Croy v. Zalma Reorganized School District R-V of Bollinger County

434 S.W.2d 517, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1968
DocketNo. 53545
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 434 S.W.2d 517 (Croy v. Zalma Reorganized School District R-V of Bollinger County) 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
Croy v. Zalma Reorganized School District R-V of Bollinger County, 434 S.W.2d 517, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 804 (Mo. 1968).

Opinion

HOUSER, Commissioner.

Suit in equity to reform a deed conveying one acre of land in Bollinger County. Clarence Croy and wife, the named grantees, sued the grantor, a school district, for a decree compelling grantor to execute a new and reformed deed to include additional real estate the record title to which was in Charles M. Wagner. Wagner and his wife were permitted to intervene to set up a defense. Plaintiffs, denied relief, have appealed.

Appellate jurisdiction is in this court. The object of this suit is to secure a decree compelling the district to convey, in addition to the one acre described in the deed, additional adjoining land the record [519]*519title to which is in intervenor. Plaintiffs claim that the school district acquired this additional land by adverse possession and that it was intended to be included in, but by mutual mistake was left out of, the grant. If plaintiffs should prevail title to this additional land would be taken from defendant’s record title and transferred to plaintiffs. Title to real estate, therefore, is involved within the meaning of Article V § 3 of the constitution, V.A.M.S. Phillips v. Cope, Mo.App., 104 S.W.2d 276.

On this de novo review, on disputed evidence, we find these facts: J. C. Wagner, father of intervenor Charles M. Wagner, owned the quarter quarter section in which the land in question is situated. In 1916 J. C. Wagner conveyed as a gift to the then-existing school district (of which defendant district is the successor) a one-acre tract of land out of the quarter quarter section, described by metes and bounds. A frame schoolhouse, moved onto the northeast corner of the one-acre tract, was used for school purposes until 1939 or 1940. Then a new concrete and brick schoolhouse was erected at a point some SO feet north of the north line of the one-acre tract. Charles M. Wagner, present at the time the site for the new building was decided upon, informed the representatives of the school district that the proposed site was not on the one-acre tract. His brother William disputed Charles, stating that he knew where the corner was, and pointing out what he considered was the corner. The new school building was erected on land then belonging to J. C. Wagner, a fact established by two subsequent surveys. School was conducted in this new building until 1952, when school was discontinued there because of the reorganization of the school district. In 1956 the district advertised for sale “Concrete school and two toilets and one acre (more or less) of land.” At that time Charles M. Wagner advised a member of the school board that the building had not been erected on the one-acre tract owned by the district. As a result of that conversation two members of the board, the county surveyor and Charles M. Wagner went to the school site and made a survey, which indicated that the building was not built on the one-acre tract. The school board and the community in general had doubts about whether the building was on the school lot. No bids were received. Thereafter Charles M. Wagner and his relatives mowed the grass, cleared brush around the building, moved in furniture, made repairs, did some painting, installed a gas furnace, planted pine trees around the building and began using it as a clubhouse. In 1966 the school board decided to read-vertise its property for sale. The members of the board in 1966, knowing of the dispute as to the location of the building and having “discussed that the building might not be on the acre”, gave newspaper notice that the district would receive bids “toward the sale of one acre of land known as the Pond Creek School grounds. Complete description of this parcel may be found in Book 20, page 316, located in the Bollinger County Recorder’s office. Quitclaim deed will be provided by the school district * * * ” Three bids were received. J. C. Wagner, son of Charles M. Wagner, bid $101. One Sturgeon bid $30. Plaintiff Clarence Croy bid $125. The board accepted Croy’s bid and the school district executed and delivered to the Croys a quitclaim deed to the one-acre tract. The description in the quitclaim deed, in words and figures, was the same as in the original deed made by J. C. Wagner to the district in 1916, except that a mistake was made in one of the calls whereby the quarter quarter section was mistakenly described as “Southwest” whereas it should have read “Southeast.” It was the intention of the parties that the word “Southwest” read “Southeast.” The Croys took possession and ejected intervenors’ furniture and effects from the building. The Croys subsequently caused the land described in the deed to be surveyed. Their surveyor found the building to be off the land described in the deed. Clarence Croy then had another acre surveyed immediately north of the described acre and brought [520]*520this suit to reform the deed so as to include the land on the north upon which the building was erected. Clarence Croy considered the value of the building to be $5,000.

Plaintiffs sought reformation on the ground that the parties entered into the deed in question by mutual mistake of fact. The petition alleged that school district and plaintiffs acquired title to the land adjoining the one-acre tract by adverse possession; that school district intended to convey and plaintiffs intended to bid on and buy the land and building, including both the one-acre tract and the adjoining real estate on which the school building was erected, but that by mutual mistake of fact the deed erroneously described only the one-acre tract, and should be reformed to describe the one-acre tract plus the adjoining land acquired by school district and plaintiffs by adverse possession. The school district filed no pleading. Inter-venors’ answer was a general denial. The court found the issues for school district and intervenors.

The central issue is whether the parties intended that the land adjoining the one-acre tract be included as a part of the land to be sold and conveyed. To prevail it was incumbent upon plaintiffs to prove by clear, cogent and convincing evidence, Allan v. Allan, Mo.Sup., 364 S.W.2d 578 [1]; Walters v. Tucker, Mo.Sup., 308 S.W.2d 673, 679 [7], (1) that the school district acquired the adjoining land by adverse possession and (2) that the parties intended that the adjoining land be included in the deed.

Plaintiffs failed to meet the burden of proving that the parties intended to include the adjoining land in the quitclaim deed or that it was omitted by mutual mistake of fact. We find to the contrary that all parties concerned entertained grave doubts and were in a state of uncertainty on the question whether the building was located on the one-acre tract or on privately owned ground; that the one-acre tract was advertised, bought, sold and conveyed without any intention on the part of seller or buyers that any land other than the one-acre tract be transferred, and that grantors intended to convey and grantees expected to receive title to the school building only if it proved to be located on the one-acre tract.

None of the school directors in 1966 knew whether the building was on the one-acre tract. They were uncertain about the question. They had been told by Charles M. Wagner that it was not. They had heard about the 1956 survey, which revealed that it was not. They knew that the community in general entertained doubts on the question. They discussed the question in their meeting. They did not claim, assert or understand that the district had obtained title to the adjoining land by adverse possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
434 S.W.2d 517, 1968 Mo. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/croy-v-zalma-reorganized-school-district-r-v-of-bollinger-county-mo-1968.