Gray v. Clement

246 S.W. 940, 296 Mo. 497, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 940 (Gray v. Clement) 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
Gray v. Clement, 246 S.W. 940, 296 Mo. 497, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 176 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*503 WALKER, J.

This is a suit brought under Section 1970,' Revised Statutes 1919, to quiet title to certain real estate in the city of Saint Louis, and in ejectment. This is the second appeal in this case. On. a former trial there was a judgment for defendants and plaintiffs appealed. This court reversed and remanded the case. [Gray v. Clement, 286 Mo. 100.] The hearing and determination following this reversal constitute the matters for review.

This property, as described in the petition, was devised by Francois Giraldin, the owner of the fee, to his daughter Josephine Brokel for life, with remainder in fee therein to her children or their descendants. On December 26, 1878, this will was probated in the probate Court of the City of Saint Louis. On the 16th day of January, 1880, Josephine Brokel, the life tenant, and *504 her husband, Prank Brokel, brought a suit in the Circuit Court of the City of Saint Louis against their children, the remaindermen in fee, to partition the land in question. The petition alleges that plaintiffs Josephine and Prank Brokel are husband and wife, and that the defendants are the fruits of said marriage and are all minors; that Francois Giraldin died seized in fee of the real estate described in the petition, and by his last will devised the land to his daughter Josephine Brokel for the term of her life and at her death the same was to be divided among her children or their descendants; that the title of said Josephine Brokel in said land is that of a life estate, and that Prank Brokel has a.right by the curtesy to same; that the defendants are each entitled to a one-fifth interest in fee in said land subject to the life estate of Josephine and the right by the curtesy of Frank Brokel; that the nature of' the land is such as to render it incapable of partition in kind and an order of sale is prayed for.

On the 26th day of May, 1880, a decree of partition and an order of sale was made in that suit. A commissioner was appointed to sell the land and compute the value of the life estate. On June 29, 1880, the land was. sold, the purchaser being Prank Brokel, at the sum of four hundred dollars. The report of the sales was approved by the court and a deed therefor made to him, which was formally acknowledged. The wife’s interest in the proceeds of the sale having been apportioned, the amount due each child of the pittance remaining was stated, but there is no showing that it was ever paid to them.

In 1881 or 1882, Prank Brokel erected two buildings on this land at a cost óf about eight thousand one hundred dollars. He and his wife subsequently executed a deed of trust on the land to secure a loan made to them and thereafter (April 28, 1886) they conveyed the land by warranty deed to one August Schulte, subject to the lien of the deed of trust, which was made a part of *505 the consideration. Three or fonr years after the making of this deed to Schulte, Frank Brokel died. Schulte, dying thereafter, devised the land to his .wife. Upon the latter’s death intestate, a part of her heirs brought a suit against the others to partition the land, and under a decree rendered therein, it was sold and the defendants herein, viz., Michael Clement and Frances, his wife, became the purchasers and a deed was made to them. It thus appears that defendants Michael and Frances Clement derived their title by mesne conveyances originating in the deed to Schulte from Frank and Josephine Brokel. Josephine Brokel died September 5, 1917. The plaintiffs herein and one Emma Reidmeyer are her surviving heirs.

Plaintiffs’ petition in the instant casé alleges that the defendants Michael and Frances Clement are in possession of and claim to be the owners in.fee of the land; and that they have been collecting the rents on same since the death of Josephine Brokel, September 5, 1917,'the value of which is eighty dollars per month. A formal prayer for the determination of the title follows, with a plea that the plaintiffs be awarded damages in the sum of five thousand dollars against the defendants for the withholding of the possession of the property from the date of the death of the life tenant Josephine Brokel, and for eighty dollars for monthly rents from the date of the judgment herein until the delivery of the possession of the premises to the plaintiffs.

Upon a hearing, the circuit court, on the 13th day of February, 1922, adjudged and decreed that at the time Frank Brokel acquired the possessiqn of the property in question it was unimproved and its value was two thousand dollars; and that at the time the defendants, Michael and Frances Clement, acquired the possession of same September 27, 1910, by reason of the improvements placed thereon by Frank Brokel, the value of the property was five thousand dollars — a first lien is therefore decreed in favor of the defendant's upon *506 the property in that sum, and they are adjudged to he entitled to retain the possession of same until it is paid. The ownership of the fee in the property, subject to the lien of the defendants, is declared to be in the plaintiffs and Emma Reidmeyer; and upon the payment to said defendants of the amount of their lien that the owners of the fee are'entitled to the possession of the premises. The court further decrees that the owners of the fee, if they deem proper so to do, may, instead of discharging the lien of the defendants on said land, execute deeds of special warranty to the defendants and upon the payment by the latter to the plaintiffs of the sum of two thousand dollars, the title is to be divested out of. the plaintiffs and invested in the defendants. The right of the plaintiffs, in the event they elect to accept two thousand dollars for their interest, to enforce their claim for same against the defendants, is given judicial recognition, or as it is stated, “they may proceed as if no election had been made.” In the event they do not elect, the title to the premises is in them, subject to defendants’ lien. The possession of the premises pending the determination, as thus provided, of the matter at issue, is awarded to the defendants, to be retained by them until their lien is discharged, which, if not consummated within one year from the date of this decree, will authorize the defendants to foreclose the same. The costs of the proceeding are ordered divided, and the court retains jurisdiction to enable it to make áuch further orders, etc., as may be deemed expedient and proper.

The assignments of error of the respective parties are, on the part- of the plaintiffs, the ruling of the circuit court that the defendants are entitled to a lien on the land in question and to the possession of the same until such lien is discharged; and, on the part of the defendants, that this action is unauthorized in that it is a collateral attack upon the judgment in partition and the order of sale of the land in question. Other assign *507 ments are subordinate to those stated and may be considered in connection with them.

I. Proceedings in partition nnder onr law so far as concerns the ¡jurisdiction of the courts are purely statutory. To the latter we must look, therefore, to determine the power of the court in a given case.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 940, 296 Mo. 497, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-clement-mo-1922.