Crider v. Meatte

7 S.W.2d 691, 320 Mo. 474, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 768
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 S.W.2d 691 (Crider v. Meatte) 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
Crider v. Meatte, 7 S.W.2d 691, 320 Mo. 474, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 768 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This is a suit to ascertain and determine title to real estate, commonly known as a suit to quiet title. From a decree rendered by the court in favor of defendant, plaintiff appealed.

The petition avers that plaintiff owns and possesses lots 17 and 18 in block 28 of the original town of Hayti, Pemiscot County; that defendants claim some interest therein by virtue of a warranty deed purporting to have been signed and executed by plaintiff but denied by her, which was a voluntary conveyance on the part of her husband without consideration. It further avers title in plaintiff by adverse possession, praying the court to ascertain and determine the title and to set aside and cancel the warranty deed, and for general relief.

Defendants, after a general denial, deny that plaintiff owns or possesses the north fifty-two feet of said lots, admitting, however, that they claim title to said fifty-two feet, but disclaiming ownership *Page 480 as to the remaining portion of said lots. They further aver that the other defendants herein have conveyed title to defendant Carrie M. Meatte, and that she now has full title to said fifty-two feet. The reply is a general denial.

It seems to be conceded that the evidence adduced warrants the finding that by warranty deed, dated February 11, 1911, plaintiff acquired title to said lots 17 and 18 from Fred Morgan and wife. At that time there were buildings on the south and north end of the lots. On May 24, 1913, fire destroyed the building on the south end, in which W.P. Meatte, husband of defendant, was then conducting a saloon. Shortly thereafter W.P. Meatte began running a saloon in the building on the north part of the lots. There is a warranty deed on record, dated May 27, 1913, according to which plaintiff and her husband conveyed the north fifty-two feet of said lots to W.P. Meatte, for a recited consideration in the deed of $2500, which was recorded December 5, 1913. W.P. Meatte thereafter conducted a saloon in said building on the north portion of said lot until February 24, 1914, when that building also burned. J.G. Crider, the husband of plaintiff, died in 1914, and W.P. Meatte, the husband of defendant, died about six months before the trial of this case. W.P. Meatte, paid rent to plaintiff or her husband while he occupied the building on the south part of the lots, but the record is without evidence that he ever paid rent to either of them after he moved into the building on the portion in controversy. The structures were not rebuilt after the fires, the lots remaining vacant thereafter.

The evidence adduced on the part of plaintiff would warrant the finding that she paid the taxes on the whole of lots 17 and 18 from 1911 thereafter. That during all this time she claimed the property. It was not until after W.P. Meatte's death that she learned that a deed was recorded conveying the north fifty-two feet to him, or that defendant was claiming an interest therein. Plaintiff moved from Hayti to Caruthersville in 1918, leaving the property in the hands of agents. Occasionally the lots were used for tent shows and at other times she allowed the churches to place stands thereon. The fifty-two feet in question were used by the public for a hitching yard. She had no personal knowledge of any one ever paying her rent on the fifty-two feet in controversy, or on the other portion of the lots, because her agents failed to tell her on what property they were collecting rent. A concrete walk on the south and east side of said lots was constructed before the deed to W.P. Meatte was executed. She refused to swear that she signed the deed, purporting to be executed by herself and husband, dated May 27, 1913, to W.P. Meatte, because she could not say it was her signature and she had no recollection of ever signing it, although the signature bears some *Page 481 resemblance to her signature. An expert witness for plaintiff testified that, in his opinion, the plaintiff signed the deed dated May 27, 1913, in which W.P. Meatte is the grantee. Another witness for plaintiff testified that he took the acknowledgment to the deed made by the plaintiff to Meatte, and after reading the deed and acknowledgment, which was in his handwriting, he would say that he took plaintiff's acknowledgment to that deed. He further stated that the lots for several years past had been used as hitching yards, and for carnival and tent shows. He had never heard either plaintiff or defendant's husband make any claim to the fifty-two feet in controversy after May 27, 1913.

Testimony of other witnesses tended to show that they had never heard W.P. Meatte speak of or claim the fifty-two feet in controversy, but that plaintiff always claimed these lots, including the portion in controversy. They testified that it was generally reputed among the citizens of Hayti that plaintiff owned the lots. They also testified, relative to consideration, that Meatte wanted the deed so as to get possession of the building on the north portion to operate a saloon, which at that time was occupied as a restaurant. In order to obtain possession plaintiff's husband and Meatte though it best that the latter should have a deed, and that this was the purpose of making the deed. Only the south portion of said lot was used for carnivals and church purposes. Another witness for plaintiff testified that he heard W.P. Meatte say in his lifetime that Crider had made him a deed to the back part of these lots, but that he did not pay Crider anything for the deed and that the deed never had been recorded. Still another testified that W.P. Meatte told him that he had a deed to the back end of these lots, but that he never paid taxes on the property and never paid anything for the deed. Dr. Crider gave him the deed to obtain possession of the place, and he never had the deed recorded. Meatte told him that some one approached him to buy the property, but he informed him that he had not bought the property and would not sell it. That his purpose in getting the deed was to get possession. That they had trouble in getting possession. He saw Dr. Crider hand Meatte a paper, which Crider said was a deed to get the man conducting the restaurant out of possession.

About six years before the trial a fence was built around a portion of the property to keep horses and wagons out, but it disintegrated about two years prior to the trial. The county collector stated that his books from the year 1918 show that plaintiff had paid taxes on both lots until the year 1924. In 1924 defendant paid taxes on the rear fifty-two feet. Plaintiff, however, that year paid taxes on the whole of said lots, because they were not separated. The fifty-two feet was never set off to itself, so that it should be separately *Page 482 assessed. Lots 17 and 18 are carried on the books as whole lots and the taxes were paid on the lots as a whole, and they were so assessed prior to 1924.

The defendant's evidence warrants the finding that plaintiff and her husband executed a warranty deed to W.P. Meatte, the husband of defendant, dated May 27, 1913, acknowledged before B.F. Allen, justice of the peace, and filed for record December 5, 1913, which recited a consideration of $2500 and conveyed the north fifty-two feet of said lots 17 and 18. There was also offered in evidence a quit-claim deed from defendant's co-defendants, conveying to her their interest in the fifty-two feet in controversy, and that said grantors were the only heirs of W.P. Meatte. A witness for defendant testified that he heard Dr. Crider say, immediately after the first fire, that he had sold to Meatte that building over there.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 691, 320 Mo. 474, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crider-v-meatte-mo-1928.