Gates v. Seibert

57 S.W. 1065, 157 Mo. 254, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 19, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 57 S.W. 1065 (Gates v. Seibert) 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
Gates v. Seibert, 57 S.W. 1065, 157 Mo. 254, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 23 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is an action of ejectment coming from the circuit court of St. Louis county.

The land was owned by John Gates in his lifetime who died testate in 1872, leaving surviving him his widow, Levina Gates, and three children, to-wit: Jacob S. Gates (then unmarried), William J. Gates (married), Levina H., wife of Chadwick Gillum. By his will John Gates disposed of all [264]*264his property, giving most of it to bis children. In the first clause of the will the testator directs that his debts he paid, in the second he provides for his widow, and in the third, fourth and fifth for his three children. The following extracts from the will are sufficient for the purposes of this cause:

“Third. I hereby give and bequeath to my son William Jasper Gates and his wife Eliza, for and during their lifetime and after their decease to his children [description of property].
“Eourth. I hereby give and bequeath to my daughter Levina Maria Gillum and her husband Chadwick Gillum for and during their lifetime and after their decease to her children [property described].
“Eifth. I hereby give and bequeath to my son Jacob Snyder Gates (and his wife if he should marry) and after their decease to his children” the land in suit.

In 1813, after the death of the testator, his heirs deeded all their interest in the land covered by the fifth clause to Jacob S. Gates under the idea that that clause was void.

In 1816 Jacob S. Gates married Lizzie A. Oool, who gave birth to a child in September, 1877, and died the next month; the child died the day after its mother. Jacob S. Gates, in November, 1878, married Mary J. Eilley in St. Louis county. At the time he married his second wife she had by him an illegitimate child then about three years old, whom at and after the marriage they acknowledged as his child and ever afterwards treated as their legitimate offspring. The child is now Ella Gates Coffman, one of the plaintiffs in this suit. After this marriage there were two children born to them, John J. Gates, one of the plaintiffs here, and Jacob Snyder Gates, Jr., born February 8, 1882, and died July 8, 1882. Jacob S. Gates’s wife died in 1884, leaving surviving her her husband and two children, Ella [265]*265and Jobn, these plaintiffs. In 1886 Jacob S. Gates and bis mother executed a deed of trust to secure a debt of $10,000, which was afterwards duly foreclosed and at the sale James O. Ghio became the purchaser; Adam Seibert et al., defendants here, are in possession of the land as tenants of Ghio.

Those facts being shown, the court at the request of the plaintiffs gave the following declarations of law:

“(A). The court declares the law to be that if it finds from the evidence that John Gates, at the time of his death, owned the real estate, described in the petition; that he died in the year 1872, leaving Levina Gates, as his widow, surviving him, and a son, Jacob Snyder Gates; that Levina Gates died before Jacob Snyder Gates, and Jacob Snyder Gates died about the year 1888; that the land mentioned in the will of John Gates as part of the ‘Dr. Bates’ farm and given to Jacob Snyder Gates, his wife and children, under the fifth clause thereof, is the same property as that described in plaintiffs’ petition; that Jacob Snyder Gates was twice married and had by his first wife a child, which lived but a short time, and that his said wife and child both died before Jacob Snyder Gates, and before any second marriage which the court may find was contracted by him; that the said Jacob Snyder Gates thereafter was lawfully married to Mary Jane Filley, and that the plaintiff Ella Gates Coffman and John J. Gates, are the sole living children and descendants of Jacob Snyder Gates, and are legitimate children, as such may be described in other declarations of the court; that the said Mary Jane, wife of Jacob Snyder Gates, died before the commencement of this suit, and before the death of said Jacob Snyder Gates; that there was born to Jacob Snyder Gates and his wife, Mary Jane, after their marriage and the birth of plaintiff, John J. Gates, another child, which died an infant before the death of either of its parents; and that the defendants, Adam and William Seibert, were, at the commencement of this suit, [266]*266in possession of tbe real estate described; it will render a verdict for tbe plaintiffs for tbe recovery of an undivided eleven-sixteentbs interest in tbe land described in tbe petition and claimed by them, together witb sucb amounts as damages as it may determine under tbe other declarations made by tbe court.
“(B).- Tbe court declares tbe law to be that if it finds for tbe plaintiffs for the recovery of an eleven-sixteentbs interest in tbe land described in tbe petition, it will assess against tbe defendants, as damages, a sum of money which will equal two-tbirds of tbe reasonable net rental value of the use, occupation and enjoyment of tbe premises from tbe 20th day of April, 1893, to tbe present time, as originally’ sued for, and it will in its verdict fix tbe value of the monthly rental of eleven-sixteentbs of tbe property at the present time.
“(C). Tbe court declares tbe law to be that if it finds from the evidence that tbe plaintiff, Ella Gates Coffman, was tbe daughter of Jacob Snyder Gates and Mary Jane Eilley, and born prior to November 12, 1878; that on said day, November 12, 1878, said Mary Jane Eilley and Jacob Snyder Gates were married; and that thereafter Jacob S. Gates recognized tbe said Ella to be bis child by maintaining her in his house and home, treating her as sucb, and bolding her out to tbe community in which be lived as bis child; then tbe court will find that tbe said Ella is tbe legitimate child of Jacob S. Gates.
“(D). The court declares tbe law to be that tbe meaning of tbe fifth clause in tbe will of John Gates is, that tbe farm mentioned in that clause should belong to Jacob S. Gates and sucb person as might be bis wife, during their joint lives, and to tbe one of them who survived tbe other during bis or her life, and that subject to these life interests the children of Jacob S. Gates should become and be tbe [267]*267owners in fee simple of tbe "property; that tbe children of Jacob S. Gates should own such property in equal shares and that the shares of any of his children who might die before him should fall by inheritance to the heirs of such child at its death.”

The court refused the request of the defendant that: “The court sitting as a jury declares the law to be that upon the pleadings and evidence adduced in this action the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover, and the- finding and verdict must be for the defendants.” The finding and judgment were for the plaintiffs and the defendants have duly appealed.

The points of difference in the case are in the construction of the will, and the effect of the after-marriage of the parents of the illegitimate child and their recognition of her.

I. It is contended in behalf of defendants that the fifth clause of the will under which the plaintiffs claim is void because it violates the rule of law against perpetuities. The proposition is that under this clause of the will it was possible that the estate attempted to be limited to the children of Jacob S. Gates might not “vest in possession” within the lifetime of a person in being,- and twenty-one years and ten months thereafter.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W. 1065, 157 Mo. 254, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-seibert-mo-1900.