Dunn v. Miller

8 Mo. App. 467, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 50
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Mo. App. 467 (Dunn v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Miller, 8 Mo. App. 467, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 50 (Mo. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of ejectment, to recover a tract of land included in United States survey 2541, made under New Madrid certificate 164, in the name of John Brooks. The parcel of land claimed in this action is a tract fronting two hundred and ninety feet on Grand Avenue in St. Louis, [471]*471and lying in Page and McPherson’s Addition. The particular lots involved are the same which defendants recovered of Dunn and his tenant Solari, in Miller v. Dunn, reported’ in 62 Mo. 216. The petition is in the usual form. Defendants plead not guilty.

Both parties claim under Charles Lucas. Lucas conveyed' to Tanner, under whom plaintiffs claim. In the ejectment of Miller v. Dunn, Miller claimed under Mrs. Lucas, to-whom, Under the name of Sarah Graham, Lucas had conveyed the property in contemplation of marriage. Miller,' in that suit, introduced a deed from Mrs. Lucas to Gillespie, and derived titleto himself through Gillespie. Though Dunn had been in possession for more than twenty years» before that action, claiming under Charles Lucas, yet the statute was no bar, as the legal title had not passed out of-the United States until the act of Congress of 1864, and; the suit was begun in 1872. In the present action, the deed of Mrs. Lucas to Gillespie was not introduced. De-. fendant showed a legal title in Mrs. Lucas, merely as an-•outstanding title in a stranger, to show a break in the chain of plaintiff’s title at that point. The theory of plaintiff in the present case is that, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, a deed from Mrs. Lucas must now be presumed, to bridge over the gap in the paper title. Defendant introduced the record of the former recovery, and claims that it is a termination of the presumptions in plaintiff’s favor growing out of long possession. He also claims that it is' a bar.

This is sufficient as an introductory statement. The ■ points upon which defendant relies will be understood from-what is further said in the course of the opinion.

It is contended by defendant that the former recovery is a bar. In view of the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Kimmel v. Benna, 70 Mo. 52, it must betaken as settled that a judgment in ejectment is no bar in Missouri, even" though the titles and defences are precisely the same as they [472]*472were in the first suit. Ejectment tries the strength of legal right of possession, and title is only incidentally drawn in question. This was the rule in Missouri until changed by statute in 1855. Rev. Stats. 1855, p. 695, sect. 33. And the old rule was restored by the act of 1857. Acts, p. 34. There could'have been no doubt on the matter — in view of the rulings in Slevin v. Brown, 32 Mo. 176; Carter v. Scaggs, 38 Mo. 302 ; and Holmes v. Carondelet; 38 Mo. 551 — but for the dictum in Foster v. Evans, 51 Mo. 39. The matter is now, however, settled, even if there was ever room for a serious question as to the doctrine of the Supreme Court in the matter. There has, really, never been any contrary ruling in this State.

It is, however, incumbent on plaintiff, in this action, to show such title in himself as will warrant a recovery in ejectment. He claims that he has done so.-

• In 1801, seven hundred and nine arpens of land in New Madrid County were confirmed to the legal representatives of John Brooks. Brooks conveyed to Charles. Lucas. Lucas applied for relief under the New Madrid Act, claiming the fee of the land, and that it was injured by earthquake ; and in November, 1816, he received from the recorder of land-titles New Madrid certificate-164, entitling-him to locate the like quantity (seven hundred and nine arpens) ofland. The first deed offered in evidence by plaintiff is a certified copy of a deed recorded in St. Louis County. This deed is dated January 1, 1817, and purports to-convey to James Tanner, his heirs and assigns, “ a certain tract or parcel ofland of seven hundred and nine arpens, and the original certificate, of which the following is a copy.” . Then, follows the New Madrid certificate to the legal representatives of John Brooks, entitling him to locate seven hundred and nine arpens in the Territory of Missouri. Then follows: the habendum clause, to James Tanner and his heirs, etc., “ whom I do hereby authorize to locate, or cause to be located, according to law, the said quantity of seven hundred [473]*473and nine arpens of land; hereby covenanting to and with said Tanner that I am the lawful owner of the land, and whenever said land is duly located, will make a deed of warranty.” This instrument is acknowledged and recorded on January 4, 1817. The certified copy was admitted, against defendants’ objection.

The Territorial law of 1804, in force at the time, provides that “ all conveyances made and executed within the district, of or concerning lands, or whereby the same may be affected, shall be acknowledged * * * and recorded in the recorder’s office in the district where the lands and hereditaments are tying or being.” 1 Ter. Laws, 46, sect. 8. This New Madrid certificate might never be located. It might have been returned, and the New Madrid lands kept. It might have been located anywhere in Missouri, or in Arkansas, which was then within the Missouri Territory. It was, however, afterwards located in St. Louis County ; and it is manifestly an instrument by which land may be affected. It is, therefore, an instrument which may be acknowledged, and an instrument which may be recorded. The case is not like that of a certified copy of the record of Spanish concession in Patterson v. Fagan, 38 Mo. 83. That is a paper from the Spanish government, not acknowledged under the acts concerning conveyances, and which gave no right, except to a permissive possession under the former government. The evidence of cultivation and possession, and not the fact of a .Spanish concession, was what gave rights under the act of 1812. A power of attorney must be recorded in the county in which the land sold under it is situated; at the time that it is recorded, however, it may not be an instrument affecting land in that county. It may never affect land in that county. Judge Napton, in considering sect. 24 of the act concerning conveyances (Wag. Stats. 277, sect. 24), in Muldrow v. Robinson, 58 Mo. 345, construes the words, “ by which any real estate [474]*474may be affected,” to mean that the deed is to be recorded: in the county where the land “supposed or sought to be-affected is situated.” A paper which affects land is to be recorded in the county where the land lies. This paper affects the land in controversy here, and is recorded in the county in which that land lies. It is, therefore, within the provisions of sect. 40 of the act concerning evidence, that “ whenever the records in the recorder’s office of deeds of any county shall contain a record of any writing, instrument, or deed purporting to affect any real estate, right, or interest in or. to the same, and such real estate, right, or interest in or to the same shall have been claimed or enjoyed by any person, by or through such writing, for a period often consecutive years, such writing and a certified copy thereof, and of the time of its record, shall be prima facie evidence of the execution of such writing, and of its genuineness and time of record ; provided, the said record shall have' been made at least ten years next before such writing, or' certified copy thereof, is offered in evidence.” Wag. Stats. 596, sect.

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Related

Drey v. Doyle
28 Mo. App. 249 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1887)
Hogan v. Smith
11 Mo. App. 314 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1881)
Dunn v. Miller
75 Mo. 260 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mo. App. 467, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-miller-moctapp-1880.