Bryan v. McCaskill

225 S.W. 682, 284 Mo. 583, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 22, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 682 (Bryan v. McCaskill) 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
Bryan v. McCaskill, 225 S.W. 682, 284 Mo. 583, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 91 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

On July 26, 1911, Bryan and wife filed their petition in the Stoddard Circuit Court for an adjudication of title to the north half and southeast quarter of Section 10 in Township 28 of Range 11 in said county, against A.G. McCaskill, Achilus E. Robertson and Florence B. Robertson his wife, George A. Burr, R.E.L. Johnson, Mary E. Holmes, and several others who *Page 590 have disappeared from the record, in which plaintiffs claimed title in fee by the entirety to the 480 acres, and charged that the defendants claimed some title or interest therein. Robertson and wife on September 29, 1911, answered, claiming an estate in fee by the entirety in the north half of the section, and on October 22, 1911, Holmes answered claiming the north half of the southeast quarter in fee simple. Johnson and Burr answered jointly on the same day, claiming a like title in the south half of the said quarter, and Burr answered at the same time claiming the north half of the section by fee simple title. This, according to the testimony of defendant, Burr was a friendly suit.

The cause was tried in said court on December 7, 1911, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff declaring and quieting his title to the entire tract. From this an appeal was taken by the answering defendants Burr, Johnson and the Robertsons to this court, where the judgment of the Circuit Court was, on March 2, 1915, reversed, and the cause remanded to the Stoddard County Circuit Court "with directions to the trial court to set aside the judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs, to grant defendants a new trial, and to proceed with the cause thereafter in accordance with the views heretofore expressed and as modified." [175 S.W. l.c. 966.] The title of defendants was deraigned through a decree of the St. Louis Circuit Court of April 13, 1888, in the case of Charles P. Chouteau v. Cairo Fulton Railroad Company, Henry H. Bedford and others, which the plaintiffs desired an opportunity to impeach for want of jurisdiction of the subject-matter. This court gave them an opportunity to do so, if they could, in the court to which the cause was remanded. It turned out that the infirmity they suspected did not exist, so that the judgment for appellants stood unaffected in that respect.

Up to this time no issue had been made between the several defendants, but all had apparently joined hands in the circuit court as well as in this court to defeat the plaintiffs. *Page 591

Upon the return of the case to the Stoddard Circuit Court the Robertsons filed an amended answer which, after denying the title of plaintiffs, admitting their own claim of title and pleading that they were the owners of the north half of said section in fee and asking the judgment of the court accordingly, proceeded to plead as a special defense that one William D. McKinnies on February 8, 1908, received a patent for said land from Stoddard County upon payment of $1.25 per acre; that McKinnies was desirous to purchase the timber on the land, while Davis wanted the land, which he claimed to own. They were advised by counsel that the true title to the land was in Stoddard County, and not in Davis, and it was then agreed between them that McKinnies would advance the sum of $1.25 per acre and procure therefor a patent from the county to himself, and convey the land to Davis by deed, reserving the right to remove the timber within the period of five years. That on February 8, 1908, McKinnies paid said amount to the county and received the patent, which was duly recorded in the deed records of the county on the 22nd day of the same month, and thereby became seized of the land in trust for the purpose of said agreement, and afterward on June 8, 1908, joining with him his wife, made a deed conveying the same to Davis and reserving the right to remove the timber therefrom within five years, which deed was duly recorded on the 15th day of the same month.

That on April 23, 1908, one Joseph Sibole obtained judgment in the circuit court for said county for $1179.95 against McKinnies, on which an execution was issued on April 12, 1911, and delivered to the sheriff of said county, under which all the right, title and interest of McKinnies was sold by the sheriff at public sale on October 6, 1911, to the defendant Burr, and a sheriff's deed executed to him therefor for the consideration of $75, the amount of his bid. The answer sets up these facts with much detail, alleging fraud and conspiracy in the transaction for the purpose of extinguishing the *Page 592 title of Davis, and the Robertsons, who obtained his title by mesne conveyances on July 3, 1909. It charges that the sheriff's deed constituted a cloud upon the title of said defendants, which it asked the court to remove by its judgment.

To this answer and cross-petition the defendant Burr answered on October 25, 1915, and in March following applied for a change of venue, which was granted to the Circuit Court for Mississippi County. The answer consists of a general denial and prayer for affirmative relief.

The cause was tried in the Mississippi County Circuit Court on February 15, 1917, resulting in a judgment for the defendant Burr, that he was the owner in fee of the north half of said Section 10 and that Robertson and wife had no interest in it. The plaintiff John E. Bryan having died before the trial, the judgment also went against the plaintiff Ida M. Bryan, who had filed a disclaimer of title, as well as against all other parties who had been defendants in the suit, and thereupon Robertson and wife, after motion for a new trial overruled, perfected their appeal to this court.

In 1906 the Bryans, husband and wife, instituted a similar action against R.F. Gardner and Alfred Davis only, to quiet title to the north half and southeast quarter of Section 10. They both answered, Davis claiming to be owner of the north half of the section and Gardner claiming the southeast quarter. This suit resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs as prayed. An appeal was was taken by both defendants to this court and asupersedeas bond given. The cause stood upon our docket to October 17, 1910, when the case was called, and the appeal dismissed for failure to comply with the rules of this court.

On June 28, 1916, R.F. Gardner filed his petition in the Stoddard County Circuit Court in two suits, one against M.E. Holmes and William D. McKinnies, who claimed all the north half of the southeast quarter of *Page 593 said Section 10, and the other against George A. Burr, R.E.L. Johnson and William D. McKinnies, as claimants of the south half of said quarter section, asking an adjudication of the title and interests of the respective parties and a judgment transferring any legal title the defendant or either of them might have in the premises so claimed to himself. On application of the defendants in each case the venue was changed to the Circuit Court of Mississippi County, where a trial was had, resulting in separate judgments that the legal title to the north half of the quarter section was in defendant Mary E. Holmes, and the legal title to the south half of said quarter section was in defendants Burr and Johnson. From these judgments the appellants appealed to this court, where they have been argued and submitted in connection with this case, which they resemble in most respects, although there are some differences to which we will refer in connection with their consideration.

The land involved in this case was swamp and overflowed lands granted to this State by Act of Congress, September 8, 1850, and by the State to Stoddard County and by Stoddard County to Lewis M. Ringer by patent, dated May 1, 1869, and by mesne conveyances thereafter culminated in a deed from Henry M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 682, 284 Mo. 583, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-mccaskill-mo-1920.