Cousins v. White

151 S.W. 737, 246 Mo. 296, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 737 (Cousins v. White) 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
Cousins v. White, 151 S.W. 737, 246 Mo. 296, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 185 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Oregon county, by the plaintiff against the defendants, to quiet the title to the southwest quarter of section twenty-one, township twenty-two, range five, under old Sec. 650, R. S. 1899.

The deféndants answered, denying any claim to said quarter section, except to about five acres .lying in the southwest corner thereof,, described as follows:

Beginning at the southwest corner of section twenty-one, running thence north to a point where the public road intersects the section line between sections [299]*299twenty and twenty-one, the same being a distance of five hundred and fifty-four feet; thence in a southeasterly direction along said public road to and intersecting the section line between sections twenty-one and twenty-eight: thence west a distance of six hundred feet to the point of beginning.

Said answer was as follows:

“Now come defendants in the above entitled cánse and for their answer to the petition of plaintiff, deny each and every allegation in said petition contained.
“Defendants further answering say that they are in possession of and have within their enclosure a portion of the land described in plaintiff’s petition; that they and their grantors have for twenty-six years, last past, maintained an enclosure around said portion of land; have been in the open, continued, exclusive and adverse possession of the same for the whole of said period of twenty-six years, claiming title thereto and have made valuable improvements thereon; that the portion of said land so held by defendants and their grantors more particularly described is as follows: [Then follows the description as above set forth.]
“Defendants further say by reason of the open, notorious, exclusive and adverse possession of the above described land under claim of ownership by them and their grantors for a period of more than ten years as aforesaid, they are vested with the full title to said land, both legal and equitable.
“Wherefore, defendants pray that the court may by its judgment and decree adjudge that the defendants are the owners of the above described land; that defendants be vested with full title thereto, both legal and equitable, by the judgment and decree of the court; and that plaintiff be divested of any title or interest he may hold to the same, and that the same may be vested in these defendants, and for such other [300]*300orders and judgments as to the court may appear meet and proper. ’ ’

At tire trial all defenses, except the Statutes of Limitations, were abandoned.

Tire following facts are undisputed:

The record title to tire land is in tire plaintiff, be having acquired it from one O’Neal, who through mesne conveyances acquired it from William H. Taylor, about the year 1880'.

The defendant Margaret White 'purchased lands adjoining that in controversy from Amos Huffstedler, in the year 1894. She testified that at the time she purchased said lands she purchased all the lands which were within the Huffstedler enclosure, which it is conceded included this five acres. She testified that she had Huffstedler point out the lines to her, which included the land sued for; that he told her that all the lands in that country were sold as farms, and that this farm included all the lands inclosed by the fences which he pointed out to her; that he told her that he had been in the possession of this five acres for thirteen years, and had cultivated it all that time; that she took possession of said five acres along with the other land inclosed by the same fence, and had the actual, exclusive, adverse and notorious possession of it from that time down to July, 1909’, about sixteen years, when this suit was instituted, cultivating it each and every year, and receiving all the rents, issues and profits thereof during all that time; and that during all that time she claimed title thereto, which was not questioned nor was her possession ever disturbed, except upon one occasion, about a year after she purchased the land, namely, in the year 1894, and that was by William H. Taylor, who at that time claimed to have had the record title thereto; that upon that oc-, casion Taylor made claim to the five acres, and took possession thereof, and set some posts near the present controverted line; that she so vigorously pro[301]*301tested against Ms claim of title and wrongful possession, that lie pulled up and left the place, and never again claimed title thereto or disturbed her possession thereafter, which was about twelve of fourteen years prior to the institution of this suit.

Amos Huffstedler testified for plaintiff, but did not contradict the testimony of Mrs. White, except in this manner: He testified that at the time he made the contract of sale with Mrs. White, he stated to Mr. Trihble, the attorney who drew the deed, in the presence of Mrs. White, that there was some agricultural land that cornered down in the field (this five acres) he was not selling to defendant.

Mrs. White testified that she never heard Huff-stedler mate that statement to Tribble, but that after she had contracted for the land and “had made the payment” thereon Huffstedler, for the first time, said to her that there was some agricultural land that cornered down in the field, and that he assured her that she would never be bothered about it, that he had held it for thirteen years, had cultivated it all those years and had never been bothered about it, and that he deemed the title to the same to be safe for her.

(The record is not clear upon this point, but from this remark I suppose the land was purchased upon the installment plan, and that the payment referred to was the first payment made under the contract of pur: chase.)

Huffstedler also testified that he held the actual, exclusive and notorious possession of said five acres of land for thirteen years prior to making the deed to Mrs. White, and cultivated it all that time, and received all the issues, rents and profits thereof, but that he never claimed the land adversely.

The record is silent as to the reason and as to the conditions that existed under which he took possession of said five acres, or why it was enclosed with Ms lands.

[302]*302Mrs. White was recalled and testified that she took possession of all the land in question, under the deed, believing that she had a good title to all of it as Huff-stedler had told her she had.

The only evidence introduced tending to contradict the evidence of Mrs. White to the effect that she claimed the five acres of land adversely under color of title, was that of the plaintiff and his attorney, S. M. Meeks, regarding a conversation which took place in the latter’s office a few days prior to the institution of this suit.

Plaintiff testified as follows:

■‘I had a conversation with Mrs. White about this piece of land in Mr. Meeks’s office, after I bought it from Michael; she came in and said she would buy it from me, if I would sell it, and I told her I would, and she asked me how much I wanted, and I said seventy-five dollars an acre; she said, ‘That is too much.’ She asked me how much I gave and I said $9.25 per acre, and she said she would give me twice as much as it cost me. She said there was something like five acres and she would give me $100' for it.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 737, 246 Mo. 296, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousins-v-white-mo-1912.