Missouri common law has long held that a constructive trust should be imposed only in cases of fraud or other wrongful conduct. The Missouri Court of Appeals overruled that precedent in Brown v. Brown, holding that a mere mistake is a sufficient ground for imposing a constructive trust. With this decision, the court considerably expanded the circumstances under which a plaintiff may be entitled to this equitable remedy. While the essential holding of Brown is a positive step for Missouri case law, the decision failed to distinguish between a mistaken conveyance that is purely gratuitous and one that is supported by consideration. This Note explains why such a distinction is necessary and argues that the broad holding in Brown should be li...
The recent case of Gray v. Ward calls attention to the problems which arise in the application of th...
This note examines the decision in Norman v. Wright in light of Sections 538.230 and 537.060 of the ...
Few challenges to a judicial determination are as disruptive as a criminal defendant’s allegation of...
Missouri common law has long held that a constructive trust should be imposed only in cases of fraud...
Plaintiff, who had courted defendant for six years and had proposed marriage, conveyed a lot and hou...
The complaint alleged that testatrix who had executed a will leaving her whole estate to defendants ...
Two heirs at law, by physical force or by creating a disturbance, prevented decedent from executing ...
In order to increase borrowing capacity the husband conveyed several parcels of land to his wife so ...
In Neal v. Bryant: plaintiff brought a statutory action to determine and quiet title to a parcel of ...
As the collateral consequences of court judgments gain increased recognition, courts in many states ...
A mother, desiring to divide real property among five children, conveyed two of five shares by separ...
Though the learning surrounding the subject of conditions has lost some of its importance because of...
When the Missouri Legislature adopted Missouri Revised Statute section 456.590.2, empowering courts ...
Plaintiff, an illiterate sharecropper, advanced money to purchase an eighty acre farm, record title ...
Consider two cases. In the first case, you represent the children of a woman who was intentionally a...
The recent case of Gray v. Ward calls attention to the problems which arise in the application of th...
This note examines the decision in Norman v. Wright in light of Sections 538.230 and 537.060 of the ...
Few challenges to a judicial determination are as disruptive as a criminal defendant’s allegation of...
Missouri common law has long held that a constructive trust should be imposed only in cases of fraud...
Plaintiff, who had courted defendant for six years and had proposed marriage, conveyed a lot and hou...
The complaint alleged that testatrix who had executed a will leaving her whole estate to defendants ...
Two heirs at law, by physical force or by creating a disturbance, prevented decedent from executing ...
In order to increase borrowing capacity the husband conveyed several parcels of land to his wife so ...
In Neal v. Bryant: plaintiff brought a statutory action to determine and quiet title to a parcel of ...
As the collateral consequences of court judgments gain increased recognition, courts in many states ...
A mother, desiring to divide real property among five children, conveyed two of five shares by separ...
Though the learning surrounding the subject of conditions has lost some of its importance because of...
When the Missouri Legislature adopted Missouri Revised Statute section 456.590.2, empowering courts ...
Plaintiff, an illiterate sharecropper, advanced money to purchase an eighty acre farm, record title ...
Consider two cases. In the first case, you represent the children of a woman who was intentionally a...
The recent case of Gray v. Ward calls attention to the problems which arise in the application of th...
This note examines the decision in Norman v. Wright in light of Sections 538.230 and 537.060 of the ...
Few challenges to a judicial determination are as disruptive as a criminal defendant’s allegation of...