Benoist v. Rothschild

46 S.W. 1081, 145 Mo. 399, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 6, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 1081 (Benoist v. Rothschild) 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
Benoist v. Rothschild, 46 S.W. 1081, 145 Mo. 399, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 95 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Brace, P. J.

This is a proceeding in partition in which the plaintiffs as heirs at law of James Christy claimed title to an undivided half of a lot of land in the county of St. Louis, and the defendants each claimed adversely to the other the other undivided half thereof.

The defendants made no claim to the share of the plaintiffs, and by consent that share was adjudged to the plaintiffs, leaving the issue between the defendants as to the other undivided half to be determined. Upon the trial of that issue before the court, a jury having been waived, the finding and judgment was for the defendant Rothschild, and the defendant Thomas appealed.

It appears from the evidence that in the year 1.866 James Christy and Thomas Ryan became seized in fee simple as tenants in common of the premises; that on the twenty second of November, 1875, a judgment was rendered in the circuit court of St. Louis county, which became a lien on Ryan’s interest in said land in favor of the administrator of said Christy and others, against said Ryan, for the sum of $11,626.83; -that on the nineteenth of May, 1876, the said Ryan, by his deed of that date, in which his wife joined, conveyed his undivided half of the premises, together with ten other parcels of land, to John E. Gibbons, the habendum clause of the deed being as follows: “To have and to hold the, same, together with all rights, privileges,- easements, appurtenances, and hereditaments to the same belonging unto the said party of the second part, his heirs and assigns forever; and the said Thomas Ryan, for himself, his heirs, executors and administrators, covenants to and with said Gibbons that he and they shall and will, with the exceptions hereinafter made and mentioned, warrant and defend the title to the premises conveyed unto him, the said John E. Gibbons, his heirs, executors, administrators [405]*405■and assigns against the lawful claims and demands of all and every person or persons whosoever, lawfully claiming the same, which exceptions are three in number and are: First, judgments against said Thomas Ryan in the courts of St. Louis county and in favor respectively of the legal representatives of James Christy and Samuel M. McCarty; second, certain mortgages and deeds of trust by said Ryan and wife, executed and already duly recorded, subsisting liens upon some or all of the property hereby conveyed, and of which said Gibbons is fully advised by the examination of the title he has made; third, taxes assessed last year, but payable during this year. The amount of all which liens, taxes and hypothecations have been computed between the parties hereto as part of the consideration of this deed, and the said GibbQns has purchased the property hereby conveyed for said sum of twenty-eight thousand dollars in addition to and exclusive of the sum necessary for the hypothecations.” On the twenty-sixth of June, 1877, the said Gibbons by his deed of that date conveyed the premises to Thomas J. Smith. The conveyances to Gibbons and Smith were in trust for the Butchers & Drovers Bank, for whose benefit the title thus acquired by them was held. On the thirteenth of January, 1880, the sheriff by his deed of that date duly executed and delivered in pursuance of a sale made by him on the twenty-fourth of November, 1879, bn an execution issued on the aforesaid judgment on the thirteenth of October, 1879, conveyed the premises to the appellant Kate F. Thomas.

On the twenty-first of August, 1880, Thomas J. Smith, and the Butchers & Drovers Bank, by their deed of that date, conveyed the premises to J. W. Davitt, whose title the respondent Rothschild acquired on the twenty-seventh of July, 1888, by mesne con[406]*406veyances. The evidence further tends to prove that in the year 1867, when the premises were being held, by James Christy and Thomas Ryan, as tenants in common, Mrs. Mary English went into the actual possession of the same under an arrangement with Ryan that she should clear up and fence the same and in consideration thereof should have the use and occupancy of the premises for an indefinite period. That Mrs. English under this arrangement continued in the actual possession of the premises until the day after the sheriff’s sale aforesaid. ■ That on that day in the presence of his daughter, Mrs. Thomas the appellant, Ryan told Mrs. English that 'he no longer had any .interest in the premises, but that she could thereafter continue in possession of the same as the tenant of his daughter by paying the taxes on the property, for her. That about a year afterward she made a similar arrangment with Mr. Chambers, the president of the bank, and Mr. Davitt by which she was to continue in possession by paying the taxes on the premises for Mr. Davitt. Mrs. English seems to have been under the impression that the whole interest of the owner had been sold and that Mrs. Thomas had purchased one undivided half interest, and some one to whom Chambers, and then Davitt, and then Rothschild, succeeded, had purchased the other undivided half, and thus she continued in possession, paying as she understood it, one half of the taxes on account of the Thomas interest and one half on account of the Davitt-Rothschild interest, until some time prior to March the first, 1889, when she accepted a lease from Rothschild for the west half of the premises for one year from that date, at a rental of $65 per annum, and since the latter date continued in possession paying the taxes for Mrs. Thomas, and the rental aforesaid to Rothschild, and was so in possession at the date of the institution of [407]*407this suit, and the filing of defendants answers therein. The suit was instituted on the fourteenth of February, 1891. The answer of Eothsehild was filed on the thirteenth of May, 1891, and the third amended answer of Mrs. Thomas was filed on the sixth of October, 1891, on which issue was on the same day joined by reply of Eothsehild. The issue was tried and went to judgment in favor of Eothsehild from which judgment Mrs. Thomas appealed to this court, where the judgment was reversed (May 14, 1894) and the cause remanded for new trial, 121 Mo. 660. After the case was remanded Mrs. Thomas filed a fourth amended answer in which, after putting in issue Eothschild’s title and claiming title by adverse possession, she set up an equitable title and upon the issue joined in that answer the case was tried which resulted in the present judgment.

1. That the respondent Eothsehild has acquired Eyan’s legal title to the premises, unless that title was divested by the sale and sheriff’s deed made in pursuance thereof as aforesaid is conceded, and it appearing that the execution by virtue of which that sale was made and the deed executed, was not issued until more than three years after the judgment was rendered, it must also be conceded that Eyan’s title was not thereby divested, and that the respondent Thomas failed to acquire title by that deed. Christy v. McKee, 94 Mo. 241. This proposition is not disputed, appellant’s first contention being that upon the facts stated she acquired title by adverse possession; the adverse possession being the possession of Mrs. English, which appellant claims as her possession by virtue of the attornment to her of Mrs. English after ,the sheriff’s sale, so that the main question to be decided on this contention is, whether or not Mrs. English’s possession was adverse to the respondent and his grantors.

[408]*4082. The argument, in brief, in support of this contention, is that Mrs. English was in possession on the day the Gibbons deed was made as the tenant of Thomas Ryan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 1081, 145 Mo. 399, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benoist-v-rothschild-mo-1898.