed by the quondam executor. In the meantime Henze had been selling lots in the Oak Hill tract, at least one such sale having been made prior to Hamburger, Sr.’s,- death. The evidence is conflicting on the question whether Henze or Hamburg'er, Sr., exercised dominion over the Oak Hill property in 1891 and 1892 but there is practically no dispute as to Henze’s possession after 1893, and it is admitted he paid the taxes falling due after the date of the deed to him.
April 30, 1896, Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., died, leaving a will whereby he devised to appellant all his property except legacies of insignificant amount to certain relatives, one of these legatees being Henze’s wife. January 21, 1897, the deed- of August 11, 1890, was recorded anew, the first record of it not conform
To show Hamburger, Sr.’s, incapacity to execute the deed of August 11, 18901, appellant offered the petition, instructions, verdict and judgment in the contest proceedings in which Hamburger, Sr.’s, will was set aside, but the court excluded this.
The evidence relied on to show that the deed mentioned was really a mortgage consisted mainly of statements of Henze.
Mrs. Gaines, sister-in-law of Henze, said that before the suit to set aside Hamburger, Jr’s., will was instituted Henze said to one of the attorneys that he had no interest in the matter and wanted his wife’s
James M. G-renolds testified that within a year before the senior Hamburger died he heard Henze tell Hamburger, Jr., that he, Henze, held a mortgage on the Salzman avenue place and if the son behaved himself the property would be all his. Witness lived in one of Henze’s places from 1888 to 1893 and then moved away.
Mrs. Bernardine Hamburger, whose husband is a nephew of Frederick W. Hamburger, S,r., testified that after the death of Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., Henze said to her that in case he and Mrs. Henze died there “was plenty for both sides” and that he would “look out that Rinkel and Thompson won’t get hold of this. ’ ’ She said he was talking of the land the railroad company bought.
Appellant testified the first information he had that the deed of August 11, 1890, was in a fact a mortgage was received from the witness Mrs. G-aines just before this suit was begun; that at the time suit was begun to set aside the will of Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., all real estate inherited by the latter from his father had been sold under deed of trust and there was, apparently, no property belonging to the estate; that he found an unreleased deed of trust to Henze against the Darby Hill property; that the note secured had previously been paid and Henze, when applied to in 1903, executed without objection a deed of release to Mollie H. Rinkel and William B. Thompson, who seem then to have owned the Darby Hill tract.
Appellant also offered in evidence certain mem-oranda, offering in that connection testimony that the handwriting was that of Henze and the book was one
Appellant then called an attorney who represented the contestants in the snit to set aside the will of the junior Hamburger and offered to prove by him that Henze, though a party, did not employ or pay him and then offered to prove by the attorney that after judgment for the contestee in that case, and while the contestants were preparing to take an appeal, he had a conversation with Henze in which Henze stated he knew there was no property which could be affected by the will except the Oak Hill property; that it stood in his, Henze’s, name and the intention of the contestants was to prevent appellant from getting it; that all other property owned by Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., had been sold under deed of trust. This the court excluded.
The same witness testified he had examined the records of St. Louis county and there were no unreleased deeds of trust against the Oak Hill property August 11, 1890.
For defendants Ernest Gleditzsch testified that Hamburger, Sr., in 1889 attempted to sell him one of the Oak Hill lots, but he did not purchase; that after-wards he concluded to buy and in 1891 saw Hambur- ' ger, Sr., and was told by him he had sold the place to
It also clearly appeared from tbe testimony of Frank C. Schmidt that tbe reason tbe deed of August 11, 1890, was recorded anew in 1897, was that in copying it into tbe record tbe first time it was recorded, there was a partial omission of tbe description of one of these lots; that this lot was sold and tbe purchaser complained to Henze that tbe title was bad; that, tbe latter promised to look into it and, later, in 1896 or 1897, told the grantee be bad “a record of tbe deed made,” bad “straightened tbe thing out.” Later the lot owner secured a certificate showing perfect title.
Two deeds of trust on tbe Darby Hill property showing releases dated September 11, 1890, were put in evidence. One was for $500 and tbe abstract does not give tbe amount secured by tbe other.
