Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911

Kennedy's Administrator v. Duncan

Kennedy's Administrator v. Duncan
Missouri Court of Appeals · Decided May 2, 1911 · Caulfield, Nortoni, Reynolds
157 Mo. App. 212; 137 S.W. 299; 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 392

Kennedy's Administrator v. Duncan

Opinion of the Court

REYNOLDS, P. J.

— By her petition filed in the circuit court of Lincoln county, Mrs. Millie J. Kennedy, alleged that she was the widow of one Armstrong L. Kennedy, and that during the lifetime of her husband he was seized of an estate of inheritance in 80 acres of land in Lincoln county (describing it, and hereafter referred to as the acre tract or property) and that the land was sold under execution against her husband to one Perkins; that Perkins, The Farmers & Mechanics Bank, and others claiming under judgment or sheriff’s sales, conveyed it by warranty deed to one Morris; that Morris by Avarranty deed, conveyed it to defendant in 1904. Averring that she had never relinquished dower in the land and had made demand for assignment thereof of defendant, which had been refused, plaintiff prays judgment for $100 damages and $10 per month for rents and profits and that her dower interest in the land be estimated and computed at its present, worth. Other parties were also joined as defendants but the action was dismissed as to them.

The answer, denying the allegations of the petition, avers that at the time of the sale to Perkins, which was-in 1900, and for a long time prior thereto, plaintiff’s husband was the owner of three certain lots in the town of Olney in Lincoln county, one known as lot No. 49, on which was situated a dwelling house and other improvements belonging thereto and which then was, and for a long time prior thereto had been, occupied and enjoyed *216■by plaintiff’s husband and by plaintiff as their home; that they continued to use this Olney property as their homestead up to the time of the death of the husband and that since then plaintiff, as his widow, has used and occupied and enjoyed the Olney property as her homestead. It is further averred that this homestead property exceeds one-third in value of both the homestead property and the acre property and being the homestead ■of plaintiff and exceeding one-third in value of both of said pieces of property, plaintiff was not entitled to ■dower in the acre property. The only town lot finally in issue was lot 49, the two others not being considered.

A general denial was filed by way of reply.

The trial was before the court, a jury being waived. A deed, of date 1890, conveying the acre property from •one McCormick to plaintiff’s husband, the sheriff’s deed to Perkins, the deeds from Perkins and others to one Morris, and from Morris to defendant Duncan, the latter dated 1904, were in evidence. Plaintiff also introduced in evidence the record copy of ^ deed from plaintiff and her husband, of date March 1, 1899, conveying to M. J. Downing “and to her bodily heirs and if she shall die leaving no bodily heirs then to her nearest blood kin,” the acre property and also this lot No. 49 in the town •of Olney, that deed duly filed for record and recorded ■on October 5, 1899, in the recorder’s office of Lincoln •county.

There was no dispute as to the present possession ■of defendant of the 80 acres. The evidence was conflicting as to the value of the acre property as well as of lot 49 and as to the value of the rents and profits of •each of them. It is unnecessary to notice this evidence of values; the value arrived at and fixed by the trial ■court is sustained by sufficient evidence and is accepted by us as conclusive on that.

By way of an attack on the deed from plaintiff and her husband to Mrs. M. J. Downing, who was their •daughter, and who, it appears, is dead, leaving a child *217surviving her, defendant- offered in evidence a judgment of the circuit court of Pike county, setting aside this deed so far as it included the 80 acres alone. This judgment was entered in a suit by The Farmers & Mechanics Bank, a creditor of plaintiff’s husband, it being adjudged that the deed, so far as it purported to convey the 80 acres to Mrs Downing, was without any consideration and that the conveyance was fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff in that suit. We understand counsel to agree that this judgment did not include the town lot. Nor is there any evidence in the case that the town lot was included in the action. It was admitted that the determination in that case, that the conveyance was fraudulent as to the attacking creditor, rested on the fact that the deed to Mrs. Downing from her father and mother was without consideration. At this present trial defendant offered in evidence, in connection with the judgment in the hank case, depositions which had been taken and used, as we understand it, in that suit, the depositions being those of plaintiff and her husband. It appeared by these depositions that when they were taken both were living and making their home on this town lot 49. Plaintiff’s husband deposed that when he had made the deed to his daughter, she was then married, living about 20 miles from him, and had two children; that he did not know whether his daughter knew at the time that the deed to these pieces of property had been drawn up, but he had told her of them after he had made and acknowledged them; had filed the deed for record himself. It had remained in his house and in his possession until he sent it for record and he had not delivered it to his daughter until after filing it for record. When he told her he had made it, she said that it was-just what she had been looking for for a good while; that she had expected it for some time. His daughter-did not pay him anything for the land or the lot. When he conveyed this property to his daughter he did not have-enough to make her equal with his other children. When *218lie bought the place he had bought it for her and “it was generally known in town that it was M. J. Downing’s place.”

