Calloway Bank v. Ellis

238 S.W. 844, 215 Mo. App. 72, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 147
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 844 (Calloway Bank v. Ellis) 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
Calloway Bank v. Ellis, 238 S.W. 844, 215 Mo. App. 72, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 147 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*75 FARRINGTON, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Barry County dismissing the plaintiff’s hill in equity. On June 12, 1913, in Barry County, Missouri, there was an attempted organization of a School District under the Buford Act. Directors were elected for the consolidated district and they proceeded to function, voting'bonds to build- a school house and secured a school site. The defendants made a deed to five acres of land to the school directors for the consideration of one dollar and other considerations, inserting a provision in the deed as follows: “This deed made with the understanding that if the contemplated house should fail to be built in one year and received by the State of Missouri, or after it is built should a failure to maintain a school for the term of three years at any one time this described piece of land with the belongings thereto shall revert to the said grantors of said land.”

The district took charge of the land, cut some timber from it (which from the record apparently was of little value), excavated for a basement and placed concrete walls for a foundation. The excavation for the basement did not run under the whole building but was merely under one room and was some six or seven feet deep. It was used as a furnace room and was something like ten or twelve feet square. This building was erected across the road from the defendants’ house, which was out in the country about in the center of the consolidated district.

After the formation of the District, an election for bonds was voted and $4000 of bonds were issued and registered with the Auditor of the State. The bonds were sold to the plaintiff in this action, and it appears that everything was in proper form so far as affecting the validity of these bonds is concerned, except that there was some discord among the residents of the Consolidated School District, from which followed a quo warranto proceeding to declare the organization of this District void and to oust the directors from office. That liti *76 gation was finally concluded in State ex inf. Burges, ex rel. Marbut, v. Potter, 191 S. W. 57, where it was held that the failure of a Superintendent to give the notice in time and manner prescribed by law left the meeting which was called to effect the organization without authority to organize such District, and that the directors acting under such organization were without authority and power. Before that suit was determined, the plaintiff’s money had been invested by the school directors in the building, which is the subject of this suit. School had been started and was being carried on under the organization, such as it was. Of course, when that judgment of the Supreme Court, declaring the organization invalid and the directors out of authority or power to act, was rendered', they closed school and the building was left standing on the ground which had been deeded by the defendants to said school directors. And after there was a failure to hold school in said building for a period of three years, the defendants took possession of the ground and the building, claiming the same under the terms of the reverter clause in the warranty deed.

It is shown that the plaintiff had no actual knowledge of the pendency of the quo warranto proceeding until after the District had been adjudged invalid and until long after it had purchased the bonds and the money turned over to the school directors had gone into the erection of the building.

It is admitted that no levy was ever made to meet the bonds or the interest thereon, and, we may say here, that plaintiff sought an equitable lien to be declared and enforced against the ground and the building for the money which it paid the directors for these bonds. It has abandoned its claim to a lien on the land and merely asks that an equitable lien be established on the building. It is admitted that plaintiff’s money went into the building in question; that the defendant and his wife are in possession of it; and that there never has been any legal organization of the District, and the plaintiff is still the *77 owner of the pretended bonds and paid therefor the snm of $4000.

The evidence also shows that the defendant, Ellis, at the time he made this deed to' the District, knew that the validity of the organization of the District was questioned and that a suit to declare it invalid had been filed. This the defendants had actual knowledge of, and of which the plaintiff had no actual knowledge.

It must be conceded that since the District is disorganized and the Directors shorn of all power to run and carry on the school by the decision of the Supreme Court, that if plaintiff has any remedy whatever he must seek it at the hands of a court of equity. We are of the opinion that a court of equity should grant some relief to this plaintiff, and that it is entitled to have an equitable lien on the building which was erected with its money, and that it shall be entitled to enforce a lien to the extent of its debt for $4000, first having made the defendants whole on account of any damage that flowed to their land occasioned by the destruction of timber cut from one or two acres of same, consisting of small post oak and black oak trees and a few large black oak trees.. The defendants should also be made whole for such damage as will result to the land by reason of the excavation of something like ten or twelve feet square and six or seven feet deep made in the construction of the basement or heating room, and also be allowed such damage as the erection of the concrete foundation will cause the land by having been put there.

We base this decree on the broad principle announced in the case of Berry v. Stigall, 253 Mo. 690, 162 S. W. 126, which is that “equity seeks to prevent the unearned enrichment of one at the expense of another.” The deed made by the defendants to the School District was an absolute nullity because no School District in law existed. The deed was no more valid than had the grantee named therein been a dead man. No title whatever, by reason of such deed, passed from the defendants and no cove *78 nants or rights of reverter made in sneh deed are of any force and effect. It is well established in this State that there can be no conveyance of land without it be to a grantee capable of receiving a grant. [Douthitt v. Stinson, 63 Mo. 268; Thomas v. Wyatt, 25 Mo. 24; Arthur v. Weston, 22 Mo. 378.]

The law is also well settled that where a person in good faith and under the belief that he has title erects a building upon the land of another, and with the knowledge and consent of the owner, that the true owners of the land do not become the owners of such improvement and the builder can recover for the value of his improvements. [Sires v. Clark, 132 Mo. App. 537, 112 S. W. 526; Richmond v. Ashcraft, 137 Mo. App. 191, 117 S. W. 689; Smith v. Mount, 149 Mo. App. 668, 129 S. W. 722.]

There can be no doubt that such provisions as were made in the reverter clause in'that deed were valid and would- be enforced where the deed in which they are made is a valid deed. In the case of Clark v. Town of Brookfield, 81 Mo. 503, cited by respondent, the deed was a valid deed, hence it differs from the case at bar.

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

Related

Duncan v. Akers
262 N.E.2d 402 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1970)
Noelker v. Wehmeyer
392 S.W.2d 409 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1965)
Toalson v. Madison
307 S.W.2d 32 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1957)
Sidney Smith, Inc. v. Steinberg
280 S.W.2d 696 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1955)
Hickerson v. Con Frazier Buick Co.
264 S.W.2d 29 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1953)
Board v. Nevada School District
251 S.W.2d 20 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1952)
Cramer Mfg. Corp. v. Royal Exchange Assur., Ltd.
81 F. Supp. 899 (W.D. Missouri, 1949)
Brown v. Citizens' State Bank
134 S.W.2d 116 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
McCreary v. Lake Boulevard Sponge Exchange Co., Inc.
183 So. 7 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1938)
State Upon the Information of McKittrick v. Missouri Utilities Co.
96 S.W.2d 607 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 844, 215 Mo. App. 72, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calloway-bank-v-ellis-moctapp-1922.