Gulick v. Huntley

46 S.W. 154, 144 Mo. 241, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 291
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 154 (Gulick v. Huntley) 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
Gulick v. Huntley, 46 S.W. 154, 144 Mo. 241, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 291 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Marshall, J.

This is a proceeding in equity for an injunction, and to confirm a parol partition to lands.

In 1886 Ezra Huntley died, seized of large tracts of land in Jasper county and elsewhere. By his will he left his wife, Mary, one third of his property, real and personal, for life, “and after her death the same to be divided equally, share and share alike, between my sons and daughters,” and in case of the decease of any of his children before the death of his wife, the share of such child to go to the heirs of the body of such deceased, and if there were no heirs,.said share to be divided equally between the surviving children. The remaining two thirds of his property he left to his two sons, George and Jasper, and his two daughters, Mary Guliek and Rosener Steinmetz; the sons to have their portions absolutely, and the daughters for life, remainder to their children. Rosener died before her father, leaving children. He provided in his will that the probate court of Jasper county should appoint commissioners to make partition of the property in the manner specified. After his death George Huntley, the executor, petitioned the probate court to appoint commissioners as the will directed. The court did so. The commissioners partitioned the property in conformity to the directions of the will, and because the real property could not be equally divided, they made the shares equal out of the personal property of the estate. They did not provide for a partition of the one third set apart to the widow after her death. The probate court [247]*247confirmed the commissioners’ report and entered judgment accordingly on May 25,1886. The parties in interest acquiesced- in the partition. They took possession of the part assigned to them, made improvements on their part, rented it or cultivated, mortgaged or alienated the whole or parts of their shares. The estate was finally settled in October, 1894. In November, 1894, the First National Bank of Carthage obtained judgment against Greorge and Jasper Huntley for $2,816,40 debt and $7.40 costs, and on the seventh of April, 1895, the sheriff levied the execution on all the interest of Greorge and Jasper in the whole property of which their father died seized, treating the partition as void, and levying the execution upon the undivided interest of the defendants in the whole property. Thereupon Mary Gruliek, her husband and children instituted this proceeding, alleging all these facts, averring an acquiescence by all the adults and by the father and guardian of Rosener’s heirs, in the partition', and that it would be inequitable for them to attempt after so long a time to avoid the partition, and asking that the execution in favor of the bank against Greorge and Jasper be quashed so far as it related to any part of the estate except that allotted to them, and praying that the partition be confirmed “or if, on final hearing, the court should, for any cause, deem it inequitable or improper to confirm the partition so made by said commissioners,” that partition be made according to the respective rights of the parties.

The circuit court held the partition by the probate court to be void, and appointed commissioners to partition the property. The commissioners allotted each party identically the same property that was allotted each by the action of the probate court, but they found that the share that had been allotted to Mary Gruliek was worth $650 less than the shares that had been [248]*248allotted to her brothers and the heirs of her sister, so they provided that Mary Gulick should be allotted lands of the value of $650 out of the one third of the property allotted to the widow for life, and then recited that the remainder of said one.third, after carving out $650 worth, should be divided between Mary Gulick, her brothers George and Jasper and the heirs of her deceased sister in the manner and proportions provided by the will. The commissioners did not specify the lands which were of the value of $650 which should go to Mary Gulick after the termination of her mother’s life estate, nor did they attempt to allot, set apart or designate which portions of the property subject to the life estate should go to each person after the life estate ended. They contented themselves with ratifying the will by generously declaring that each should have one fourth. In fact the whole attempt to partition the one third subject to the widow’s life estate is a failure and a miscarriage. The court on May 27, 1895, confirmed the report of the commissioners and made the shares of George and Jasper subject to their conveyances and .mortgages thereof, and gave the bank a lien on their shares subject to the conveyances and mortgages. To this the bank objected. George and Jasper objected to the additional allowance to Mary Gulick and also to the attempted partition of the one third allotted to their mother, until after the termination of the life estate. It appeared that Mary Gulick and her husband had entered into a contract with their attorneys, Thomas & Hackney, before the beginning of the suit to pay them a reasonable fee to be fixed by the court, so that upon testimony being adduced the court allowed the attorneys $1,500, and charged it against the whole property except the one third allotted to the widow. While the case was pending George Huntley claimed his home[249]*249stead rights as against the execution in favor qf .the bank. The sheriff appointed commissioners who set apart his homestead, and appraised it at $lr500. George excepted to the commissioners’ action, and upon a hearing the court on May 24, 1895, set aside the report, and quashed the levy of the execution as to the land of George Huntley.

George and Jasper Huntley and the First National Bank of Carthage appealed.

I. Although the partition by the probate court had no binding force or validity, still as it was confessedly equitable, fair and just, and as the parties in interest, the adults for themselves and the father and guardian of the heirs of Rosener, acquiesced in the allotment, took possession of their respective shares, and improved them, mortgaged and aliened them at will, and this status continued from 1886 until 1895, and was never interrupted until by the outside interference of a creditor of the two sons, it constitutes a good parol partition inter sese, which can not be disturbed or avoided by any one who was sui juris during that time. Hazen v. Barnett, 50 Mo. 507; Nave v. Smith, 95 Mo. 600; Sutton v. Porter, 119 Mo. 100. And this is true even where one of the parties is a married woman, if it app'ears that it was an equitable, fair and equal division. Sutton v. Porter, 119 Mo. 100. Any of the parties to such a parol partition can afterward have the parol agreement confirmed by a decree in equity. Hazen v. Barnett, 50 Mo. 506. Any of the devisees of Ezra Huntley had a right to maintain this . action to have the parol partition confirmed and upon the showing made in this case the court should have entered a decree confirming that partition. It was error to proceed ah initio, under the issues in this case, to partition the lands. There was no evidence whatever upon which to base the judgment that Mary [250]*250Gulick had not received her proper share. She testified that she was satisfied and did not want the parol partition disturbed. The petition is not bottomed upon any idea of inequality to her. It avers that as she was denied full and complete participation in the personal property, it would be inequitable to permit any of the other adult parties to question the fairness or validity of the parol partition.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 154, 144 Mo. 241, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulick-v-huntley-mo-1898.