Genoway v. Maize

63 S.W. 698, 163 Mo. 224, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 353
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 63 S.W. 698 (Genoway v. Maize) 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
Genoway v. Maize, 63 S.W. 698, 163 Mo. 224, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 353 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is an action for the assignment of dower in certain lands in Henry county, Missouri. Since the appeal to this court the defendant has died and the cause has been properly revived against his executrix, Mrs. Bettie Maize.

The petition alleges the marriage of plaintiff to Peter E. Genoway, July 31, 1833, and that said Peter and plaintiff continued to live together as husband and wife until the death of Peter Genoway on July 8, 1896; that during said marriage said Peter Genoway was seized of an estate of inheritance in the northeast quarter of section 34, township 44, range 26, and the south one-half of the northwest quarter of said section 34, containing in all two hundred and forty acres. That plaintiff has not relinquished her dower in said real estate and is entitled to one-third thereof for and during her natural life, as and for her dower therein; that on or about September 4, 1891, she demanded her dower of defendant, but he refused to recognize her dower therein, for which, with damages, she prays judgment, etc.

[227]*227The answer admits the marriage of plaintiff and Peter Genoway as alleged in the petition, and the seizin of said Peter Genoway, in his lifetime and during the said marriage, of the lands described in the petition, and that defendant claims to be the owner in fee thereof, and denies all other allegations.

Further answering, the defendant says that by deeds of conveyance dated December 27, 1865, and February 5, 1866, recorded in deed book “0” at page 317, 318 and 319, and deed book “0” at page 420 of the records of Henry county, Missouri, the said Peter F. Genoway conveyed by warranty deed to Francis M. Maize, defendant, the lands described in plaintiff’s petition in fee, and that the plaintiff joined with her said husband in the same and therein and thereby relinquished her dower in and to said lands.

And for a third defense defendant pleaded the statute of limitations of thirty years as provided in section 6770, Revised Statutes 1889.

In her reply, plaintiff admits she signed a paper dated December 27, 1865, the same paper referred to by defendant in his answer as a deed from plaintiff and her husband to said defendant, but she denies that said alleged deed was the joint deed of herself and husband, Peter Genoway, and she denies she relinquished her dower in the real estate in said deed described.

For further reply she says that said Francis M. Maize promised and agreed-to pay plaintiff the sum of one thousand dollars if she would sign said alleged deed dated December 27, 1865; that she signed the same relying upon the promise of said Maize and said agreement to pay her said sum of one thousand dollars; that after said Maize obtained possession of said deed under and by means of said promise and agreement he refused to pay her the said sum of one thousand dollars or [228]*228any part thereof. And plaintiff says that her signature to said deed was procured by fraud and deceit of the said Maize and the same is not of any binding force against her in law, or otherwise.

“And for her further reply plaintiff denies all new matter set up in defendant’s answer not herein admitted to be true, and having fully replied she prays judgment as in her petition.”

On the trial the parties stipulated for this and other like cases as follows:

“1. That Peter F. Genoway and plaintiff were married July 31, 1833, and that they continued to live together as husband and wife until the death of the said Peter F. Genoway, July 8, 1896.

“2. That the said Peter F. Genoway owned the several pieces or parcels of land described in each of the petitions in the above entitled eases respectively.

“3. That each of the defendants claim title of their respective pieces of land under said Peter F. Genoway, deceased, or the defendant Francis M. Maize, who claims said title under said Peter F. Genoway, deceased.

“4. That the several defendants are each in possession of the respective pieces of land described in the petition, alleged to be so held by the respective defendants and were on the eighth day of July, 1896.

“5. That Peter F. Genoway and the plaintiff signed and acknowledged a deed to all of the land described in each of the petitions in the above-entitled causes which deed is dated December 27, 1865; that said deed was acknowledged by the said Peter F. Genoway before Nathan Marchant, a justice of the peace of Hamilton county, Ohio, December 27, 1865, and by the plaintiff before James Parks, circuit clerk of Henry county, Missouri, January 18, 1866.

[229]*229“6. That said Peter E. Genoway made and delivered another deed of same land to defendant Eraneis M. Maize dated Eebruary 5, 1866, and acknowledged the same before B. E. Horton, clerk of Ham. Oom. Pleas, State of Ohio, in which the plaintiff did not join and that the defendants or any of them shall have the right to offer either or both of said deeds in evidence upon the trial of any of said cases, and the signing of said deeds, is admitted, subject to any objections which the plaintiffs may make to them, or either of them, as evidence in said suits, or either of them. That nothing herein shall preclude the plaintiff from offering testimony at the trial of any of the above-entitled suits that the plaintiff acknowledged the deed to defendant Eraneis M. Maize about December 27, 1865, under a promise from said Eraneis M. Maize that if she so signed and acknowledged said deed he would pay or cause to be paid to her about $1,000 or $1,300 and that said money or any part of it has never been paid to the said plaintiff; that the said defendants reserve the right to make any objection to such evidence if offered by the plaintiff in any of the above suits.

“8. That Mrs. Genoway was in possession of the land prior to December 27, 1865, and that she vacated the same on or about December, 1865, or January, 1866.

“9. That the plaintiff is the widow of Peter E. Genoway, deceased.

“10. That neither plaintiffs nor Peter E. Genoway, deceased, nor any one of them, have been in possession of any of said lands since 1866, nor have they or any one for them paid any taxes on any of said land.”

The plaintiff then introduced testimony tending to show the rental value of the land described in the petition, but as the question raised is not material to the determination of the questions involved in this record, it is omitted.

[230]*230The defendant offered in evidence the deeds from Peter Genoway to Erancis M. Maize, with the certificates of acknowledgment thereon. Also evidence as to the rents and profits.

At the conclusion of the evidence the court declared the law to be that plaintiff could not recover and refused all of plaintiff’s instructions. Plaintiff appeals.

I. Our first inquiry must be as to the sufficiency of the deed of Peter Genoway and wife of date December 27, 1865, to defendant Maize, to bar the dower of plaintiff, the widow of said Peter.

By reference to the stipulated facts it will be observed that the execution of that deed by Peter Genoway was attested by two witnesses and acknowledged by him before a justice of the peace in the State of Ohio, and the relinquishment of the plaintiff’s dower was acknowledged before the clerk of the circuit court of Henry county, in which county the lands lie.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.W. 698, 163 Mo. 224, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genoway-v-maize-mo-1901.