I. Tbe only evidence offered which it is suggested tended to show that in August, 1890‘, Frederick W. Hamburger, Sr., was mentally incapable, was tbe record in tbe contest .of bis will in which tbe verdict and judgment could hardly be said to mean more than that in November, 1892, be lacked testamentary capacity. There was no offer to prove otherwise whether bis mind was sound in August, 1890, and no offer to show that bis condition in November, 1892, was tbe same as in August, 1890'. The issue in tbe case mentioned was tbe mental capacity of Hamburger November 2, 1892, and, though tbe judgment be assumed to be admissible, it could not alone have justified tbe trial court in finding be was insane nearly two and a half years theretofore and, consequently, could, not justify this court in making such a finding now.
Tbe allegation that Hamburger, Sr., was mentally incapable to execute tbe deed of 1890 must be ignored
II. There is no direct evidence of any kind and no circumstantial evidence of any consequence that Henze made any representations to. Hamburger, Sr., false or otherwise concerning the existence of deeds of trust on either the Oak Hill or Darby Hill property. The consideration clause in the deed is not set out literally in the abstract and the only statement relating to that feature is added in pen and ink and is as follows: ‘ ‘ The consideration in this deed was the payment of $4000', the grantee agreeing to pay the balance of $1000 on two deeds of trust on said property” and is the language of the abstracter, not of the deed. It appears there were two deeds of trust on the Darby Hill property in August, 1890, and these were released of record September 11, 1890. There is no direct evidence that Hamburger paid Henze any money at any time. One of the deeds of trust mentioned secured $500 and the amount secured by the other is not shown by the record though it was before the trial court.
No effort was made to dispute the recital of the deed that part of the consideration was $4000 in cash. Appellant having practically ignored in his evidence, and in his briefs here, the allegations to the effect there was no consideration for the deed, we may with propriety, at this stage of the case, follow his example.
III. The somewhat confusing allegations of the petition are clarified by appellant’s course on- the trial in practically confining his evidence to the allegation that the deed of August 11, 1890, was in fact a mortgage. This deed is absolute on its face and to destroy the presumption arising therefrom that it is and was, as it purports to be, absolute in fact, it is neces sary that the evidence adduced to prove it to be a
There is no direct evidence of any agreement between Frederick W. Hamburger, Sr., and Frederick W. Henze except that contained in the deed. The language of the deed is merely that of an absolute conveyance. Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr., under whom appellant claims, witnessed Ms father’s signature to the deed to Henze. The deed was recorded immediately and besides the actual knowledge Hamburger, Jr., would seem to have had of it, its record became constructive notice to him, after his father’s death at least, of the fact the deed existed and showed the record title to be in Henze, Hamburger, Jr., after his father’s death, obtained a judgment invalidating the will executed by his father November 2, 1892, and thereby became entitled to all' property owned by his father at his death. As administrator d. b. n. he adopted an inventory of the estate to which he was sole heir, which inventory purported to list all realty of the estate but did not include the Oak Hill property, except the one lot insufficiently described in the first record of the deed of August 11, 1890; This inventory thus adopted took full cognizance of the deed mentioned and proceeded on the theory it was absolute in fact, and must have been based upon an examination of the record of the deed since it was partly predicated upon an error in that record. In view of these facts the testimony of Grenolds that Henze’s statement to Hamburger, Jr., said to have been made within a year before Hamburger, 'Sr.’s, death, had reference to the Oak Hill property is not to be given much credit. Hamburger, Jr., did not so understand it. His subsequent adoption of the inventory which did not include the Oak Hill property (except the one lot), and his failure to take any note of the matter though he was paying up other debts of the estate, and his
The testimony of Mrs. Gaines possesses no real probative force. She finally testified that: “All he [Henze] said, as far as I remember was ‘now, if you don’t set aside that will, you get nothing and Mr. Rinkel will get it all.’ ” She had attempted to say Henze was referring to the Oak Hill property, but both her direct testimony and cross-examination show that was but her own inference from the language quoted and that quoted was all Henze said. Further, the date of the conversation was not given except that it was before the suit to set aside the will of Frederick W. Hamburger, Jr. Whether it was before or after the sale of the Darby Hill property under the deeds of trust does not appear. If before such sale, what
Mrs. Bernardine Hamburger in her testimony does not identify the property referred to by Henze when he said ‘ ‘ there was plenty from both sides, from my wife’s side and from my side . . . and I am going to look out that Rinkel and Thompson won’t get hold of this.” She says he was “talking about the land the railroad had bought,” but the record does not disclose what property that was or that Henze said anything else about it. In no event conld this statement of Henze be taken to mean he had but a mortgage on the Oak Hill property. It really amounts to a statement that he and his wife had property which on his and her deaths would go to the kin. The probability of the wife dying under an impending operation gave origin to the conversation in which the statement is said by the witness to have been made.
