Cordier v. Brown

98 Mo. 666
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 98 Mo. 666 (Cordier v. Brown) 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
Cordier v. Brown, 98 Mo. 666 (Mo. 1889).

Opinion

Brace, J.

— This is an action of ejectment in which the plaintiff sues to recover an undivided one-sixth of certain premises in the city of St. Louis described in the petition by metes and bounds, being the west half of a tract of seven and one-half arpents, conveyed by John Hogan and wife, who was the owner in fee simple of said seven and one-half arpent tract, by deed dated February 10, 1853, to Guilliaume Hauguel and Eulalie-Hauguel, his wife, “to have and to hold the same, unto-them the said Guilliaume Hauguel and Eulalie Hauguel for and during their joint natural lives and the life of the survivor, with power in the said Guilliaume-Hauguel, to convey in fee simple forever, or to mortgage or otherwise encumber the one equal undivided half of said granted premises, and, after the death of the said Guillaume and Eulalie Hauguel, said granted premises, or so much thereof as shall not have been conveyed by the said Guilliaume Hauguel, shall pass to and vest in the heirs of said Eulalie Hauguel forever.”

On the fourth of May, 1863, Guilliaume and Eulalie Hauguel, by general warranty deed of that date, conveyed an undivided one-half of said seven and one-half arpent tract to Andrew S. Barada. On the sixteenth of March, 1864, Guilliaume and Eulalie Hauguel, by a second general warranty deed of that date, conveyed by metes and bounds the west half of said seven and one-half arpent tract to the said Barada, and the said Barada,on the same day, by quitclaim deed in which his wife joined, conveyed by metes and bounds the east half of said seven and one-half arpent tract to the Hauguels “to have and to hold the same unto them the said Guilliaume Hauguel and Eulalie Hauguel for and during their natural lives, and the life of the survivor, and after the death of both of them the said granted premises shall be vested unto the heirs of said Eulalie Hauguel the same as provided by deed of John Hogan.”

[668]*668On the twelfth of September, 1865, Barada and wife by quitclaim deed conveyed by metes and bounds the west half of said seven and one-half arpent tract to William B. Thompson from whom defendants deraign title by mesne conveyances.

Guilliaume and Eulalie Haugel were husband and wife ; the former died in 1872, the latter in September, 1885. The plaintiff is a child of the said Eulalie by a former husband and one of two children whom she left surviving her at her death, and who, with the children of a third child deceased, are her heirs at law.

On the fourteenth of August, 1872, the plaintiff, by a general warranty deed of that date, conveyed to Charles H. Peck an undivided one-third of the east half of said seven and one-half arpent tract. In this deed, she described herself as “a widow, daughter of Eulalie Hauguel, wife of Guilliame Hauguel,” and gave the following description of the tract in which she conveys such interest: “Commencing at a point in the northern line of United States survey number 1276 of the St. Louis Common Fields confirmed to the legal representatives of Auguste Conde, eight hundred and twenty-six feet, eleven and a half inches distant eastwardly from, the eastern edge of Vandeventer avenue, the said beginning .point being the northeast corner of a tract of three and three-quarters arpents coneeyed to Andrew S. Barada by said Guilliaume Hauguel and wife, thence eastwardly with the north line of said survey number 1276, south sixty degrees one thousand and ten feet and seven and a half inches to a point, thence south, twenty-seven degrees, twenty-five minutes west, ten feet, thence north, sixty-one degrees west, three hundred and four feet to a point, thence south, twenty-nine degrees west, one hundred and eighty-three feet to a point in the south line of said survey 1276 ; thence west with said southern line of said survey 1276, north, sixty-one degrees west, seven hundred and seven feet [669]*669one and a half inches to a stone at the southeast corner of said tract of three and three-quarters arpents conveyed to A. 8. Barada by said Hauguels / thence north with the eastern boundary line of said Barada three and three-quarter arpent trad north, twenty-seven degrees, five minutes east, one hundred and ninety-two feet, six inches to the point of beginning; containing three and three-quarters arpents and being the east half of a tract of seven and a half arpents, heretofore conveyed to said Guilliaume and Eulalie Hauguel by John Hogan and wife, * * * the same being bounded north by United States survey number 3285, west by Barada, south,” etc.

Ever since the execution of the deeds by the Hauguels and Barada on the sixteenth of March, 1864, Barada and his grantees have been in the exclusive possession of the west half of said seven and one-half arpent tract, and the defendants at the commencement of this suit were so in possession, all claiming title under those deeds, of which each by its reference in the description of the premises conveyed showed that they were but parts of a single transaction intended to effect a partition of the seven and one-half arpent tract between the parties. The boundaries in the deed of plaintiff to Peck correspond with those in the deed from Barada to the Hauguels.

I. It is quite too plain for argument and apparent on the face of the habendum clause from Hogan to the Hauguels that the estate of Guilliaume and Eulalie was limited by that deed to a life estate in the seven and one-half arpent tract, and the power of the said Guilliaume was limited to the power to convey in fee simple an undivided half thereof. To hold that Guilliaume under the terms used by the grantor in that deed had power to convey the whole tract in fee simple would do violence to the grammatical construction of the sentence in which the power is granted and would defeat the [670]*670¡evident intent of the grantor to make provision for the heirs of Eulalie by settling upon them beyond peradventure an estate in fee simple after the termination of the life estates, in any event, to the extent of the one undivided half thereof.

It is also evident that if the said Guilliaumehad not executed the power in the deed, upon the death of him and his wife, the plaintiff would have been entitled to an undivided third in fee simple of the whole tract. But having executed the power by his conveyance to Barada, of the fourth of May, 1863, of the one undivided half in fee simple, by that act her estate was reduced from a possible undivided third in fee simple to a certain undivided one-sixth of the whole tract upon the termination of the life estates. By this conveyance, Guilliaume exhausted all the power granted him by which the quantum of plaintiff’s interest in the seven and one-half arpent tract could be by him or his wife affected. While the subsequent conveyance between the Hauguels and Barada had the effect of severing the right of possession of the common tract between them during the pendency of the Hauguels’ life estate, they in no way affected per se the plaintiff’s right to an undivided sixth of the w'hole tract in fee simple upon the termination of that life estate. 'And this was the interest which the plaintiff, as one of the heirs apparent of Eulalie Hauguel, had in the whole tract at the time she came to make her deed to Peck; and but for that deed would have been her interest in the whole tract, the possession of which she would have been entitled to at the commencement of this suit.

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50 Mo. 597 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1872)

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Bluebook (online)
98 Mo. 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordier-v-brown-mo-1889.