Dausch v. Crane

109 Mo. 323
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 109 Mo. 323 (Dausch v. Crane) 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
Dausch v. Crane, 109 Mo. 323 (Mo. 1891).

Opinion

Black, J.

This is ej.ectment in which there was a verdict and judgment for defendant. The property sued for is described as fifty-five feet on St. Ange avenue extending back two hundred and sixteen feet to a width of fifty feet on Linn street, and bounded on the north by Park avenue, in the city of St. Louis. It is part of a triangular piece of ground containing one and twenty-hundredths acres, bounded on the north by Park avenue, west by St. Ange avenue, east by Linn street, and is known as city block 822. This city block is located in the northwest corner of block 2 of Charles DeWard’s survey of the St. Louis commons.

By the act of March 18, 1835 (2 Ter. Laws, p. 501) the mayor and aldermen of the city of St. Louis were authorized to sell the commons belonging to the inhabitants of the city at public auction, the purchaser to pay interest annually until the expiration of ten [327]*327years, with the right to pay the principal at the end of that time and receive a deed in fee. This act also gives the mayor and aldermen power to settle and compromise with persons having claims within the commons, conflicting with the claim of the inhabitants.

The commons were laid off into blocks pursuant to this>act by what is called the DeWard survey; and on the twenty-eighth of January, 1836, the city passed an ordinance for the sale of the commons, and in the same year provided by another ordinance that grantees or purchasers should have the right to be substituted in place of the original purchasers.

Besides the act of the legislature, the DeWard survey and these ordinances, the plaintiff introduced the following evidence: First, parol evidence tending to show that Isaac W. White purchased this triangle at a public sale in March, 1836, accompanied with proof that no written lease or memorandum of sale to him could be found; second, the will of Isaac W. White, probated in 1841, in which he states that he purchased the triangle," and that two of his sons were to pay the arrearages due and to become due therefor, and by which he devised the property to his wife for life, remainder to his children; third, a deed from the city of St. Louis conveying the triangle to Sophia White, dated eleventh of March, 1848 — this deed does not set forth any recitals of a prior sale; the only recital being that the purchase price of $300 was paid by her; fourth, a deed from the children conveying the triangle to their mother, dated the thirteenth of May, 1853; fifth, the will of Sophia White, probated in December, 1858, and a deed by the executor of that will conveying the strip of ground in suit to Virginia Lount, one of the children of Sophia and Isaac White. This deed bears date the twenty-seventh of June, 1863, and was made pursuant to proceedings to which all the children were parties; [328]*328sixth, proof that Virginia married Millard, and a deed from them to the plaintiff, dated in 1882, in trust for Virginia.

The defendant introduced the following evidence: First, a deed from the city of St. Louis to Frederick Dent, dated the fifteenth of March, 1837, conveying to Dent thirty-eight and fifty-four-hundredths acres of land; second, a deed from Dent to Patrick Dillon, dated October 26, 1837, conveying the same land; third, the will of Dillon, probated in 1851, devising his estate to Barton Bates in trust with power to lease and sell lands; fourth, a lease on the lot in suit from Bates, as trustee, to P. D. Tiffany, dated the first of January, 1857, for twenty years. This lease was surrendered to Bates, and by him accepted in 1875; fifth, a lease from Tiffany to Henry Prante, dated the twenty-ninth of January, 1857, extending to the first of January, 1860; also, a lease from Tiffany to Fritz Walkenhorst, dated the twenty-sixth of April, 1857, extending to the first of April, 1860. These two leases covered the property in suit; sixth, evidence showing the appointment of the present defendant as trustee in the Dillon will in the stead of Bates.

There was much other evidence produced by the one side and the other which will be noticed hereafter.

1. The plaintiff, it will be seen, holds under the deed from the city of St. Louis to Sophia White, dated the eleventh of March, 1848, while the defendant holds under the deed from the city to Dent, executed and recorded long prior thereto, to-wit, in March, 1837. It is conceded by the instructions given, at the request of the plaintiff, the appellant here, that if this Dent deed is valid, as to the land in suit, then it has priority over the deed to Sophia White. To show its invalidity the plaintiff produced evidence that, on the second of April, 1836, a committee on commons recommended a [329]*329settlement with Dillon, and thereupon the board of aldermen passed this resolution: “That P. M. Dillon, G-eorge Morton and Frederick Dent, being the legal representatives of James Mackay, shall receive deeds for the land claimed by them, and which is within the survey of the commons, by their paying $20 per acre therefor.”

Now, the deed to Dillon, executed by John F. Darby, mayor, describes the thirty-eight and fifty-four-hundredths acres as being in the survey of the commons, and also in the Mackay claim, and professes to have been made pursuant to a compromise made under the act of the legislature before mentioned. On its face it is a .valid conveyance. The specific objection made to it is that, in point of fact, the property in -suit is not within the Mackay claim, and, hence, the mayor had no right, under the resolution, to convey it to Dent. The evidence shows beyond all doubt that the land in question is a part of the land described in the Dent deed, and that it is also within the commons; but the evidence for the plaintiff tends to show that the south line of. the Mackay survey runs along the center of Park avenue, and, hence, that survey did not embrace this property.

On the other hand the evidence for the defendant tends to show that the south line of the Mackay survey ■is an established line, and that it runs fifty odd feet south of the south line of Park avenue, and, hence, includes this property, On this state of the evidence •the trial court could not, as a matter of law, say that the land in suit was not within the Mackay claim. Whether it was or not was a question of fact, and, hence, the court properly submitted this question to the jury.

It is next insisted that the court erred in excluding ■a resolution of the board of aldermen adopted on the [330]*330twelfth of June, 1838, which is to the following effect: “That this board does not recognize the deed made by John F. Darby as mayor deeding the thirty-eight and forty-five-hundredths acres to Dent, for the reason that he had not been authorized to make the deed.” This resolution could not affect the validity of the deed previously executed and delivered to Dent, and, hence, it was properly excluded.

2. The next branch of the case arises out of the claim that Sophia White acquired title by twenty years’ adverse possession.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pahler v. Schoenhals
234 S.W.2d 581 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1950)
Mann v. Mann
183 S.W.2d 557 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1944)
Lossing v. Shull
173 S.W.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1943)
Burnside v. Doolittle
24 S.W.2d 1011 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1930)
Miller v. Halleran
270 S.W. 427 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1925)
Native Lumber Co. v. Elmer
78 So. 703 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1918)
Pease v. Whitney
98 A. 62 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1916)
State ex rel. Porter v. Hudson
126 S.W. 733 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1910)
Thompson v. Logan
51 So. 985 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1909)
Lasley v. Kniskern
115 N.W. 971 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1908)
Redman v. Perkins
98 S.W. 1097 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
McCaughn v. Young
85 Miss. 277 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1904)
Brent v. Chipley
104 Mo. App. 645 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1904)
Ganz v. Weisenberger
66 Mo. App. 110 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1896)
Goltermann v. Schiermeyer
28 S.W. 616 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 Mo. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dausch-v-crane-mo-1891.