Brook v. Barker

228 S.W. 805, 287 Mo. 13, 14 A.L.R. 347, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 7, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 805 (Brook v. Barker) 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
Brook v. Barker, 228 S.W. 805, 287 Mo. 13, 14 A.L.R. 347, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 134 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

DAYID E. BLAIR, J.

The action is ejectment for possession of the west half of Lots Seven and Eight in Block Four in the original town, now city, of Memphis, in Scotland County, and for damages and for fixing the value of monthly rents and profits.

The answer contained a general denial, and set up defendant’s claim of title to the premises in controversy and alleged a certain agreement between respondent (plaintiff below) and his wife relating .to the property, purporting to authorize the conveyance of said property by her free of any claim by the respondent. The reply denied the new matter of the answer and alleged that the *16 respondent was entitled to an estate by the curtesy in said property; that respondent was sixty-four years old when the petition was filed and entitled to the use of the property during his life or expectancy, and prayed the court to determine his interest in the property and require appellants to pay a gross sum in lieu thereof, as provided by Section 8499, Revised Statutes 1909.

Trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for appellants (defendants below). The trial court had struck out all testimony in a deposition of the appellants relating to the alleged agreement between respondent and his wife that she could convey her separate property. There was no other evidence on that issue. Upon motion a new trial was granted on the sole ground that the verdict is unsupported by any evidence. The appeal is from the order granting a new trial.

It is admitted that one John M. Nichols is the common source of title. On May 28, 190*3, he conveyed the property in question to Alvira Brook, the wife of respondent, and she conveyed to Joseph P. Sill on October 28, 1909, while said Alvira was the wife of respondent. Sill conveyed to appellant Sylvester Barker on April 25,1912. Appellant Annie E. Barker is the wife of Sylvester Barker. At the time the petition was filed and at the trial appellants were in possession of the property, claiming title. Respondent did not join in his wife’s deed to Sill. A child was born alive of the marriage between respondent and his wife. Alvira Brook died May 16, 1917, and this suit was begun on September 15, 1917.

The<funds for the purchase of the property in question were derived from the estate of Alvira Brook’s deceased father. The evidence tends to show that at the time Alvira Brook purchased the property in May, 1903, she and respondent had ceased to live together as man and wife. The testimony in the deposition which was stricken out by the court tended to. show an agreement that respondent and his wife should each own and control their individual property, and that respondent thereafter sold his farm and Alvira joined in the deed, and that when *17 she conveyed the property in question to Sill in 1909 respondent, in violation of his alleged agreement, refused to join in the deed. This deed appears in full in-the record and recites “that Alvira Brook and her husband Thomas Brook, . . . grant, bargain, sell, convey and confirm mito Joseph P. Sill, ...” and it is signed and acknowledged only by Alvira Brook, without recital as to whether she was married or single.

After Alvira Brook conveyed the property to Sill valuable improvements were made thereon. There is some evidence in the record referring to the pendency of a divorce suit between respondent and his said wife. This undoubtedly was never pressed, because all parties are proceeding on the theory that the marriage relation existed at the death of Mrs. Brook in May, 1917.

New Trial: No Evidence. I. Appellants contend that the assignment of error in the motion for a new trial, which the trial court stated to be the sole ground for sustaining the same, is not sufficient. Such assignment is as follows: “Because the verdict rendered by the jury is unsupported by any evidence.” Appellants cite Falloon v. Fenton, 182 Mo. App. 93, l. c. 98, in support of this contention. It was said in State v. Scott, 214 Mo. 261, “It is only in case there is no substantial evidence to support the verdict that this court will interfere.” The assignment here is that there was no evidence at all to support the verdict. The assignment itself is sufficient, and if, in fact, there was no evidence to support the verdict, the motion for a new trial was properly sustained. The determination of this question presents the real question for decision.

II. If the deed of Alvira Brook to Joseph P. Sill in which respondent did not join, was effectual to convey the fee simple title to the premises in controversy free from any claim of respondent to a life estate therein by the curtesy, then the court erred in granting a new trial. More broadly stated, the question to be here determined is: Does Section 8309, Revised Statutes 1909 (Sec. 7328, *18 R. S. 1919), abolish the husband’s estate by the curtesy consummate in his wife’s separate real estate when she has conveyed same during her lifetime by a deed in which he has not joined?

It would appear upon an examination of the abstract of the record that both appellants and respondent tried the case below on the theory that if respondent was the husband of Alvira Brook and issue of the marriage was born alive and Alvira was seized of the premises during coverture and died before the suit was filed and appellants were then in possession of the premises, respondent was entitled to recover. Respondent’s instructions were framed on that theory. Appellants filed no demurrer at the close of all the evidence, and the only instructions asked by appellants were given by the court. These related only to the burden cast upon respondent of proving the birth of living issue, and other issues of fact set out in respondent’s instructions, and to the form of verdict if the jury found for appellants.

If the jury, out of sympathy for the unfortunate situation of appellants, disregarded the instructions of the court and found for appellants, yet must that verdict be permitted to stand nevertheless, if, perchance, court and counsel were' mistaken as to the law of the case and the verdict after all was for the right party? [In re Lankford Estate, 272 Mo. 1.] Such is the question to be determined.

Under the common law respondent would clearly have been entitled to possession of the premises at the time the petition was filed and at the date of the'trial. Marriage, birth of living issue, seizin in the wife during coverture, death of the wife — all the essentials of an estate by the curtesy consummate at common law — are here present. The husband’s right could only be cut off by joinder in the deed. He must prevail here unless the provisions of Sections 8304 and 8309, Revised Statutes 1909, are such that the separate deed of his wife was sufficient to cut him off.

Section 8309, Revised Statutes 1909 (Sec. 7328, R. S. 1919), or the part thereof involved here, is as follows:

*19 “All real estate . . . belonging to any woman at her marriage, or which may have come to her during coverture by . . . purchase with her separate money or means . . . shall, together with all income, increase and profits thereof, be and remain her separate property and under her sole control.”

Section 8304, Revised Statutes 1909, (Sec. 7323, R. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 805, 287 Mo. 13, 14 A.L.R. 347, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brook-v-barker-mo-1921.