Anderson v. Sutton

243 S.W. 643, 295 Mo. 195, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 9, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 643 (Anderson v. Sutton) 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
Anderson v. Sutton, 243 S.W. 643, 295 Mo. 195, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 110 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*199 approximately 320 acres of land in Sections 21, 22, 27 and 28, Township 46, Range 13, Boone County, Missouri.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is the owner of said land in fee and that defendant claims adversely .thereto. The answer denies the ownership of plaintiff, avers that defendant is the owner in fee, and alleges that he is in possession.

The cause was tried by the court, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiff. No instructions were asked or given, and the court made no findings of fact. From the adverse judgment rendered, defendant has appealed.

The respective contentions can best he understood by reference to plaintiff’s Exhibits “A” and “D” and defenadnt’s Exhibit 6, which are found on pages 200, 201, and 202, following.

As will be observed, plaintiff’s exhibit “A” is a Government survey made in October, 1916. Plaintiff’s Exhibit D ” was taken as to topography mainly from a survey of 1879, and as to shore line from a survey of 1890. Defendant’s Exhibit 6 was constructed by P. S. Quinn, County Surveyor of Boone County. Pie testified that he made the survey therefor in April, 1895, taking notes “from the original Government notes on file here.” The land in controversy comprises part of the 110-acre tract and the 262-acre tract shown in the lower left hand corner of defendant’s Exhibit 6.

Plaintiff claims by virtue of accretion to the shore line of lands purchased by him from one John Girard in 1896. Defendant rests his claim upon deeds from Boone County and from one Conley and wife, both executed in 1912.

It is admitted that plaintiff owns all that part of New Madrid Survey No. 97 which lies north and east of what is designated in the testimony as the slough or creek. (See defendant’s Exhibit 6, tract marked “Anderson.”) Subsequent to 1817 an island, commonly known as “ Johnson’s Island,” also designated on some of the Govern *203 ment surveys as “One Thousand Island,” formed in sections 9,16 and 21. A number of small bars and islands united to form this island, among them being islands 33, 34 and 40 shown at the top of defendant’s exhibit 6. (Also see plaintiff’s Exhibit “D.”) Some time in the ’80s another island, sometimes referred to as Wright’s Island and sometimes as Edward’s Island, was formed to the west and south of Johnson’s Island. (See defendant’s Exhibit 6, also plaintiff’s Exhibit “D.”) This island was surveyed by Quinn, the county surveyor, in 1895. The, county court sold the northern part of this land, to E. L>. Johnson, the middle portion to EL T. Wright and the southern portion to P. Edwards. (See defendant’s exhibit 6). About the year 1883 or 1884 the Missouri River cut into what is designated oii defendant’s exhibit 6 as “Bonne Femme Creek,” at a point some hundred yards or somewhat less than a quarter of a mile north of the northern line of land. At that point the Avaters of the creek thereafter emptied directly into the river, departing from the old channel, and from thence onward the waters of the river and creek mingled. Defendant claims that the confluent' waters of the river and creek washed away all of plaintiff’s land which lay west of the old bed of Bonne Femme Creek.. According* to the witness Girard, who Avas one of the original owners of plainland (having* purchased the same in 1883 and having lived thereon since 1877), all' of plaintiff’s land was not washed away, but a small triangular tract was left untouched. The witness Cauthorn spoke of this tract as a high bar of five acres lying “west of the old creek bed.” As we gather from the argument and briefs, it is the contention of plaintiff that the river reached its most eastern shore line about the year 1884, that it then receded to the west and refilled the entire eastern shore line, causing accretions to form to the triangular tract which was not washed away and adding land to the shore line all along plaintiff’s front, as well as to the west and south ends of the so-called 'Wright’s or Edward’s Island. It is the *204 contention of defendant that all of New Madrid Survey No. 97 to the west and south of what is designated on defendant’s exhibit 6 as the “high hank” was carried away by the river, that after a few years, bars began to form in the river within the former boundaries of the said survey, and that as these bars grew and spread they pushed the main channel of the river west and south. The real •question then is whether the newly formed land to the west and south of, the so-called slough or old creek bed, within the former boundaries of New Madrid Survey No. 97, is an accretion to plaintiff’s land lying north and east • of the slough or creek. This question must be determined in the light of the evidence, bearing in mind the rule that substantial evidence is sufficient to support the judgment rendered.

I. Defendant contends that the trial court erred “in determining that all of the land in controversy was accretion to respondent’s high bank or main shore to the eastward of the slough or creek.” Stating his claim of error differently, defendant insists that

*205 been able to cross it going from Anderson’s land would be wben it was frozen up. ’ ’

P. S. Quinn, testifying for defendant, stated that when he surveyed Wright’s or Edward’s Island in 1895, the slough or “big arm of the river” was 825 feet across and ten to twelve feet deep. On cross-examination he testified:

“Q. How did you get across to measure the distance? A. There was no water in it at that time.
“Q. Well, you knew what an island is at the time you surveyed it? A. Yes, was.
“Q.. What made you call it an island, was it permanently surrounded with water? A. No, sir, not then.
“Q. You say you surveyed right across on the line, which I will have you mark as line‘C’? A. All right
“Q. And you also surveyed across what is marked the ‘Big Slough,’ ‘D’; there was no water in it there, you say? A. No water at that time.”

P. F. Edwards testified that when he acquired his first tract of land in 1890 “there was water running through there (the slough) all the time. I had me a flat boat made and I crossed my work stock in this boat, for farming.” On cross-examination witness stated that Johnson Island had not been an island for thirty years; that the land he owns is below Johnson Island, with another tract intervening; that there was no water between his land and the intervening tract; that the land he owns “formed out in the river and gradually made until it came back to this land, the high land.”

“Q. Now I will ask you if it isn’t true that it was building down in here at the same time it was building along here, all along Anderson’s land at the same time? A. Yes, sir, it was.”

J. D. Calvin stated that he crossed the slough in 1904 or 1905 in a boat. “Mr. Edwards had a boat there and we crossed our horses with that.” On cross-examination witness stated that the slough was skirted on both sides with timber.

*206 “Q. That large timber extends down just across the line, on Anderson’s land? A. I don’t know how far it goes.

“Q.

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Related

Sutton v. Anderson
31 S.W.2d 1026 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Hecker v. Bleish
3 S.W.2d 1008 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)
Anderson v. Sutton
254 S.W. 854 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 643, 295 Mo. 195, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-sutton-mo-1922.