Avery v. McHugh

423 S.W.2d 17, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 580
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1967
DocketNo. 32732
StatusPublished

This text of 423 S.W.2d 17 (Avery v. McHugh) 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
Avery v. McHugh, 423 S.W.2d 17, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 580 (Mo. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, Commissioner.

Action for breach of warranty of seisin, in which plaintiffs had a verdict for $5,500. From a judgment thereon defendant appeals.

On June 11, 1964, the defendant McHugh, as trustee, executed a general warranty deed covering lands in Franklin County, naming the plaintiffs as grantees therein. A recitation of the complete description of the lands purportedly conveyed is not necessary; we set forth the part thereof which gives rise to the present controversy and italicize for emphasis:

* * * thence south along Qr.Qr. line to the North line of the County Road, thence along said road line and the North line of US. Highway 66 to the point of intersection with the West [18]*18lme of Eastridge drive and thence North ⅜ * ⅜ »

In September, 1965, the County Surveyor of Franklin County surveyed the locale for the plaintiffs, starting from recognized monuments, and following the above deed description, and prepared a plat thereof which became plaintiffs’ exhibit 6. His plat shows that the county road referred to in the deed runs in a generally northwest to southeast direction, while Highway 66 in this area runs in a generally west to east direction. He testified that the north line of the county road did not intersect with Highway 66 at any point on the tract and that the point on that north line of the county road which approached nearest to Highway 66 was still thirty-two feet north of the north right-of-way line of the highway.

A rough draft of the pertinent parts of the surveyor’s plat follows.

As shown by the plat, the entire area in question lies between Highway 66 and Interstate Highway 44.

Testimony shows that L. P. McHugh died on March 19, 1932, leaving a widow and five children.1 On February 16, 1933, the Missouri Pacific Railroad executed a quitclaim deed to a part of its original right-of-way described in the following words:

“All that part * * * lying north of the right of way of State Highway Route 66 T.R. through the east 700 feet of the SE14 of the NEJ4 of Section 9, Township 43 North, Range 2 East.”

In that deed the grantee was designated simply as “L.P.McHugh Estate”.

In December 1949 the trustee in bankruptcy of the Missouri Pacific conveyed to Charles and Birteel Slade another part of that railroad’s right-of-way which by its description amounted to a westward extension of that part of the right-of-way conveyed in 1933 to “L.P.McHugh Estate”; its eastern boundary was the line which lay “700 feet westwardly from and parallel with the east line of said Section 9.”

The successive conveyances from Missouri Pacific were thus of lands lying [19]*19north of Highway 66 and according to plaintiffs’ plat (Exhibit 6) and brief such tracts lay south of the county road.

On April 5, 1954, the widow of L. P. McHugh by general warranty deed conveyed certain lands to James B. McHugh “or” Joseph D. McHugh, trustees2, and on the same date the five children of L. P. Mc-Hugh, each describing himself as a joint tenant and not a tenant in common, executed an instrument entitled “Trust Agreement”. In the widow’s deed and the Trust Agreement the lands described are identical. While it is doubtful that the Trust Agreement created a trust, it is clear that it conferred on "James B. McHugh or Joseph D. McHugh as trustees” the broadest of agency powers to sell, convey or lease any of the described real estate.3 In the widow’s deed and in the trust agreement, that part of the land description, which is significant for present purposes follows:

“Beginning at the Northeast corner of said Section 9; run thence West on section line 20.15 chains to ⅛ ¼ corner; thence South 19.68 chains to the County Road; thence along said road, South 69½ degrees East 8.70 chains; thence South 79½ degrees East 7.58 chains; thence North 88½ degrees East 4.54 chains to the section line-, thence North 24.15 chains to the place of beginning,” (Our emphasis.)

Plaintiffs’ evidence thus discloses, inter alia, the existence of the following tracts of relevant McHugh land:

1.That described in the Trust Agreement which was bounded on the south by the county road. No question has been raised as to the capacity of the Trustee to exercise the power to sell and convey given by the Trust Agreement.

2. All that part of the original Missouri Pacific right of way lying north of Highway 66 and south of the county road through the east 700 feet of the SE14 of the NEJ4 of Section 9.

There was no evidence as to whether or not the “county road” was a dedicated road. There are slight differences of courses and distances between the road as delineated in the trust agreement and that shown on the surveyor’s plat. However there was no contention that the location of the county road as shown on that plat was not the location of the county road on the date of the deed from defendant,— June 11, 1964.

Before proceeding to further consideration of the evidence, we call attention to the mild rebuke administered by the Supreme Court in Hamburg Realty Company v. Woods, 327 S.W.2d 138, 141:

“ * * * In testifying as to locations, courses and distances shown on the maps and photographs, the witnesses were permitted, with some gratifying exceptions, to designate them by pointing to the exhibits and saying ‘here’, ‘from here to here’, ‘then up (or ‘down’ or ‘this way’) to here’, etc., few of which designations are shown in the record or marked on the exihibits. While it appears that the trial judge was able to follow the indications made by the witnesses, it is only by tedious and time-consuming study of the exhibits can the appellate court interpret such testimony with any degree of certainty and very considerable portions of it are wholly meaningless to a reviewing court. We [20]*20set forth that portion of the evidence that can be interpreted by reference to the exhibits, realizing that much of it will be without meaning to the reader who does not have before him each of the exhibits as the testimony of each of the witnesses given in relation thereto is considered.” (Our emphasis.)

In our present case much more vigorous criticism might well be directed to like uncertainties produced by the manner in which witnesses testified. The record abounds in illustrations of such uncertainties which are emphasized by the lack of any effort by the respective counsel to make the written record resolve the dubieties of the spoken words. Some examples are set out in the footnote.4

After the execution of the instruments of April 5, 1954, the named trustee had full power to alienate land designated above as tract 1, which lay to the north of the county road. However the land over which the trustee was given a power of disposition by the Trust Agreement did not include the tract acquired in 1933 and designated above as 2.5

Plaintiff’s evidence shows that defendant listed real estate for sale with a Mr. Dailey, a realtor of Pacific, Missouri. At the southeast corner of the tract covered by the trust agreement a large sign, about thirty feet long and five feet high, carried this legend in large letters: “13 acres commercial.

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Related

Hamburg Realty Company v. Woods
327 S.W.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
423 S.W.2d 17, 1967 Mo. App. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-mchugh-moctapp-1967.