Eversmeyer v. Broyles

216 S.W. 317, 280 Mo. 99, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 191
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 4, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 317 (Eversmeyer v. Broyles) 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
Eversmeyer v. Broyles, 216 S.W. 317, 280 Mo. 99, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 191 (Mo. 1919).

Opinions

The plaintiff brought suit in the Circuit Court of Lincoln County to enjoin the levy of an execution and the annulment of the judgment upon which the execution was issued. The case in which the judgment was rendered was ejectment. The defendant here *Page 103 W.W. Broyles was plaintiff, and the plaintiff here was defendant. It is alleged that the defendant, Richard T. Bennett, sheriff of Lincoln County, is about to serve the execution.

The bill of plaintiff sets out the pleadings, proceedings and judgments in the case of Broyles v. Eversmeyer.

The petition in that case stated a cause of action in ejectment in the ordinary form for the recovery of a tract of land in Lincoln County, described as follows, to-wit: All the Northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28, Township 50, Range 1 west. The petition stated that the defendant Eversmeyer was wrongfully in possession of the same and that the plaintiff Broyles was damaged in the sum of five hundred dollars by the withholding of possession, and that the monthly rents and profits of the premises was fifteen dollars.

The judgment in the case of Broyles v. Eversmeyer is then set out and it recites that the court heard the evidence and found the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of:

"All of the Northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28, Township 50, Range 1 west, and that afterwards on the 2nd day of January A.D. 1906, the defendant herein, Eno Eversmeyer, entered upon said lands and took possession thereof and ever since that time and now has wrongfully continued in possession thereof and unlawfully withheld and now withholds possession thereof from the plaintiff that part of the said Northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28, Township 50, Range 1 west, described as follows: Beginning on the north line of Fractional Section 28, Township 50, Range 1 west, at a point 610 feet west of the Northeast corner of said Fractional Section 28; thence with the line between said Fractional Section 28 and Survey 1744, S. 39 degrees east 450 feet; thence S. 10 degrees W. 800 feet; thence N. 75 degrees W. 1100 feet; thence S. 10 degrees W. 60 feet; thence leaving said line between Fractional Section 28 and Survey 1744 and running S. 84½ *Page 104 degrees E. 288 feet; thence S. 52 degrees E. 1002 feet; thence N. 46 degrees E. 406 feet; thence N. 17 degrees 10 degrees E. 482 feet; thence N. 33½ degrees W. 133 feet; thence N. 70 degrees W. 105 feet; thence N. 10 degrees E. 246; feet; thence N. 23 degrees W. 480 feet to the north line of said Fractional Section 28; thence west with said section line 183 feet to the place of beginning, containing about 11¼ acres.

"The court doth further find that plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of $360 by reason of defendant's action in taking possession of said land and withholding the same from the plaintiff since the second day of January, 1905, to this date; the court further finds that the value of the monthly rents and profits of said lands is $7.50.

"It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that plaintiff have and recover against the defendant a judgment of restitution for the possession of the aforesaid lands, so found by the court to have been unlawfully taken and withheld by defendant from plaintiff, and that we have a writ of restitution therefor, and also that plaintiff have and recover from defendant a judgment for the sum of $360 for his damage as found by the court by reason of the defendant taking and withholding possession of said lands from the plaintiff, and that he also have judgment against the defendant for the value of the rents and profits found by the court at the rate of $7.50 per month from the date of the rendition of this judgment until possession is delivered to plaintiff, and for the costs expended about the prosecution of this suit and as taxed by this court, and that he have execution therefor."

The bill in this case then alleges that a writ of possession and execution had been issued upon this judgment directing the Sheriff of Lincoln County to oust the plaintiff from the possession of the lands described in the judgment and to levy the damages and costs adjudged in favor of Broyles and against Eversmeyer. *Page 105

The bill further alleges that it cannot be determined, from the terms and provisions of the said judgment, where the tract of land lies which is adjudged to belong to Broyles. It is averred that there are two tracts of land, Tract A and Tract B, and that it is impossible to determine which tract is meant by the description in the judgment; that Tract A lies wholly without Fractional Section 28, Township 50, Range 1 west, and that Tract B. lies wholly within the Northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28. It is further averred that the plaintiff Eversmeyer is in possession, and has been since the commencement of the suit of Broyles v. Eversmeyer, of only an undivided one-third part of Tract A, and therefore if Tract A was the tract intended the judgment is wrong in that it should have adjudged the recovery only of an undivided one-third, and should have adjudged recovery of only one-third of the damages, rents and profits.

It is further averred that if Tract B is the tract sued for and intended to be described in the judgment, then Broyles, the plaintiff in said ejectment suit, was at the time of the rendition of the judgment and at the commencement of the suit and ever since has been in exclusive possession, and therefore is not entitled to a judgment for possession or the recovery of damages of rents and profits for the withholding of such possession.

It is further alleged in the bill that the plaintiff had a meritorious defense to the suit in the case of Broyles v. Eversmeyer and that he was the owner in fee of an undivided one-third of Tract A and entitled to the possession of same. The plaintiff, Eversmeyer, then prays for a temporary restraining order enjoining the defendant from levying upon and selling plaintiff's property under the said execution and from interfering with plaintiff's possession of said Tract A; and that the said writ of injunction upon final hearing may be made perpetual, and that the said judgment may be annulled and Broyles be restrained from attempting hereafter to enforce it. *Page 106

The defendants filed a demurrer to this bill which was by the trial court sustained. The plaintiff declining to plead further, his bill was dismissed, and from that judgment he appealed.

I. The first point made by appellant is that the description in the judgment attacked is so vague and uncertain as to render the judgment void; that it cannot be determined from the description of the land whether it lies within the northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28, or in Survey 1744 mentioned in the judgment and entirely without the northeast Fractional Quarter of Section 28. It is argued that the sheriff in serving the execution which contains a description of the property, following the judgment, must have some definite fixed monument by which to identify the land; that no fixed monuments from which to begin the measurements and calls for distances appears in the description and therefore the sheriff would not know where to begin.

The description clearly states the beginning point from which the description must start, and that is the northeast corner of Fractional Section 28. If we understand appellant, he contends there is no monument by which to locate that point. The plaintiff's bill in this case states nowhere thatGovernment there is any uncertainty about that section corner,Corner. nor about the location of the line dividing that section from Survey No. 1744.

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Related

Tillman v. Hutcherson
154 S.W.2d 104 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)
Weil v. Richardson
24 S.W.2d 175 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 317, 280 Mo. 99, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eversmeyer-v-broyles-mo-1919.