Foard v. McAnnelly

114 S.W. 990, 215 Mo. 371, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 990 (Foard v. McAnnelly) 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
Foard v. McAnnelly, 114 S.W. 990, 215 Mo. 371, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 285 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

The petition is an ordinary petition in ejectment for the following strip of land in Texas county:

“Beginning at the northwest comer of section nineteen in township' thirty, range nine west, in Texas county, Missouri, thence running east on said section line thirty-seven chains to- a fence, thence running south one hundred and twenty-two links, thence running west with a fence thirty-seven chains, thence running north one hundred and twenty-two links to place of beginning; thence running north ten links to the northeast corner of section twenty-four, in township thirty, range ten, thence running west on the section line of section twenty-four, five hundred and twenty-five links, thence running south one hundred and thirty-two links to a fence, thence running east five hundred and twenty-five links with a fence, thence north one hundred and thirty-two links to the place of beginning. ’ ’

Ouster was laid as of April 2, 1905, damages claimed in the sum of five dollars, and monthly rents and profits alleged to be $1 per month. We set out the answer more fully, for in so doing it assists in the statement of facts shown upon the trial. In the answer we find first a general denial. Then follows this language:

“For a further answer says: That plaintiff ought not to have or maintain his action, but should be stopped from setting up or maintaining the same for the following reasons: that the fence running east and west, described in the plaintiff’s petition, was [374]*374b-uilt more than twenty years ago by one R. B. Meador, who was then the owner of the south half of southwest quarter, section eighteen, township thirty, range nine, and the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter, section thirteen, township, thirty, range ten west, and in the possession of the same, and this plaintiff then being the owner of, and in possession of the tract of land lying directly south thereof, and who by agreement joined in the building of said fence mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, as and for a division fence between their several tracts of land, which has ever since that time been used by the said plaintiff and the said R. B. Meador up to about the seventh day of September, 1904 (as a division fence dividing this respective tract of land), at which time this defendant purchased the said land (described in petition) from the said R. B. Meador, and immediately thereafter went in the possession thereof.
“Defendant alleges that from the time of the building of the said fence at the time and in the manner, and for the purpose aforesaid, the said Meador and the said plaintiff believed and considered the said fence to be the true boundary line dividing the said tracts of land owned then by the said plaintiff and the said Meador, and immediately after the building of the said fence the said Meador commenced to clear up, cultivate and improve the said land (described in the petition) and laid out and expended a large amount of money and labor in improving the same (all the time claiming the same as his land), and has ever since that time occupied the same and remained in undisputed possession thereof until the said 7th day of September, 1904; paid all taxes assessed thereon; all done in the belief that the said fence was the true line dividing their respective tracts of land, and further says that all the improving on the said land was done with the knowledge, consent and approval of the said plaintiff, and under the full belief that [375]*375the said fence marked the line of division as aforesaid.
“Defendant further alleges that about the first of June, 1904, he commenced negotiations with the said Meador for the purpose of ultimately purchasing the said land, and while the same was in the actual occupation of the said Meador as aforesaid, and which fact of such contemplated purchase by defendant of the said land was well known to this plaintiff, and well knowing the same to be claimed by the said Meador, remained quiet and permitted this defendant to purchase same, the plaintiff well knowing that defendant believed that the said fence would mark the boundary of the said tracts between plaintiff and defendant in case he should purchase same.
“Defendant alleges that afterwards and on 7th day of September, 1904, he did purchase the same, and received a deed from the said Meador for the said land owned by the said Meador as aforesaid, still believing that the said Meador was the owner of all the land of which the said fence formed the south boundary line, and paid for the said land a valuable consideration, all of which he would not have done except in the belief that he was entitled upon the said date to all the land up to the said fence.
“The premises being considered, the plaintiff should be estopped from claiming the possession of the said land or any part thereof.”

The record discloses no reply, but the case pro-' ceeded as if one of general denial of new matter had been filed.

From the foregoing answer it appears there was a doubtful or disputed boundary line between Meador and Foard. The defendant is Meador’s grantee.

There are three different surveys testified to in the evidence. One by George Paulding in 1884, one by S. S. Roark, county surveyor of Texas county, in 1901, and a third by L. C. MeSpadden, surveyor of [376]*376Dent county, a year or more later. In the latter survey, Mr. Roark assisted. The Roark survey fixed the line north of the Paulding survey, and the McSpadden survey very slightly to the north of the Roark survey. It might be well to state that P'aulding seems to have been the deputy surveyor of one Brown. The fence described in the petition is on the line of the Paulding survey, and the land sued for and recovered is the strip between the fence and the Roark survey. As to how the several surveys were made is fully in evidence. By this we mean the parties describe their work fully, both as to what Government land marks were found and what were not found.

There is also a deed in evidence from Meador and wife to1 R. T. Foard, conveying a small tract of land in section nineteen, which was south of the line, whatever it may be, and in this deed made by Meador the land is described by Government numbers, with nothing to indicate an agreed boundary line. This deed was in 1899', some four years after the Paulding survey.

The evidence upon one of the disputed questions, i. e., as to whether or not there was an agreed line, can be best stated in their own language. Mr. Foard says:

“Q. You have seen and read and heard read a description of the land described in this petition, have you not? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. I will ask you who was in possession of this land when this suit was filed on April 14, 1905; who was in possession of it or had it in possession of that date? A. I had it in possession in my deeds.
“Q. Who had it under fence? A. George H. McAnnelly.
“Q. How much of that land is in cultivation if you know? A. Five or six acres.
“Q. What is the rental of it worth a year? A. Well, now, I suppose it would be worth $2 a year.
[377]*377“Cross-examined by. Mr. Grove:
“Q. Did you ever have possession of it? A. I suppose I had possession of it before it was fenced. I had a deed to it.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 990, 215 Mo. 371, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foard-v-mcannelly-mo-1908.