Glasgow v. Missouri Car & Foundry Co.

129 S.W. 900, 229 Mo. 585, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 189
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 900 (Glasgow v. Missouri Car & Foundry Co.) 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
Glasgow v. Missouri Car & Foundry Co., 129 S.W. 900, 229 Mo. 585, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 189 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

— This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in favor of the defendant in a suit in ejectment, seeking to recover possession of a piece of real estate in the city of St. Louis. The petition is in the usual form, and the-answer consists of a general denial and a plea of the ten, twenty-four and thirty-year Statutes of Limitations.

A jury was waived and the case tried upon an agreed statement of facts. The agreed facts are as follows:

The fee-simple title to the land in contoversy became vested in William L. Ewing, and on October 29, 1849, he and his wife conveyed the same to William Glasgow, Jr., “in trust, nevertheless, and to the' express use and interest that the said premises shall be forever held for the sole and separate and exclusive benefit, use and behoof - of the said Mary Ewing Lane, party of the third part, without any account to any person whomsoever or any liability in any manner for the debts or liabilities of William Carr Lane, husband of the said Mary Ewing Lane; and in further trust that said party of the third part shall forever have and fully enjoy the pernancy of the profits, rents and issues of said premises, for which her receipt and acquittances shall forever be a sufficient discharge ; and that said party of the second part shall always sell and mortgage or lease the said premises or any part thereof, or any interest or estate therein, and execute [590]*590and deliver such assurances and conveyances of the same as may at any time he required by the written order or request of said party of the third part or her assigns, and also that said party of the second part shall always, when necessary or proper, defend and make good the title of said premises, but for all expenses that may be incurred in the execution of the trusts of this deed said party of the second part may make deductions out of said rents and profits of said premises.”

'No conveyance of this property from William Glasgow, Jr., or Mary E. Lane, or from any of their descendants, appears of record in the records of the city of St. Louis.

Mary E. Lane died intestate November 5, 1865, leaving as her sole heirs two daughters, Sarah L. Glasgow, wife of William Glasgow, Jr., and Anne E. Lane, originally one of the plaintiffs in this suit, both being at said date of legal age. Anne E. Lane died unmarried and without issue since the institution of the suit. She left a will, but made no mention of the property here involved, and the will contained no residue clause. Her sole heirs at law are the children of her sister, Sarah L. Glasgow. Mrs. Sarah L. Glasgow died February 28, 1887, leaving surviving her her husband, William L. Glasgow, Jr., and her children, Wm. C. Glasgow, Allen Glasgow, Frank A. Glasgow, Susan R. Carson, Mary Branch, Sarah L. G. Wilson and Annie Glasgow, plaintiffs herein. Her estate was administered in the St. Louis Probate Court and the property here involved was not inventoried. William Glasgow, Jr., husband of Sarah L. Glasgow, died January 31,1892.

The land in controversy was unimproved, unenclosed and unoccupied at all times prior to 1879; was subject to overflow from the Mississippi river and was not susceptible of continuous occupation and was [591]*591not in the actual, that is, the physical possession of any one.

No taxes on the land had heen paid by plaintiffs or anyone under whom they claim since 1852. Defendant and those under whom it claims have paid taxes on this land continuously from 1852 to the present time, inclusive, said land having been assessed in their names since said date; in the name of Catherine M. Merry until her death, in the name of her heirs until' 1898, and in the name of defendant since said date.

Defendant entered into actual occupation of the premises in controversy in June, 1879, under lease executed by the heirs of Catherine M. Merry, raised the grade thereof and constructed buildings thereon. On December 11, 1897, defendant obtained a general warranty deed to the property from the heirs of Catherine M. Merry. Since June, 1879, defendant has been in actual, open, notorious and visible possession of the premises.

The court found for defendant, and after an unsuccessful motion for a new trial, plaintiffs have appealed to this court.

I. The contention in this cause hinges upon the proposition, first, whether plaintiffs, as the heirs of Mrs. William Glasgow, Jr., are barred by the ten, twenty or thirty-year Statute of Limitations. It is admitted that Miss Anne E. Lane and her heirs are barred by the actual adverse possession of defendant from 1879 until the commencement of this action in 1899, during all of which time Miss Lane was a feme sole, and could have brought her action by ejectment. As to her sister’s, Mrs. Glasgow’s, half, the conditions are different. From 1849 to 1879, the land in suit was vacant and unoccupied by any person and the constructive possession must be held to have been with the owner of the title.

It is insisted by defendant that the trustee William Glasgow, Jr., was barred by the ten-year limitation. [592]*592Plaintiffs assert that upon the death of Mrs. Lane in 1865, the statute executed the use in her two daughters, Mrs. Glasgow and Miss Lane; that is to say, the legal estate which had been conveyed by Mr. Ewing to Mr. Glasgow, Jr., was a trust for Mrs. Lane during her marriage to William Carr Lane, and ceased upon the death of Mrs. Lane, and thereupon both the legal and equitable title vested in the two daughters, and the trustee no longer represented the title and his failure to sue could not affect their rights, and the statute "of ten years did not run on the principle that when the trustee has the legal title and the sole right to sue and his right to sue is barred by adverse possession, his cestui que trust is likewise barred; and that as Mrs. Glasgow was a married woman when her mother, Mrs. Lane, died, and continued to be such until her death in 1887 and when defendant took possession in 1879, she was under the disability of coverture and the right of possession was in her husband, as tenant by the curtesy, until her death in 1887, and until his own death in 189-2, when for the first time the right of possession vested in her children, the plaintiffs in this case, and for the first time a -cause of action accrued- to them and they could not be barred until they had a cause of action; Unquestionably plaintiffs are right in their contention unless defendant is right in one or both of its propositions, to-wit, first that by reason of Mrs. Glasgow’s coverture, the statute did not execute the use, but the trust remained and the legal title and right to possession and- to sue remained in the trustee, and the period of limitation having run against him it had likewise barred his cestuis que trustent, and, second, that the trust was not a dry trust, but an active equitable one which the statute did not execute. Of these in their order.

Counsel for defendant- concedes that if a conveyance be made to A in trust for B, wife of C, upon the death of C, the husband, the use will be executed in [593]*593B and she will-have the legal as well as the equitable title, and such unquestionably is the law of this State. [Roberts v. Moseley, 51 Mo. 282; Liptrot v. Holmes, 1 Ga. 381; Baker v. Nall, 59 Mo. 265; Schiffman v. Schmidt, 154 Mo. 204; O’Brien v. Ash, 169 Mo. 283.]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hooks v. Spies
583 S.W.2d 569 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1979)
Jones v. Kirk
194 S.W. 44 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 900, 229 Mo. 585, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glasgow-v-missouri-car-foundry-co-mo-1910.