Brown v. Wilson

155 S.W.2d 176, 348 Mo. 658, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 25, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 155 S.W.2d 176 (Brown v. Wilson) 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
Brown v. Wilson, 155 S.W.2d 176, 348 Mo. 658, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 482 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

*661 TIPTON, J.

This case was originally appealed to this court, but we allowed a stipulation of the parties and transferred it to the St. Louis Court of Appeals. That court affirmed the judgment ’ of *662 the trial court. [Brown v. Wilson, 131 S. W. (2d) 848.] Thereafter this court,' in a certiorari proceeding brought by the plaintiff, as relators, held that the case was within the exclusive appellate jurisdiction of this court because title to real estate was involved within the meaning of the Constitution, and retained the case for argument and decision on the merits, which is the matter now under submission. [State ex rel. Brown v. Hughes et al., 345 Mo. 958, 137 S. W. (2d) 544.]

The opinion of the St. Louis Court of Appeals was written by Commissioner Bennick which clearly and properly decides the points raised on the merits of the case. We adopt the same except as to the last point, namely, the judgment rendered by the trial court was coram non judice and void insofar as it purported to adjudge the defendant the “owner” of the land. Without resort .to quotation marks, the adopted part of the opinion is as follows:

This is an action in ejectment which was duly instituted in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County on July 30, 1937. The trial of the. case was to the court alone without the aid of a jury. From a judgment which was rendered in favor of defendant, plaintiff was allowed an appeal to the Supreme Court, but upon that court’s becoming satisfied that it was without jurisdiction over the cause, it ordered that the same be transferred here.

Plaintiff’s petition was in the conventional form, alleging that she was the owner in fee simple of the land in question and entitled, to its possession, and that defendant had wrongfully entered into pbssession of the land and was unlawfully withholding the possession thereof from plaintiff.

Defendant’s answer was a denial that plaintiff was the owner in fee simple of the land in question or that defendant had wrongfully entered into possession of the premises ‘and was unlawfully withholding possession thereof from plaintiff, followed by the further allegations, first, that on March 26, 1918, defendant had purchased the land from his predecessors in title, as shown by warranty deed, and had continuously held the record title thereto since the date of purchase; and second, that he had been in open, notorious, adverse, exclusive, continuous, and hostile possession of the land since March 26, 1918, .claiming title thereto, cultivating the same, and exercising the usual acts of ownership over the' land since that date.

In other words, while defendant may not have pleaded his defenses in the precise alternative fashion, the intent of his answer (to which no objection-was interposed) was that he had purported to acquire title to the land in dispute by warranty deed from his predecessors in title, but that regardless of whether legal title to such disputed tract had been actually acquired by him by such conveyance, he had in any event held the.land adversely to plaintiff’s claim, and under color- of -right, for more than ten years prior to the institution of *663 this action, so that in view of such adverse possession for such period of time, he could no longer be said to be unlawfully withholding possession of the land from plaintiff.

The land in dispute, a small tract comprising only three-fourths of an acre in area, lies between the present main channel of Big River to the north and a slough to the south, which, until about thirty years ago, constituted the main channel of the river. The evidence was not all of one accord as to the manner in which the river had changed its course, that is, as to whether the change had been sudden or whether it had been slow and gradual, though there was evidence to show that the tract in question was once a distinct island, with water flowing through the channels both to the north and to the south. It was also shown that the channel of the slough is still- well defined, being from forty to fifty feet in width and from eight to ten feet in depth, and that even now a rise or from two to three feet in Big River will cause water to run through the former channel in the slough.

Plaintiff’s land (except as to the tract in dispute) lies south of the slough, while defendant’s land lies north of the present channel of Big River, save for a small tract which is located south of the river and immediately east of plaintiff’s land. Plaintiff acquired her land on March 23, 1935, by warranty deed from George M. Sullens and Sarah E. Sullens, his wife, while defendant acquired his land on March 26, 1918, by warranty deed from L. P. Williams and Maggie II. Williams, his wife. Suffice it.merely to say that each deed purported to make Big River either the northern or the southern boundary of the land conveyed as the case might be, and this controversy between the parties has arisen over the question of whether for one reason or another the boundary so designated should be considered the original or the present channel of the river.

Preliminary to the matters of chief insistence in the case, plaintiff makes the point that the court erred in permitting defendant to testify regarding what his deceased grantor, L. P. Williams, had shown him relative to the location of the corners of his land. Regardless of whether such evidence might have been objectionable for other reasons, it was not objectionable upon the ground assigned for its exclusion, which was that Williams was dead at the time of the trial. This is not a case where the validity of defendant’s deed was the point in issue, nor is it a case where the parties to the action claimed to have acquired their titles from a common source. So far as the particular evidence was concerned, defendant was in no sense occupying a position adverse to that which Williams had occupied, but instead, as the grantee in the deed from Williams and his wife, was in direct privity with him. Consequently defendant was not disqualified to testify by reason of the fact of Williams’ death, and the objection assigned by plaintiff to the evidence in question is therefore unavailing.

*664 PoT her next point plaintiff' argues that the court erred in refusing her requested declarations of law Nos. 1, 4, and 5, not only because each of the same contained correct propositions of law (as she contends) upon the facts’stated therein, .but also for the further alleged reason that with such declarations of law refused, it is impossible to determine upon what theory of the law the court reached 'its decision in the case.

By her requested declaration of law No. 1, plaintiff would have had the court declare the law to be that if the land ip dispute was included in the description in the deed from plaintiff’s grantors to her, and if plaintiff had the record title to the land, then plaintiff was entitled to recover as the actual owner of the land, unless defendant had acquired title by limitation, that is, by adverse possession.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Norman v. Wright
100 S.W.3d 783 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2003)
State ex rel. Mohart v. Romano
924 S.W.2d 537 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1996)
Rouse Co. of Missouri v. Justin's, Inc.
883 S.W.2d 525 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1994)
Blando v. Reid
886 S.W.2d 60 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1994)
State Ex Rel. Rice v. Bishop
858 S.W.2d 732 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)
Coleman v. City of Kansas City, Mo.
859 S.W.2d 141 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)
Murphy v. Timber Trace Ass'n
779 S.W.2d 603 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1989)
Norman v. Allison
775 S.W.2d 568 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1989)
Scott v. Rorebeck
766 S.W.2d 659 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1989)
Weber v. Johannes
673 S.W.2d 454 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
Flowers v. Bales
615 S.W.2d 103 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1981)
Snider v. Wilson
585 S.W.2d 91 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
Adams v. White
488 S.W.2d 289 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1972)
Carroz v. Kaminski
452 S.W.2d 312 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1970)
Northwest Missouri State Fair, Inc. v. Linville
448 S.W.2d 274 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1969)
Payne v. St. Louis Union Trust Company
389 S.W.2d 832 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1965)
State v. Jacobs
380 P.2d 998 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1963)
ROHNER ET UX v. Neville
368 P.2d 391 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1961)
Domyan v. Dornin
348 S.W.2d 360 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1961)
Kansas City v. Hammer
347 S.W.2d 865 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.W.2d 176, 348 Mo. 658, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-wilson-mo-1941.