31 Mo. 98 | Mo. | 1860
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought by the plaintiff to recover the possession of a lot of ground in St. Louis, and to set aside certain deeds alleged to be fraudulent. Valentine Finck and others, as securities for Jacob Mueller, admi dstrator of the estate of Catharine Mueller, deceased, executed to the State of Missouri a bond in the penalty of thirteen thousand dollars, conditioned in pursuance to law. After the execution of the bond, and before a breach of the condition thereof,
There was no oral evidence in the case, and the court, rejecting all the instructions asked by both parties, rendered a judgment for the defendant.
The suit, out of which this action has arisen, is the first instance that has fallen under our observation in which an action has been brought on the bond of the ancestor against his heir. Under the common law system of administering descendants’ estates, this was no uncommon thing. But our mode of administration is so different from that prevailing at the common law, that an action of debt on a bond against the heir can not be maintained, if at all, but under peculiar circumstances. The provisions in our code of laws, which seem to contemplate the existence of the right to maintain such an action, were taken through inadvertence from the laws of states whose system of administration conformed more nearly to the common law. These observations are
There was something said about fraud in the conveyances made to those under whom the defendant claims. The petition alleged that the conveyances were made without any consideration, and with an intent to defraud the plaintiff. The defendant denied that the deeds were made with any such intent, and insisted that they were valid and operative against the plaintiff. The plaintiff offered no evidence in support of the allegations of his petition in relation to fraud
Affirmed.
[The plaintiff filed a motion for a rehearing on the ground that he was taken by surprise by the decision, inasmuch as it was the understanding of the counsel that the considerations mentioned in the deeds from Johanna Binck to Joseph Brohammer and from the latter to Lorenz Brohammer had never been paid, and that the charges of the petition in this matter were not specially denied in the answer because they could not be denied with truth, and that the answer was only designed to deny the fraudulent intent of the acts. The court, in overruling this motion, gave the following opinion:]
delivered the opinion of the court.
Even taking the matter as made by the petition for a re' hearing, that the consideration of the deed was the point in issue, yet we do not see that the case is helped. If the deed was voluntary, it does not follow that it was fraudulent in law. The judgment was a general one. It does not appear that the defendant was in embarrassed circumstances, or that he had not other property sufficient to satisfy the execution. None of these facts are stated in the case.
When a party is endeavoring to obtain an estate worth not less than nine thousand dollars for the sum of two hundred
Motion for rehearing overruled.