These depositions and the judgment of the Pike County Circuit Court when offered were objected to by plaintiff. The court, without at the time passing on the objections, said he would take the evidence subject to the objections. .He did not specifically pass on them, but from his judgment in this case he evidently disregarded all this testimony.

There was no dispute of the fact of possession by defendant. The Olney lot did not contain 5 acres.

Plaintiff asked no declarations of law. Defendant asked three, all of which were refused. The first was to the effect that if plaintiff’s husband had been in possession of lot 49 for 15 years or more before his death, and was a housekeeper or head of a family and resided and lived in a dwelling house on the lot, with his family, up to the time of his death, and that the lot did not exceed f1500 in value or five acres in extent, then the property was the homestead of plaintiff’s husband and upon his death it passed to plaintiff as her homestead, and if plaintiff has since the death of her husband continued to reside on the premises, then the property is the homestead of plaintiff. The second asked was to the effect that if this lot 49 is the homestead of plaintiff, derived from her husband in the manner above described, in determining what, if any, dower right she has in the farm land, the'value of each should be ascertained, etc., stating the law as to this matter as in section 6710, Revised Statutes 1909. The third instruction or declaration asked was in substance that although the court might find that plaintiff and her husband conveyed lot 49 to their daughter in 1899, if the court found from the evidence that the conveyance was fraudulent as to the creditors of the husband and if after making the deed the husband and the family continued to keep the premises as a homestead up to the time of his death and that *219since then plaintiff “has continued to occupy and use said premises as her home, then said property was the homestead of said A. L. Kennedy, and upon his death passed to the plaintiff as her homestead, and must he so regarded for the purpose of this cause notwithstanding said deed.” These declarations* of law were refused and the court rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff, finding her dower right as existing in the acre property and assessing its value at $304.60 and her damages at $22.24, a total of $326.84, which amount the court adjudged to be a special lien upon and against the acre property until it is discharged and paid off, ordering special execution to issue to enforce the lien. Filing a motion for new trial, which was overruled and exception saved, defendant duly perfected his appeal to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme 'Court determined that it was not a case “involving title to real estate,” hence, not within its constitutional jurisdiction. It accordingly transferred the cause to this court. The opinion of the Supreme Court will be found under the title Kennedy v. Duncan, 224 Mo. 661, 123 S. W. 856. We refer to that for a more particular recital of the pleadings and issues.

Pending the appeal plaintiff died; her administrator voluntarily entered his appearance and since the transfer of the case to this court, by written consent of the parties, the cause has been duly revived in the name of the administrator of the deceased plaintiff. '■

The matters of homestead and of rights in homesteads have been of frequent adjudication by the courts of our state, and of learned and voluminous discussion by text-writers. We have been referred by the learned counsel in this case to many authorities on the points they raise. We have also examined the matter to some extent ourselves, independent of these references. There are many decisions and much learning expended in determining when the right to the jjomestead attaches, but in all the cases and by all the textwriters, so far as we *220are advised, that question has invariably been adjudicated or discussed on the right of one claiming a homestead to assert that claim; on the endeavor of the claimant of the homestead to have the benefit of the homestead law. In none of them, or in any textbook have we found that claim discussed or adjudicated, where it was sought to force a homestead upon a party agáinst his contention or against his claim of homestead, and even against his own deed. That is what is attempted in this case. It is in evidence here that Kennedy and his wife, by a duly executed, acknowledged, delivered and recorded deed, conveyed this lot 19 to their daughter, the deed, in legal intendment, being a conveyance to her for life and the heirs of her body, and if she should “die leaving no bodily heirs, then to her nearest blood kin.” Whether the limitation over is valid need not be considered, for as we gather it, she left a child surviving her, so that it went, on her death, to that child in fee, and so far as the-evidence shows, the fee is in that child, its heirs or assigns. At any rate, this deed absolutely and entirely took the property out of the grantors.

