Ancona Realty Co. v. Frazier

41 S.W.2d 820, 328 Mo. 750, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 440
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 820 (Ancona Realty Co. v. Frazier) 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
Ancona Realty Co. v. Frazier, 41 S.W.2d 820, 328 Mo. 750, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 440 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*753 ATWOOD, J.

Ancona Realty Company, a corporation, brought suit against John Frazier, appellant herein, to establish title .to about 153 acres of land along the Missouri River in Holt County, Missouri. Its amended petition, upon which the case was tried, was filed March 8, 1927 (original petition filed January 27, 1927), and alleges that plaintiff is the owner in fee simple and in the legal possession of said land, consisting of three tracts, one containing 8.7 acres in the fractional southeast quarter of Section 19, Township 59, Range 38; another, containing 106.82 acres in the fractional southwest quarter of Section 20, said township and range;, and the other, containing about 38 acres in the fractional northwest quarter of Section 29, said township and range; and that defendant claims some interest therein adverse to plaintiff’s' claim the nature or character of which is unknown to plaintiff. Said petition also alleges title to said lands in plaintiff through Paul T. Frye by patent from Holt County dated March 15, 1920, and by adverse possession under statutes of limitations, and invokes the doctrines of estoppel *754 in pads, equitable estoppel and laches against defendant on matters therein pleaded. Said petition also alleges title in defendant by patent dated May 17, 1917, from Holt County to 63.63 acres of land immediately north of and adjacent to a part of plaintiff’s said lands.

Defendant’s answer contained a general denial, admissions that plaintiff is a corporation and that defendant claims an interest in said lands adverse to the interest of plaintiff, and allegations that he is in possession of said lands and has been in the open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession thereof for more than ten years next before the filing of this suit, and has paid taxes thereon ever since 1918, when said lands first became taxable; that “by a decree of this court affirmed by the Supreme Court'of this State in the ease of Hahn v. Dawson et al., rendered on the 15th day of June, 1896, he was adjudged to be the owner of a tract of land occupying the left bank of the Missouri River as it then bordered a portion of said land; that the tract of which he was decreed to be the owner and which was involved in the litigation referred to, occupied a position on the bank of the Missouri River as it then ran and to which a large portion of the land claimed by plaintiff in this action was afterwards made as accretion; that subsequent to said decree and on the 25th day of March, 1903, he purchased from Joshua Cole a tract of land lying immediately up the river from the tract awarded to him by the judgment aforesaid, and bordering said tract on the west and north; that he secured title to said tract from the said Joshua Cole by a quitclaim deed bearing date aforesaid and reeoi’ded in Book 81 at page 561, of the deed records of Holt County, Missouri; that the said two tracts of land after the purchase aforesaid from the said Joshua Cole constituted a single body of land, presenting a contiguous and unbroken front upon the Missouri River as it then ran and to which all of the lands claimed by the plaintiff in this1 action have been made by accretion and that all of the land described in plaintiff’s petition were made and formed to said two tracts of land owned by defendant by the gradual receding of the said Missouri River and by imperceptible and gradual accretion to plaintiff’s said land as herein described and that plaintiff is by virtue thereof the legal and absolute owner in fee simple of said lands.”

Plaintiff filed a reply containing general and specific denials of the allegations in defendant’s answer, and a reiteration and amplification of certain matters pleaded in its amended petition. Defendant filed replication admitting that he received a deed from Holt County to a tract of land containing 63.63 acres, and denying each and every other allegation contained in plaintiff’s reply.

*755 Tbe judgment was that plaintiff is the owner in fee simple absolute of the lands described in plaintiff’s petition; that defendant has no claim, right, title or interest, possessory or otherwise therein; that defendant be enjoined and restrained from prosecuting in any form any suit or action against plaintiff of or concerning said property; that plaintiff is entitled to have defendant ejected from said property, and that writ of restitution issue in favor of plaintiff and against defendant. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

The first point urged by appellant is: “ The action is at law, and it was error for the court to overrule defendant’s objection to the introduction of evidence and to deny to defendant a trial by jury.” Examination of the record discloses that counsel for defendant objected to the introduction in evidence of certain exhibits offered by plaintiff because “incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial; second, because the petition itself states no cause of action. It is not a suit in equity. There is no equity in the bill. This is not an equitable suit, and not triable as such.” Subsequently plantiff introduced other exhibits and evidence without objection. It does not appear that defendant ever requested that the ease'be tried to a jury. It follows that the point now made must be ruled against appellant.

Counsel for appellant next insist that defendant was the riparian owner to which the land in controversy accreted, and ^at aecre^on followed and is supported by the same title.

The evidence shows that about the year 1888 defendant went into actual possession of certain lands formed in the original lines of the Missouri River opposite lot 2 of the northwest quarter of Section 20, Township 59, Range 38, Holt County, Missouri, building a house and fences thereon, cultivating the same and exercising the usual rights of ownership with reference thereto. A part of this land was involved in the ejectment suit of Hahn v. Dawson et al., wherein judgment for defendants, including John Frazier, defendant herein, was affirmed by this court in bane June 15, 1896, and reported in 134 Mo. 581, 36 S. W. 233. In that ease the jury returned a verdict for defendants, evidently on a finding that the land in question was island formation and not accretion to the mainland. Plaintiff failed in the Hahn ease because her ownership was confined to mainland and as the island formation was not accretion thereto she was without title to dispossess defendants who, according to the opinion, were in the actual occupancy thereof as squatters. Of course this case was not determinative of defendants’ title. It was a possessory action only and left defendants where it found them, in possession of the land. In the instant case there is evidence *756 that defendant Frazier continued in possession of land including the thirty acres, more or less, involved in the Iiahn suit, and on May 17, 1917, purchased and acquired patent for 63.63 acres from Holt County which included the tract involved in the Hahn suit and about 33.63 acres, also of island formation, lying immediately east of it, on, a part of which Frazier had built his first house.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 820, 328 Mo. 750, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ancona-realty-co-v-frazier-mo-1931.