Chilton v. Nickey

169 S.W. 978, 261 Mo. 232, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 252
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 978 (Chilton v. Nickey) 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
Chilton v. Nickey, 169 S.W. 978, 261 Mo. 232, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 252 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

ROY, C.

[238]*238 Title.

[237]*237Suit to quiet title in which judgment was for plaintiff. The land is the northeast. [238]*238quarter, and the west half of the southeast quarter, of section - one; also the southeast quarter and lot one of the northeast quarter of section two, all in township twenty-three, range four east. It is wild timber land with no improvements, as hereinafter stated.

The answer contained a general' denial, except that it admitted a claim of ownership by defendant, and pleaded the thirty-year Statute of Limitations as to that part of the land in section one.

The plaintiff read in evidence a copy of a patent issued to Henry C. Wright of Warren county, Missouri, for that part of the land in section one, dated September 1, 1859', and a copy of a patent to Alois Menne, for the lands in section two. Each of these instruments was certified as follows:

“Department of the Interior, General Land Office, 'Washington, D. C., Oct. 12, 1910. — I hereby certify that the annexed copies of patents are true and literal exemplifications from the records in this office. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto subscribed my name and caused the seal of this office to be affixed, at the city of Washington, on the day and year above written.

(Seal)

“H. W. Lanyard, Recorder of General Land Office.”

To these copies of the patents the defendant objected for the reason that they were not authenticated as required by the Act of Congress pr in any other manner. The objection was overruled and defendant excepted.

Plaintiff read in evidence a warranty deed from Alois Menne to Nicholas P. Stephenson for the land in section two, dated December 15, 1857, and recorded December 15, 1868; also a warranty deed from said Stephenson to Henry C. Wright for the same land, dated May 29, 1858, and recorded June 14, I860.

[239]*239Wright died May 15, 1880, and left surviving him three children and-the descendants of two deceased children. The plaintiff acquired the interests of all the heirs except those of Mrs. Robert Williams, Mrs. DeMuth, Alton Easton and W. R. Easton, the descendants of a deceased daughter of Wright, said interest being one-fifth of the land. P. M. Wright, a son of Henry C. Wright, testified for plaintiff, and on cross-examination said that he did not know where his father’s deeds to the land were; that the taxes had not been paid by his father or his heirs since 1875, that the heirs got $100 from Mr. Chilton for the land, and that he was satisfied with that price because he knew it had been sold several times for taxes, and that it would necessitate trouble and expense to recover it.

As to the defendant’s title, it is sufficient to say that at various times from 1883 to 1903 different portions of the land were sold for taxes in suits against Henry C. Wright and during that time all the. land was so sold for taxes, some portions of it being sold several times. The east half of the northeast quarter and the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section one was sold for taxes on October 21, 1903. Defendant read in evidence a sheriff’s deed under a judgment for taxes against Henry C. Wright, the unknown heirs of Henry C. Wright, deceased, the unknown devisees of Henry C. Wright, deceased, and others, to the defendant herein. The deed was dated April 13, 1907.

The plaintiff, in rebuttal, read in evidence the petition in the tax suit last mentioned: It did not describe the interests of the unknown heirs of Henry C. Wright in the land and did not allege that the interests of such unknown heirs in the land were unknown to the plaintiff.

The defendant after January 1, 1900, and prior to 1906, acquired the title of all the purchasers at the [240]*240various tax sales. On April 23, 1906, a decree was rendered in the circuit court of Butler county in the case of Leander F. Nickey v. Henry C. Wright, Joseph Gardner, H. B. Powers and others, quieting the title to the land in said Nickey. The heirs of Henry C. Wright were not parties to that suit, nor was the plaintiff.

There have never been any improvements on the land-in section two. In April, 1906, the defendant sold the tie timber on the land in section two under the agreement that the purchasers were to remove the timber within two years. The purchasers during the time limited cut and removed the tie timber. The defendant testified that about six years before the trial he turned all the land over to Joseph G'ardner, who agreed to take care of it for defendant for the use of the house then on the place, and the tillable land. There was a small box house on the northeast corner of section one, near which there was about an acre of ground that had been cultiváted at some time not shown in the evidence. When the house was built is not shown. Defendant testified that he had the land in section two surveyed and that he cut brush off the land in order to keep timber thieves away. He sold an acre from the tract for a schoolhouse.

The defendant in his testimony disclaimed personal knowledge of other acts of ownership on the land except that he had put Gardner in charge of it. Gardner testified that he had been in possession' of the land since the defendant put it in his charge. When asked about his acts of ownership, he said:

“Q. Well, just tell how you got possession of it? A. I asked permission of Mr. Nickey to have possession of the place for the simple reason I would know who lived there, then if I had control of it— and he told me to go ahead and use it as my own, or something to that effect; he said go ahead and take care of it and keep the rails from getting burned and [241]*241keep, the fellows from cutting the timber off the land. I know something was said about timber, and I have had possession of it since that — and didn’t you ask me in what way I have used it?

“Q. Yes, sir. A. Well, I had a family living1' in there once. _

“Q. How long? A. I believe, maybe twice; I gave my consent once for a family to move in there, and another time I had a family living in there for my own benefit, that was working for me.

“Q. Go on. A. And that has been two years ago since the last family lived in the house. Since that time I used the house to put hay in in the winter —the fall of the year I feed my cattle around the house, in the winter time. In the summer time it makes the finest kind of a shophouse.

“Q. Is there any of the land that is inclosed by fence? A. Why, I have three barbed wires running across there, the neighbors out there don’t call it much fence.

“Q. Well, does it inclose any land? A. Yes, sir, it incloses a part of this tract. It incloses the house and, just an off-hand guess, I would say ten. acres of the land.”

He further testified that the first man who lived in the house with his permission was Thomas Powers, who occupied it a month, and that the other was Mentó Murphy, who lived there about six months; that he put the wire fence there early in the spring before the trial. There had previously been a rail fence around the house and enclosing about ten acres of the land, but it had been partly burned and was not used. The house and rail fence had been constructed prior to the acquisition of any title by the defendant, and the house was not occupied at the time defendant put Gardner in charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 978, 261 Mo. 232, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chilton-v-nickey-mo-1914.