The memorandum said to have been entered by Henze in his cash book apparently does not refer to the deed of August 11, 1890, since the memorandum itself indicates the deed therein referred to was not recorded anew but was returned to Henze and “nothing done with the deed.” The entry as to the delivery of the deed for recording was made under date of “August, 1896.” The marginal note of return of the deed by Roster to Henze is dated January 15, 1896. The conclusion that this last date is an error, probably induced by the presence of the date immediately above, and that the real date of the marginal entry was January 15, 1897, is the most reasonable. Adopting this conclusion the memorandum and note
In the circumstances, we think the entry from the cash hook of no importance, without further evidence connecting it with the deed assailed, and consequently, find it unnecessary to determine the question of its admissibility.
A deed of trnst dated May 15, 1879, on which Henze had noted a payment of interest and $115 on the principal and indorsed on the deed a statement, dated February 26, 1891, that Hamburger, Sr., owed him, Henze, nothing at that time, was put in evidence by appellant’s counsel. There is another undated notation on the deed to the effect it was to be returned to Hamburger, Sr., “after rec. the new one.” Without the aid of dates memoranda of this kind are of practically no value and the only one which is dated is squarely opposed to the idea of the existence of a mortgage or any debt due from Hamburger, Sr., to Henze in 1891.
The weight of the evidence is that Henze had possession of the property at least from and including 1893 forward. The evidence of Hamburger, Sr. ’s, possession during 1891 and 1892 is unsatisfactory. For instance, one witness who testifies to that effect also testifies Hamburger sold Gleditzsch the lot he bought. This is clearly incorrect, Gleditzsch having purchased from Henze. Again, some of the witnesses recall Hamburger, Sr.’s, possession from the fact of his filling up a pond and platting the property. The property was platted in 1888 and the pond filled before the platting was done. That Henze’s grantees and tenants were in possession of part of the property in 1893, and that Hamburger, Jr., exercised no dominion over it
There is ample evidence that $5000 was an adequate price for the property. At any rate there is no such evidence that the price was inadequate as to convince us, in view of the trial court’s finding, that this element now deserves to he considered as important.
The evidence for appellant, so far as reviewed, is weak and equivocal (Gerhardt v. Tucker, supra) and has, when considered as a whole, little or no probative force, many of the circumstances developed strongly tending to support the deed assailed and being inconsistent with the idea of its being other than its language indicates.
It is urged, however, that Mr. Ottofy’s offered testimony was admissible and that it was error to exclude it. It is unusual to reverse judgments in equity on records like that before us because of erroneous rulings in admitting and excluding evidence, this court, on the hearing here, admitting and considering such evidence as it deems admissible, and excluding from consideration evidence improperly admitted and reaching its judgment on the competent evidence offered without regard to the trial court’s rulings in' that connection. [Hanson v. Neal, 215 Mo. l. c. 271; Jones v. Thomas, 218 Mo. l. c. 544.]
If the case be considered as if Mr. Ottofy’s testimony in regard to his conversation with Henze had been admitted and the objections to his competency as a witness be waived for the moment, there arises, practically, the question whether his offered testimony would support a judgment for appellant. The conversation to which he was offered as a witness occurred
On the whole record we cannot say there is no reasonable doubt in the case, and judgment- of the trial court denying a decree for appellant on theN evidence is affirmed.
The foregoing opinion of Blair, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.