Learned counsel for respondent argues that as in the action referred to by the bank this deed was held to have been void for want of consideration, that it failed as a deed to the town lot, although admittedly the judgment only bore on the acre property. We cannot concede this. It is true that on an attack by creditors, if the deed was without consideration and was attacked directly, it might have been set aside, but that was not done as to this lot 19. The fact that lot 19 was also in the deed, which purported to convey the acre tract, and that the deed was attacked only in so far as concerned' the acre tract and declared void as to that tract for lack of consideration and hence fraudulent as against the attacking creditor, by no possible argument or on no possible principle, could be held to settle the title of those claiming .under that deed to this lot 19. Lot 19 was not involved in that litigation. It might be that there was: *221a consideration for it and none for the 80 acres. Even ■admit that there was no consideration for lot 49, that would not render the deed a void instrument, but only voidable, and that could only be adjudicated on a direct attack by a proper party as to that lot. Even a voluntary. conveyance is not a void one. It can, moreover, be attacked only by creditors. [Clark v. Thias, 173 Mo. 628, 73 S. W. 616.] The grantor cannot impeach it for want of consideration alone — no fraud as to him in procuring it present. Nor can he have it set aside because of his own fraud. Hence plaintiff’s intestate and her husband were in no position whatever to attack the deed to their daughter even on the ground that they had made it fraudulently as to their credb tors or that it was a voluntary conveyance so far as they were concerned. But that is what defendant now seeks, in effect, to do for them. He is not a creditor, has no interest in the lot, nothing whatever to do with the transaction between the decedent, her husband and the daughter and is not concerned in it. He seeks to vest plaintiff with a title which she not only does not have, but cannot acquire by any act of her own, short of fraud on her, looking to the cancellation of her own deed.

