Alluvial Realty Co. v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co.

229 S.W. 757, 287 Mo. 299, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 757 (Alluvial Realty Co. v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alluvial Realty Co. v. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co., 229 S.W. 757, 287 Mo. 299, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 158 (Mo. 1921).

Opinions

Statutory action to determine title to real estate instituted in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, October 19, 1917. The petition alleges in substance that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the south half of the north half of Section Eight, containing one hundred and sixty acres, and the south half of the north half of Section Nine, containing one hundred, fifty-five and 28/100 acres, all in Township Twenty, north, of Range Eleven, east, in Pemiscot County, Missouri; and that the defendant claims some title, interest, or estate therein, adverse to plaintiff. The prayer is conventional.

The answer consists of a plea in abatement and one in bar. In the first it is averred that the lands in question are not in Pemiscot County, but that they are situated in New Madrid County, and on that ground it challenges the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County to determine any question affecting their title. In the second, after a denial of the allegations of the petition as to the location of the lands and plaintiff's title thereto, it is averred that the lands in controversy are situated in New Madrid County and that the defendant is the sole and absolute owner of them. *Page 306

It was admitted that the title to the lands in controversy passed from the United States to the State of Missouri under the Act of Congress of September 28, 1850, commonly known as the Swamp Land Grant. The acts of the Legislature donating the lands and prescribing the boundaries of Pemiscot and other counties were read in evidence. Documentary evidence was introduced showing that on November 2, 1891, Pemiscot County issued to Louis Houck a patent to the lands in controversy; that on May 25, 1899, New Madrid County issued a like patent to John H. Himmelberger; and that severally through mesne conveyances the plaintiff acquired whatever title passed under the Pemiscot County patent, and the defendant whatever passed under that of New Madrid County.

Over the objections of plaintiff, defendant put in evidence what was designated as the "Government Tract Book of New Madrid County" and the New Madrid County Plat Book. The "Tract Book" purported to contain a list of all lands granted to the State of Missouri by the United States that were situated in New Madrid County and was duly certified August 24, 1869, by the Register of the United States Land Office at Ironton, Missouri. The Plat Book was certified May 19, 1875, by the Register of Lands for the State of Missouri. Both included the lands in controversy as being located in New Madrid County. The Plat Book portrayed the boundary line between New Madrid County and Pemiscot as following Portage Bay into Little River, running thence with the course of the stream southwest to the quarter section line between the north and south halves of Section Nine, Township Twenty, north, Range Twelve, east, and thence due west with the quarter section lines of the intervening sections to the center of Section Ten, Township Twenty, north, Range Ten, east. Defendant also read in evidence a patent from the State of Missouri to New Madrid County, purporting to convey to that county, among others, the lands in question. *Page 307

The act organizing Pemiscot County and prescribing its boundaries was passed February 9, 1851. [Laws 1851, p. 190.] The territory of the new county was therein described as follows: "All that portion of New Madrid County lying south of line beginning in the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi River, immediately opposite Major's mill race, and running thence along said mill race to the Cushion Lake byou; and thence along said Cushion Lake byou, to the Cushion Lake; thence along the middle of said Cushion Lake to a point opposite to the head of Collins Lake, or Portage Bay; thence along the middle of Collins Lake or Portage Bay to its junction with Little River; thencedue west to the eastern boundary of Dunklin County." In 1868 an act, amendatory of the general statutes then in force defining county boundaries, was passed. This act redefined and fixed the boundaries of twenty odd counties — Dunklin, Pemiscot and New Madrid, among others. It describes the line between New Madrid and Pemiscot in the same language as the Act of 1851, except as to the last call, which was made to read: "thence due west tothe middle of Section Ten (10), in Township Twenty (20),north, of Range Ten (10), east." [Laws 1868, pp. 20 and 21.] The only boundary of Pemiscot County affected by the amendment was that between it and Dunklin County on the west. Theretofore its west boundary (the east boundary of Dunklin County) had been a line extending due south from the intersection of the west edge of the Little River Swamp with parallel of latitude 36 degrees and 30 minutes north; it now became a line beginning at the middle of Section Ten, Township Twenty, north, of Range Ten, east, and running thence due south to the southern boundary of the State.

The boundaries of Pemiscot County as defined by the Act of 1868 have never been changed. [Sec. 9382, R.S. 1919.] The line in dispute begins at the junction of Portage Bay with Little River and runs "thence due west to the middle of Section Ten," etc. The two *Page 308 streams unite in Section Nine in Township Twenty, north, of Range Twelve, east. A certified copy of the plat of said Township Twenty, made June 1, 1852, under the direction of the Surveyor General of the United States from the field notes of the survey thereof, was offered in evidence by the plaintiff. The Surveyor General's certificate recites that the west boundary and the north boundary east of Little River and part of the subdivision lines were surveyed in 1848, and that the survey of the township was completed in January and February, 1851. The following is a reproduction of so much of the plat as shows the boundaries of Section Nine, the meanders of Little River and Portage Bay therein and the subdivision lines of the section:

[EDITORS' NOTE: PLAT IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.] *Page 309

From certified copies of plats obtained from the General Land Office, introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, it appears that the surveys of Township Twenty, north, of Range Eleven, east, and Township Twenty, north, of Range Ten, east, were completed in 1858 and in 1860, repectively; that is, the boundaries had been run and the townships sectionized.

The plat of Section Nine, Township Twenty, Range Twelve, east, herein before reproduced, discloses that the subdivision line between the north and south halves of the north half of the section passes between the points of intersection respectively of the north and south meander lines of Portage Bay with the east meander line of Little River. It further shows that the subdivision line just mentioned is a short distance south of the intersection of the middle line of Portage Bay with the east meander line of Little River.

The meander lines indicate that Little River at the place where Portage Bay flows into it is three-eighths of a mile wide. According to the oral testimony they correctly represent the river in that respect as it was at the time of the survey and as it continued to be until as late as 1898 — before the work of reclamation was actually begun in that territory. The west side of the river at that point, however, was nothing more than a brush covered swamp; the open water and current at normal stages were, generally speaking, on the east side. There was a high, well-defined bank along the lowland on the east side, and through an opening in this bank Portage Bay flowed in its course to join the river.

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 757, 287 Mo. 299, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alluvial-realty-co-v-himmelberger-harrison-lumber-co-mo-1921.