110 Mo. 127 | Mo. | 1892
This is an action instituted in the St. Louis circuit court against Michael J. Kelley and Joseph Roberts to set aside and cancel a deed in fee from said Roberts to the said defendant Kelley, dated September 5, 1888, and filed for record September 6, 1888, at 4:54 p. m., to a lot of ground in block 922 on the corner of Jefferson avenue and Pine street, in the city of St. Louis, of which plaintiff was the owner, on the ground of fraud.
At the same time and in the same court, and on the same ground, another suit, in which Peter Taaffe and Thomas E. Q-ay as copartners were plaintiffs, was instituted against the same defendants and one Henry Klinger to set aside a deed of trust of the same date, executed by the said Roberts to the said Klinger as trasteé for said Kelley to a lot of ground on Channing avenue and Chestnut street in said city, and filed for
The two conveyances were parts of the same transaction, and the two cases were tried together; judgment in each was rendered for the plaintiffs respectively, from which Kelley alone appeals. His answer was a-■general denial and a plea of estoppel. After the appeal was taken Peter Taaffe died, and his heirs have been .■substituted here as plaintiffs.
It appears from the evidence that for several years prior to the summer of 1888 Peter Taaffe and Thomas E. G-ay were partners -doing business as real-estate •dealers in the city of St. Louis under the firm-name of Taaffe & Gray; that they had in their office, in their •employ, the said Joseph Roberts, who was a half brother ■of Mr. Gay, not particularly bright, nor of the most exemplary habits; that from time to time both the firm and Mr. Taaffe individually made purchases of real estate, and for business purposes had deeds therefor made to the said Roberts who held the title for them, -and made conveyances thereof as he was directed by his employers; that among the property thus conveyed to Roberts was the Jefferson avenue and Pine street lot, purchased by Mr. Taaffe and conveyed to Roberts by deed dated May 10, and recorded in the recorder’s office •on May 13, 1886; and the Channing avenue and Chestnut street lot purchased by the firm of Taaffe & ^ay, •and conveyed to Roberts by deed dated October 1, and recorded October 13, 1887. Afterwards, and in pur.suance of this arrangement, Roberts, on the twenty-second of September, 1887, executed and delivered a deed for the Jefferson avenue and Pine street lot and other lots standing in his name, and belonging to the said Taaffe, and on May 1,' 1888, he executed and delivered to Taaffe & Gay a deed for the Channing -avenue and Chestnut street lot and other lots then
Prior to the year 1886, one Henry J. Dockery also had been in the employ of Taaffe & Gray, was acquainted with their mode of doing business in the name of his coemploye, Roberts, and at the time of the transaction in question knew that Taaffe and Taaffe & G-ay were the real owners of this property, and that Roberts had no real interest in the same. After leaving the employe of Taaffe & Gray, he seems to have -served at times others in the same line of- business, and finally in the summer of 1888 appears in the evidence as a sort of curbstone broker in real estate; impecunious and unscrupulous and ¡a habitue of the saloon kept by the defendant Kelley, an old acquaintance of his, who at the time was the owner of an equity of redemption in some real-estate on Itaska street in said city of uncertain, if any, value — the property being worth about $2,000 — and with some other property incumbered by hens amounting to about $3,300.
In the latter part of the summer of 1888, during the absence óf Mr. Taaffe from, the city on his usual summer “outing,” the dissipated habits of Roberts became of such a character that he was discharged from the office of Taaffe & Gay, turned out of the home of his relatives and sought shelter with his quondam associate and coemploye, Dockery, and thereafter daily supplied with liquor at Kelley’s saloon; he seems to have become Dockery’s pliant tool, moving at Ms will and pleasure in the negotiations which resulted in the execution by him of the two deeds dated September 5, 1888, one to Kelley, and one to Kelley’s trustee, in which negotiations Roberts was made to pose as a large landed pro
The evidence tends to show that the Channing avenue and Chestnut street property was unincumbered and worth about $75,000, and that the Jefferson avenue and Pine street property was worth about $3,000 over and above the incumbrances thereon. The terms finally agreed upon between the parties, on or about the fifth of September, 1888, were that Kelley was to lend Roberts $5,000 on the Channing avenue and Chestnut street property; and make him a deed to his (Kelley’s) Itaska street property, and pay Roberts $1,000 for the Jefferson avenue and Pine street property. Accordingly on that day there was drawn, signed and acknowledged by Kelley a warranty deed conveying to Roberts the Itaska street property, and a warranty deed by Roberts, conveying to Kelley the Jefferson avenue and Pine street property, and a deed of trust by Roberts conveying to the said Klinger the Channing avenue and Chestnut street property in trust to secure the payment of a principal note for $5,000 payable one year after date, and two interest notes of $175 each, one payable in six and the other in twelve months. On the same day,
“Received, St. Louis, September 6, 1888, from Michael J. Kelley, $6,000 for the deed of trust on thb lands in city block 1951, northeast corner of Channing avenue and Chestnut street, and ■ balance due from trade of property at the southeast corner of Jefferson avenue and Pine street.