At the very foundation of the right to a homestead ■claim, lies title. There are three elements absolutely ■essential to the existence of the right of homestead. The first is title; the second, intent to claim as a homestead; the third, occupation, although as to this latter, there are ■cases where the claim to a homestead has been recognized, when the right to it has been acquired, although ■during a period of time the party claiming it as his homestead, there has been no occupation in fact, the homesteader temporarily residing elsewhere. [See for illustration of this Bealey v. Blake, 153 Mo. 657, l. c. 674, 55 S. W. 288.] In this latter case, as in many others, it is held that abandonment is a matter of intent. [See Barton v. Walker, 165 Mo. 25, 65 S. W. 293, and other *222cases cited below.] No matter what the intent or the occupancy may be, however; title in the claimant is absolutely essential to sustain the claim of a homestead. [Farra v. Quigly, 57 Mo. 284; Shindler v. Givens, 63 Mo. 394; Tennent v. Pruitt, 94 Mo. 145, 7 S. W. 23.] It is immaterial whether title is in fee or for life; the owner must have title and have a home in the land before he can claim homestead. [Bemis v. Driscoll, 101 Mass. 421; Sharp v. Stewart, 185 Mo. 518, l. c. 528, 84 S. W. 963.] Our own Supreme Court has repeatedly held that title is absolutely essential. [Clark v. Thias, supra, l. c. 642 et seq.; Sharp v. Stewart, supra.] The right to homestead is purely of statutory creation. [State Bank of Eagle Grove v. Dougherty, 167 Mo. 1, l. c. 6, 66 S. W. 932.] As against creditors the right of homestead only attaches from the date of filing the deed. [Sec. 6711, Revised Statutes 1909.] This has been the law of our state from the enactment of the first homestead law in 1865, with the additional change made in 1887, which carried the right to homestead to the property when title arises by devise or descent. So strictly has this requirement of title and its record been construed, that it is held in Stinson v. Call, 163 Mo. 323, 63 S. W. 729, that the homesteader entering his land as a homestead under the laws of the United States, necessarily residing on it, occupying it as a home, cannot, under our law, claim homestead exemption for the tract so entered and patented to him, as against a creditor who was a creditor prior to the recording of the patent from the United States to the homesteader. Title and occupancy are both essential. [Barton v. Walker, supra; Rouse v. Caton, 168 Mo. 288, 67 S. W. 578.] It is true that in many cases, of which Peake v. Cameron, 102 Mo. 568, 15 S. W. 70, is an example, in which latter case Thompson on Homesteads is quoted, it is held that the lot being visibly occupied as a home is a sufficient and the usual assertion of a homestead right therein. But it is to be observed that in that case the occupant had title, and is the one *223who claimed homestead. While visible occupancy may be sufficient to establish the right of a party claiming a homestead, he also having title to the property, it is very clearly evident from consideration of Peake v. Cameron, as well as of all the cases, that the right to homestead is founded not only on title and occupancy, but on establishment of the intent; that is to say, occupancy with the intent to claim the homestead. This same intent is emphasized in St. Louis Brewing Ass’n. v. Howard, 150 Mo. 445, l. c. 451, 51 S. W. 1046. By the same, line of reasoning the fact of abandonment is a matter of intent. [Bealey v. Blake, supra; Barton v. Walker, supra.] Briefly, and to repeat, there must be title and occupancy as a homestead, as also the intent to claim it as a homestead. As we said in the outset, we are unable to adopt any theory by which a right to homestead can be imposed upon a party who, as in the case at bar, refuses to claim homestead. The claim of it as a homestead, no less than title and occupancy, fixes the right. [Finnegan v. Prindville, 83 Mo. 517; Sharp v. Stewart, supra.]

The evidence that was sought to be introduced by defendant in this.case as to the admissions contained in the depositions of defendant and her husband, tending to dispute the deed made to the daughter, was clearly in? admissible. They had conveyed by deed an estate in lands. They could not by their declarations — their oral testimony given under oath in the case, or made outside of the case, destroy by parol, by oral declarations, the estate created by deed. The very evil sought to be avoided by the Statute of Frauds would' be. revamped and that statute nullified if that was allowed. [Hall v. Small, 178 Mo. 629, l. c. 633, 77 S. W. 733.]

To hold that the deed to the daughter was fraudulent or void and so divest her and her heirs of title to this lot 49, she must not only have been a party to some action or suit attacking her title, in which the matter of title to that lot was in issue, but title to that very lot *224must have been there diverted out of ber by tbe judgment. Welch v. Mann, 193 Mo. 304, 92 S. W. 98, is a case illustrative of this. This is so plain that it needs no authority for its support. No such judgment in any such case is in evidence here.

In a recent decision by the Kansas City Court of Appeals (Snodgrass v. Copple, 131 Mo. App. 346, l. c. 351, 111 S. W. 845), Judge Johnson, who delivered the opinion, when treating of. the matter of homestead, has very forcibly said, that when the question is one of abandonment of a homestead, the key to the solution is the intention of the party. In the case at bar, we have not only no proof of intention in this plaintiff to claim this lot 49 as a homestead, but a positive, unequivocal disclaimer of homestead right in it. As we have seen, plaintiff was in no condition whatever to claim title to lot 49, because, for the purpose of this case, beyond all controversy the title of this lot 49 in this town of Olney is not in her and was not in her husband from the date of the execution, acknowledgment and delivery of the deed to the daughter. Nor could this defendant impose that title on her. Hence it was not possible, under the law, to take its value into consideration in measuring the value of the dower interest of plaintiff below in the 80 acre tract, in which, beyond dispute or doubt, she has her dower.

The declarations of law asked by defendant were properly refused; the first and third are not the law to be here applied; the second, while stating the statute, was unnecessary and inapplicable here.

The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

Nortoni and Caulfield, JJ., concur in the result.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.