Farris v. Burchard

145 S.W. 825, 242 Mo. 1, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 S.W. 825 (Farris v. Burchard) 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
Farris v. Burchard, 145 S.W. 825, 242 Mo. 1, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 1 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is a suit under section 650, Eevised Statutes 1899, to quiet title to the north half of the northwest quarter of section 8, township 41 north, range 5 west, in Gasconade county. Plaintiffs in their petition claim to he the owners of a remainder in fee of an undivided one-fourth of the land mentioned, subject to a life estate in their mother in that one-fourth, and they say that the defendant Burchard is the owner in fee of the other three-fourths. Thurman N. Matthews, brother to the other plaintiffs, was first made a party defendant, but on his motion was made a party plaintiff.

There is no dispute about the facts. James Johnson was the common source of title; he died in 1865, leaving a wife and four daughters, one of whom, Mary Elizabeth, is the mother of these plaintiffs. The wife is long since dead. The defendant now owns whatever title the four daughters acquired by descent as the heirs of their father James Johnson, which was the whole estate if their father died intestate. Plaintiffs claim that he died testate, and that his will has been duly probated; if that is correct, then the plaintiffs, as children of their mother, Mary Elizabeth, are entitled to a remainder in fee, subject to the life estate of their mother, contingent on surviving her. Plaintiffs introduced in evidence a paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of James Johnson, deceased. The document appears to have been duly signed by the testator and attested by three subscribing witnesses. There is no date to the instrument, but what is claimed to be the evidence of its probate, indorsed on the back of it,, is dated February 13, 1865. The instrument purports to give all the estate to his widow for life and at her death one-fourth in fee to each of the daughters except Mary Elizabeth, to whom he gives one-fourth “during her natural life and at her death to go to her bodily heirs, but if she should die without bodily heirs, it is to be di[6]*6vided equally among the bodily heirs of my three daughters above mentioned.”

The plaintiffs are the children of Mary Elizabeth and will be her bodily heirs if - they survive her; she is till living. This suit was begun in December, 1907, and tried in May, 1908, more than thirty years after the death of plaintiffs’ grandfather. The administration of the Johnson estate was in the probate court of that county from 1865 to 1869. No evidence was offered at the trial to impeach the verity of the instrument offered, that is, to dispute its execution, but the defendant relied on the fact, as he contended, that it had never been admitted to probate as a will. The whole case turns on that point.

The evidence adduced by the plaintiffs to sustain their claim that the will had been probated was as follows: Written on the back of the instrument was the following:

“State of Missouri, County of Gasconade, ss.
“In the Gasconade County Court. This day personally appeared in open court William R. Douglas and William L. Walton, two of the subscribing witnesses to the foregoing instrument of writing, purporting to be the last will of James Johnson, deceased, who, being duly sworn, upon oath say that the said testator exhibited this instrument to them, which he declared to be his last will and testament, duly signed by him, that at the time of exhibiting said last will he was of sound mind and over the age of twenty-one years, and that they, at his request, and in his presence, signed said will as witnesses by subscribing their names thereto.
“William R. Douglas,
“W. L. Walton.
“In testimony thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of county court at office, this, the 13th day of February, and the year of Our Lord eighteen hundred and sixty-five.
[7]*7“James Johnson,
7
15-2-7 (Seal)
P. W. Btjbchabd.”
“Jas. Abbott, Clerk.
“By D. B. O’Neil.

The probate record of the county contains the foh lowing entry which was read in evidence: ‘ ‘ Peter W. Bur chard is by the court appointed administrator with the will annexed of James Johnson, deceased, and required to give bond as such administrator in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars. . And thereupon he files his bond as such administrator, which is by the court examined and approved.” The date of that record entry is not given in the record before us.

The will was never recorded in the office of the probate court. It seems to have been misplaced, and was not among the papers appertaining to the estate until sometime in 1894, when the then probate judge on making search among apparently unimportant papers, with a view of destroying what did not seem worthy to be kept, found this document in an "out-of-the-way pigeon hole and on examination of it placed it among the papers of the Johnson estate and at the same time madé a memorandum in the words “last will” in the index book of the probate court containing references to the papers in that estate; the memorandum was made with a pencil and was interlined. The document thereafter remained with the papers in the case and was produced from those files at the trial.

That was all the evidence adduced tending to prove that the paper writing had been probated as a will. On that evidence the trial court decided that the will had been duly probated and decreed that the plaintiffs were the owners of a remainder in fee of an undivided one-fourth of the land in question, contingent on their surviving their mother. From that judgment the defendant appealed.

[8]*8In 1865 the law was: ‘ ‘ The county court, or clerk thereof in vacation, subject to the confirmation or rejection of the court, shall take proof of last wills.” [Gr. S. 1865, p. 529.] The law is substantially now as it was then, except that it is the probate court, not the county court, that now has jurisdiction. [Sec. 547, R. ' S. 1909.]

Respondents attach some importance to the fact that it is recited in the proof indorsed on the will that the witnesses appeared and the proof was taken in open court, but if that was so it should be shown by the record of the court, it could not be shown by the indorsement of the proof on the back of the will. If it was done in open court it was not done in vacation, and therefore it was not the act of the clerk but the act of the court, and the court record should show it. But whether it was done in open court or before the clerk in vacation, it was sufficient to have justified the court, if it had so adjudged, at the next or perhaps at a subsequent term, to have entered its judgment declaring the will duly probated, but that has not been done. A will cannot take effect until it is probated, and it is not probated until the court having probate jurisdiction so declares by its judgment. The proof of the execution of the will which the statute authorizes to be taken in vacation, whether by the judge or the clerk, is not conclusive until it has been confirmed by the court, and is not so binding on the court that it may not be rejected if the court should so adjudge. [Creasy v. Alverson, 43 Mo. 13; Smith v. Estes, 72 Mo.

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Farris v. Burchard
171 S.W. 361 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.W. 825, 242 Mo. 1, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farris-v-burchard-mo-1912.