Atkinson v. Taylor

34 Mo. App. 442, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 104
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 Mo. App. 442 (Atkinson v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkinson v. Taylor, 34 Mo. App. 442, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 104 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Ellison, J.

This is an action to recover the sum of five hundred dollars received by defendant from plaintiff on a ^contract for the purchase of the south forty-eight feet of lot 483, block 36, McGee’s addition to the City of Kansas.

A jury being waived the cause was tried by the court and a j udgment given for defendant.

It appears that on February 26, 1886, a contract was entered into by the terms of which defendant sold and agreed to convey to plaintiff “by good and sufficient title,” a lot in McGee’s addition to Kansas City for the purchase price of sixteen thousand dollars. A deposit of five hundred dollars was paid. It was provided that the sale should be closed, on or before March 27, 1886.

In compliance with the contract, an abstract was delivered to plaintiff on the next day, according to defendant’s testimony, or sometime between the first and the middle of March according to plaintiff’s version.

About March fifteenth or twentieth, plaintiff turned over the abstract to his attorney, who reported that the release of her dower interest by Mrs. McGee, in a deed dated December 20, 1853, was defective.

[447]*447This was a general warranty deed in which M. W. McGee (who was Mrs. McGee’s husband) was named as the grantor. Again named as conveying “all the estate, title and interest oí the said M. W. McGee,” etc., and also again named in the special covenants as “the said M. W. McGee for his heirs, executors,” etc.

The only place where Mrs. McGee is named, is in the testimonium, clause which omits the name of M. W. McGee and is as follows :

“In witness whereof, the said............together with his wife who hereby releases her right and expectancy of dower in the said premises have hereunto set their hand and seal this twentieth day of December, in the year of our Lord, one thousand and eight hundred and fifty-three.

“Mobillon W. McGee, (seal)

“MartE. McGee, (seal.)”

The deed was duly executed and acknowledged by both husband and wife. Defendant declined to admit that the objection made was valid, and demanded a compliance with the contract on March 27, and tendered a proper warranty deed from himself and wife.

The plaintiff refused to accept this deed and demanded a further quitclaim deed from the McGees. The evidence tended to show that without conceding the necessity of such a deed, but insisting that his title was good, and simply to humor what he conceived to be merely a whim on the plaintiff’s part, the defendant verbally agreed that he would try to get the desired quitclaim. The McGees resided near Los Angeles, California, and it was thought that the deed could be returned from there within ten days. The parties thereupon added to the contract a clause extending the same to April 6, 1886. The McGee quitclaim did not arrive until April 8, 1886, on which day it was tendered to the plaintiff, who refused to accept the same, but claimed that the contract had been broken by defendant and brought this suit to recover his deposit.

[448]*448At plaintiff’s request, the court declared that if ten days was the limit agreed on for procuring the McGee quitclaim deed, “and time in this respect was intended to be made the essence of the contract as extended, and defendant did not procure and tender said quitclaim deed within that time, then plaintiff had a right to recover,” etc. The question whether this contract for a conveyance of the property was put an end to, by defendant’s failure to procure and tender the quitclaim deed within the ten days limited therefor, i. e., whether time was of the essence of the contract, was, at plaintiff ’ s request, submitted by the instruction quoted, as a question of intention of the parties, and the trial court must have found, under the evidence, that it was not so intended. If this should be conceded to be error on the part of the court, it was invited by the plaintiff and we will not, therefore, listen to his complaint here in that respect. Holmes v. Braidwood, 82 Mo. 610, 615.

One of the principal questions in the case is, whether Mrs. McGee released her dower in the property, by joining with her husband, in the manner stated, in the deed to which I have referred. Mrs. McGee’s name does not appear in the granting clause, and, from this, it is contended she has yet dower in the premises. Indeed, her name does not appear in any other part of the instrument than that above indicated, and the question is, has she, released her dower ? The very question is, partially at least, its own answer. In speaking of dower, the invariable inquiry is, not whether the wife has granted it, but has she released it. Now a grant is one thing and a lease is quite a different thing, both in technics and law. Dower, become consummate, yet unassigned, is not the subject of a grant, but is of a release. By the much greater reason it is not the subject of a grant when not consummate by the death of the husband. It is then merely an inchoate right, a contingency. While the husband lives it is only a right in legal contemplation, [449]*449depending upon the good conduct of the wife and the-death of the husband. Until his death the right is “shadowy and fictitious” and may never become-vested.

It is said in Durrett v. Piper, 58 Mo. 544, to be such a “ possibility which maybe released, but cannot be-the subject of a grant or assignment.” But we are not left to depend alone upon the reason of the matter. The question has been before other courts. In Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Noland et al., 97 Ind. 217, the wife’s name-appeared only in the attestation clause of the deed, which was as follows: “In witness whereof the said. James French and Elizabeth French, his wife, who hereby relinquishes her dower-in said premises, — have hereunto set their hands and seals, this thirteenth day of December, 1854.” This was held a sufficient release of dower. So in Davis v. Bartholomew, 3 Ind. 485, the only mention or act of the wife appeared in the following, at the close of the deed : “In witness whereof, the said Jeremiah Bartholomew and Rebecca, his wife, who hereby relinquishes her right of dower in the above premises, have hereunto set their hands, date above written.” And it was held to be a good release.

In Meyer v. Gossett, 38 Ark. 377, the wife’s name only appeared in the testimonium clause as follows: “And, I, Elizabeth F. Gossett, wife of said John Gossett, for the consideration aforesaid, do hereby release and relinquish unto said Robert B. Tunstall, trustee, all my right or claim of dower in, and to, said lands.” And it was adjudged to be a good release of dower.

The same ruling was make in the case of Frost v. Deering, 21 Maine, 156, where the closing words of the deed, just preceding the date and signatures, were: “ In witness whereof I, the said Caleb Lassell, junior, and Susan, wife of said Caleb Lassell, in token that she [450]*450relinquishes her right to dower in the premises, have hereunto set our hands and seals, this,” etc.

In Dennison v. Foster, 9 Ohio, 127, the court held it to be a proper release of dower, where “No mention of the wives is made in the granting part or in the covenants ; but in the testatum clause the grantors, together with their wives (each of whom relinquishes her right of dower), set their names and seals,” etc. To the same effect are the cases of Stearns v. Swift, 8 Pick. 532; Learned v. Cutler,

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Related

Kling v. A. H. Greef Realty Co.
148 S.W. 203 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
34 Mo. App. 442, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkinson-v-taylor-moctapp-1889.