“(Signed) Joseph Roberts.”
The deeds were filed in the recorder’s office on the afternoon of that day with a request for “immediate” record, and that the transaction be kept out of the papers. After which Dockery having received $150 of the money from Roberts, and both being seized with an urgent desire to go West, in company with Kelley they
On the tenth and twelfth of September, upon the affidavits of Taaffe & Gray, information was filed and criminal proceedings commenced in the St. Louis court of criminal correction against Roberts and Dockery for obtaining money by false representations and pretenses, to answer which they were afterwards arrested, brought back from Denver and lodged in jail.
I. The matters of estoppel set up in the answer as a defense to this action are: First. The institution of the criminal proceedings against Roberts and Dockery, and, second, the mode in which the plaintiff conducted real-estate business in the name of Roberts thereby holding him out to the world as the owner, not only of the property in question, but of much other valuable real estate, the legal title to which on the records appeared in his name, and who had apparent authority from Taaffe and -Taaffe & Gray to sell and convey the same.
The only merit that can be found in the first plea of estoppel is its novelty. It seems to be based upon the idea, that, as it was charged in the criminal information by the prosecuting attorney under the elastic provision of section 1561, Revised Statutes, 1879, that the said Roberts and Dockery with intent to cheat and
II. As to the second plea of estoppel, it is only necessary to say that there is no evidence tending to show that Kelley was induced to act upon any knowledge he had of Taaffe, and Taaffe & Gay’s methods of doing business. On the contrary he expressly denies that he knew anything of them or their business or that he knew that Roberts had ever been in their employ or associated with them in any manner whatever, and claimed throughout the whole of his evidence that he acted solely upon the faith of the abstracts of the record that he obtained in the course of the negotiation, and which showed that by the record the title was in Roberts.
III. There is in fact but one question in this case, and that is: Had Kelley at the time he received the deed from Roberts to the Jefferson avenue and Pine street property actual notice of the prior unrecorded deed from Roberts to Taaffe?
While it appears from the evidence of Roberts that he told Kelley that the Jefferson avenue and Pine street property belonged to Taaffe, and the Channing avenue and Chestnut street property belonged to Taaffe & Gay, yet it does not appear, either from his evidence or that of Roberts, that either of them communicated,to him prior to the transaction the fact that Roberts
A careful reading of all the evidence contained in the voluminous record in this case, of more than seven hundred pages, cannot fail to impress the mind of one, in the habit of analyzing and weighing human testimony, with the conviction, that while the idea of this fraudulent scheme of swindling the plaintiff and his partner out of their property probably originated in the mind of Dockery, and may have been first discussed and determined upon between him and Roberts, yet that early in the game it was communicated by Dockery to Kelley, and that all along there was a perfect understanding between them how Roberts in his relation to this property was to be worked to their profit, the lion’s share of which was to go to Kelley as the only one who •could raise any money, some of which was absolutely necessary in order to satisfy, and get rid of, Roberts. Whether this be a correct estimate of the weight of the evidence or not, and whether Kelley knew that Roberts had executed the prior deeds to his former employer, the plaintiff, or not, or whether Dockery communicated to him the fact that the property in Roberts’ name on the records really belonged to Taaffe & Gay, or not, this much can certainly be said, from the knowledge he
A synopsis of the evidence in this cause could not be given within anything like reasonable limits. After mature consideration, we find it sufficient to satisfy the-mind and conscience of the chancellor that the defendant was a knowing and willing party to the fraud and that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief given by the-decree of the trial court, which is accordingly affirmed. All concur. Barclay, J., concurs on the ground that there does not appear to be such a preponderance of' evidence against the finding by the trial judge on the-facts as would warrant a reversal of.it.