Frank v. Reuter
Frank v. Reuter
Opinion of the Court
This is a creditors’ bill to divest the title of a certain lot in the town' of Elsberry, Missouri, out of defendant, Mrs. R. H. Reuter, and vest the same in Herman H. Reuter, her husband, and John A. Sauer, and to subject the same to certain judgments of the plaintiffs against the firm of Sauer & Reuter.
The evidence shows, that the plaintiffs are judgment creditors of the firm of Sauer & Reuter, composed of the defendants, John A. Sauer and Herman H. Reuter.
The defendants are related to each other as follows: H. H. Reuter andR. H. Reuter are husband and wife; Mary Gerber is a sister of H. H. Reuter; H. H. Reuter is a son-in-law of the wife of John A. Sauer.
The defendants, Sauer & Reuter, were for some years in mercantile business in New Hope, Lincoln county. In 1880, they removed their business to Elsberry, on the line of the St. Louis, Keokuk & North Western Railway, purchased a lot, built a store-house thereon and sold goods until they were closed up by attachment in January, 1882. In August, 1881, they had on hand goods amounting to $5,000 at cost price.
The property in controversy in this suit belonged to Sauer & Reuter, and had been used by them as a store-house. It was attached by the creditors with the stock of goods. The judgments in the attachment suits were rendered in September, 1882, and the storehouse sold at an adjourned term in November following. At the sale, John Singleton bid the property off in the name of Mary Oerber, he having received instructions as to how to bid and where to get the money, from John A. Sauer. Singleton also bid off the dwelling house at the same time in the name of Mary Oerber.
• In less than a year from the date of these sales, to-wit: in August, 1883, Mary Oerber and husband
Soon after their failure in 1882, Sauer and Reuter ■ each engaged in other business requiring considerable sums of money, but had their business conducted in the name of some third person. Sauer traded in stock to a ■considerable extent with R. T. Elsberry, furnishing all •the money and had this business carried on in the name of defendant, Otis Baldwin. Reuter started and conducted for several years at Elsberry a boot and shoe store,, which was run in the name of Mary Grerber, but •of which he had absolute control and management, and which he finally closed out, receiving the entire proceeds with Mrs. Grerber’s consent.
All the deeds and. other transactions with Mary Grerber were prepared and attended to by Sauer and Reuter; as she expresses it, “they had everything fixed up for me” and “I signed without ashing any questions. ’ ’
The only question of fact involved in this record, was whether Mrs. Grerber bought and paid for this lot with her own money. If the lot was bought in and paid for by Sauer & Reuter, the decree of the circuit ■court must be affirmed.
There is only one exception properly saved to the evidence in the case, and that relates to the admission of the record of a deed of trust, that was shown not to be in the power of plaintiffs to produce, and of which they would not be the custodians, not being parties thereto. There was no error in the admission of the certified copy of the record, under this state of facts. Section 4861, Revised Statutes, 1889.
The only other contention of the appellants is that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the decree.
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