Dyer v. Brannock

2 Mo. App. 432, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 200
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Mo. App. 432 (Dyer v. Brannock) 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
Dyer v. Brannock, 2 Mo. App. 432, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 200 (Mo. Ct. App. 1876).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an ejectment, commenced on August 11, 1872, to recover possession of part of survey 3,182, of a con[434]*434firmation by the act of 1836, to the representatives of Motarcl, lying in the cul-de-sac of the Grand Prairie common field. Upwards of 100 persons occupied different parts of this land. They were all sued together as joint trespassers. They answered separately, denying the title of plaintiff, and also denying any joint occupation. Each set up his several holding. The statute of limitations was also set up in each ■case. Some alleged a possession of twenty-four years, others thirty-six. Plaintiffs demurred to some of these answers, and moved to strike out others of them. The court overruled both motions and demurrers. The case came on for trial in February, 1873. The court ordered the plaintiffs to elect against which of the defendants they would proceed, and to dismiss the suit as to all the other defendants. Whereupon plaintiff elected to proceed against Brannock, and dismissed as to the other defendants. At a later period of the trial plaintiff became non-suit, with leave etc., and the general term set this non-suit aside. The cause came on to be tried again in November, 1874, when there was judgment for defendant Brannock, which was affirmed in general term, and the case comes before us by appeal. When the cause was tried in November, 1874, plaintiffs claimed, notwithstanding their dismissal of the suit as to all but Brannock, to be entitled, by virtue of the reversal of the ruling by which they had been driven to a non-suit, to proceed against all the original defendants. The court refused to allow this, and plaintiff excepted. At the trial evidence was given of a confirmation to Motard’s representatives of a tract of land in the cul-de-sac of the Grand Prairie, and that James Daud and Sally Adams were such representatives as to a portion of this tract. Sally Adams was, in November, 1824, married to Zachariah Wilson. She died in child-bed, in 1826, leaving a child, who died in 1827.

Zachariah Wilson was a river-pilot. On August 24, 1819, he agreed with Jane Collins that they would thereafter live together as man and wife. This agreement they communi[435]*435rated to the mother and brother of Jane, and to some boarders in the family, and, about ten o’clock, p. m., Jane and Zachariah retired to an apartment prepared for them. They cohabited until September 13, 1819, when Wilson left her and accompanied Major Long on his celebrated expedition westward. She appears to have seen no more of him' “until 1830. At that time she was living in St. Charles with her daughter, Cynthia Elizabeth, the fruit of her connection with Wilson. This child, she tells us, was born on April 28, 1820. Wilson wrote to her that if she would come to .St. Louis and live with him again he would take care of her and her child, which he acknowledged to be his also. She consented to this, and thereafter lived with him until his death, in 1836. Cynthia lived Avith them, and Wilson acknowledged her as his daughter. Shortly after Wilson’s death, Cynthia married Abner Dyer, and the plaintiffs are the children of that marriage. Cynthia died in July, 1869 ; Abner in June, 1870. After Wilson had gone array, Jane Collins heard from others that he had left a wife and children in his native State. He was about twenty-seven years ■old in 1819 • she was about nineteen. From first to last no marriage ceremony took place between Jane Collins and .Zachariah Wilson. The nearest approach to it was their standing up in the parlor of her mother’s boarding-house, in •St. Louis, on August 20, 1819, joining hands, and assenting by boAving their heads, in the presence of several witnesses, to the statement that they were going to live together through life, and then retiring. All these facts appear by the testimony of Jane Collins, or Jane Wilson, who testified at the trial as a Avitness for plaintiff, and who seems to have told the truth Avith great candor.

After the death of Wilson, a proceeding in partition was commenced, in Avhich the tract of land sued for was set off and allotted to the “ unknoAvn heirs of Zachariah Wilson.”

There was evidence tending to show that defendant, and .those under whom he held, had been in possession of the [436]*436land, with claim of title from 1844 to the commencement of this suit, claiming it as their” own.

The court charged the jury as follows :

“ You are instructed that the premises sued for are part of a tract of land confirmed to the representatives of Joseph Motardby the act of Congress of July 4,1836, and that the title to the premises was vested in Sarah Ann Adams at the time of her death. The plaintiffs seek to recover as the alleged descendants of Zachariah Wilson, to whose heirs, then unknown, the portion of the Motard tract which included these premises was set apart by the decree of the St. Louis-Circuit Court rendered in 1838. Whether the plaintiffs-can recover as the descendants of Zachariah Wilson will depend upon their having established (1) that they are such descendants, and (2) that Wilson himself, having title to the premises sued for at the time of his death, transmitted such title, by descent, to the plaintiff.

“ If you believe from the evidence that one Cynthia Elizabeth Wilson was the daughter of Zachariah Wilson, that said Cynthia Elizabeth married one Abner W. Dyer, and -that plaintiffs were born of such marriage, then you will find that plaintiffs are the descendants and heirs of Zachariah Wilson. If you believe from the evidence that Wilson was married to Sarah Ann Adams in the year 1824, that a. child was born of such marriage, that Sarah Ann died leaving such child surviving her, and that Wilson survived said child, then, upon the death of such child, the title to the premises in controversy became vested in Zachariah Wilson; and if you further find from the evidence that, in the year 1819, at the town of St. Louis, intending thereby to contract marriage, the said Wilson and one Jane Collins mentioned [sic] agreed to live together thenceforward as man and wife, and that of the union thus formed Cynthia Elizabeth Wilson was born, and that she survived the said Wilson, then the title to the premises sued for became vested in said Cynthia, and, at her death, descended to the plaintiffs, [437]*437as her heirs. But if you believe from the evidence that when they came together, in 1819, that said Wilson and the .said Jane Collins did not intend to contract marriage, but to merely live together for purpose of illicit cohabitation, and that of such intercourse the said Cynthia was born, then, upon the death of her father, she did not become vested with the title to the premises sued for — unless you find from the evidence that, subsequently to the birth of said Cynthia, .and after the death of Sarah Ann Adams, the said Wilson and the said Jane Collins, intending thereby to intermarry, mutually agreed to live together thenceforward as man and wife, and did so live, and that, after such reunion, the said Wilson recognized the said Cynthia as his child. If the conditions of the legitimacy of said Cynthia thus indicated have, in your opinion, been satisfied by the evidence, and you believe that the plaintiffs are descendants of said Wilson, then the deeds, documents, and records read in evidence by the plaintiffs complete the legal title in these plaintiffs to the premises sued for, and they are entitled to recover, unless the defendant has established his defense •under the statute of limitations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Mo. App. 432, 1876 Mo. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-brannock-moctapp-1876.