Haden v. Goodwin

117 S.W. 1129, 217 Mo. 662, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 117 S.W. 1129 (Haden v. Goodwin) 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
Haden v. Goodwin, 117 S.W. 1129, 217 Mo. 662, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 299 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is an action of ejectment for a strip of ground off of the south side of lot seven of block three of Westenburger’s addition to the city of Sedalia.

This action yas commenced in the circuit court of Pettis county, September 1, 1905. The petition was in the ordinary statutory form and ouster was laid as of August 2, 1905'. At the October term, 1905, the defendants Charles Goodwin and James Owens each filed separate answers which were general denials.

The defendant Carrie E. Goodwin in her separate answer, denied .each and every allegation of the petition. And for a further defense, pleaded that she was the owner of lot eight of block three of said Westenburger’s subdivision, and that plaintiff was and is the owner of lot seven of said block three. That in the year 1891, the division line between the two said lots was uncertain and unknown, and that then the defendants and plaintiff’s grantor agreed upon a boundary line between said lots and located a fence upon the line so agreed upon, and that defendants have ever since that [665]*665date claimed all of said lot eight and up to said fence so located, and have had the peaceable, open and notorious possession of the same up to the 7th day of August, 1905, on which last date the plaintiff and one Zenobia Haden, with strong hands, made unlawful, forcible entry upon said premises and tore down the defendant’s fence and built a foundation for an addition to the dwelling on the south side of the line so agreed upon by the defendants and plaintiff’s grantor to be the boundary line between them as aforesaid; that afterward, to-wit, on the 15th day of August, 1905, defendant’s tenant, James A. Owens, who was in possession of said premises, instituted a forcible entry and detainer suit against the plaintiff herein and the said Zenobia Haden, before N. H. Rogers, a justice of the peace,.and on the 29th day of August, 1905, the same was tried before a jury and the jury found the plaintiff herein and the said Zenobia Haden guilty in the manner and form as charg’ed in the complaint of the said James A. Owens. For further answer defendant states that neither the plaintiff herein, nor the said Zenobia Haden, has ever redelivered the possession of the premises so unlawfully entered by them to this defendant’s tenant, James A. Owens, nor to this defendant, but that the plaintiff and the said Zenobia Haden still retain possession of the said premises the same as before the institution of the said suit before said justice. This defendant for further answer states that on the 30th day of September, 1905, the said N. H. Rogers, the justice before whom said forcible entry and detainer was tried, issued a writ of restitution against the plaintiff and the said Zenobia Haden to remove them from said premises and restore said possession to the said James A. Owens, defendant’s tenant, and said writ is no’w in the hands of the constable of Sedalia township. Defendant denies that she was in possession of the premises described in plaintiff’s petition at the commencement of this ’ suit. For further answer de[666]*666fendant states that, if the court should find upon the hearing of this case that at the institution of this suit she was in the possession of the premises described in plaintiff’s petition, she has had the peaceable, adverse and continuous possession of said premises for more than ten years prior to the institution of this suit, claiming the same adversely to the plaintiff and his grantors, to-wit: from the —day of — ——, 1891, to the 7th day of August, 1905, and having fully answered, defendant asks to go hence with her costs.

Plaintiff for reply admitted that the defendant Carrie Goodwin is the owner of lot eight of block three of said Westenburger subdivision, but denies that there was ever an agreement as to the boundary line between said lots seven and eight and denies that there was a fence located upon an agreed boundary line between said lots. Denies the adverse possession of the tract in dispute by the defendant. Plaintiff alleges the fact to be that a fence was located upon the plaintiff’s said lot seven whereby certain portions of said lot were thrown within the enclosure of the defendants’ said lot eight at a time of which the plaintiff is not informed, but plaintiff alleges that it has been understood between defendant and plaintiff that this said fence was not on the true line between said lots, and was left as a matter of convenience with the understanding that plaintiff could at any time occupy lot seven up to the true line. Plaintiff admits the institution of the forcible entry and detainer suit as alleged in Carrie E. Goodwin’s answer, and that the finding of the jury was as therein set forth. But plaintiff denies that either he or Zenobia Haden still retained possession of said premises. Plaintiff alleges the fact to be that on the 31st day of August, 1905, and before the institution of this suit, plaintiff and said Zenobia Haden paid the damages assessed together with the costs in said forcible entry and detainer cause, and as far as within the power of plaintiff and said Zenobia Haden [667]*667restored the possession to the defendant, and defendant had the possession of the same at the commencement of this suit.

This canse was tried in the circuit court, and in obedience to a peremptory instruction the jury returned a verdict for. the defendants. Within due time and in proper form an appeal was perfected to this court.

There is very little controversy about the facts. As already indicated in the pleadings it stands admitted that the plaintiff is the owner of lot seven and the defendant Carrie E. Goodwin owns lot eight, which joins lot seven on the south. Charles Goodwin is the husband of Carrie E. Goodwin and James Owens was and is the tenant of Carrie E. Goodwin, and he occupied the said lot at the time of the commencement of the forcible entry and detainer case. The testimony very clearly indicates that when the dividing fences in this block were built, they were not put upon the true lines between the same, and for some time the strip of ground in controversy in this suit was within the enclosure of the defendant, Carrie E. Goodwin. The survey made by the city authorities in 1905 located the true line between lot seven and lot eight, and showed that this strip of land was within the Goodwin enclosure. In August, 1905, the plaintiff desiring to build an addition to his residence on lot seven, tore down a part of the dividing fence and built a foundation 'wall on this strip south of where the said fence stood. Thereupon the defendants Goodwin by and through their tenant Owens, instituted a forcible entry and detainer case against the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered in Owens’s favor against plaintiff and his wife on the 29th of August, 1905, for the possession of this strip and one cent damages. On August 31, 1905, and before the commencement of this action, the plaintiff George S. Haden, the defendant in said forcible entry case, paid in full the judgment for damages and all the costs taxed in the said case, and the jus[668]*668tice’s docket of that date contains this entry: “Constable Chaney reports this case satisfied and all costs paid.” And the itemized costs upon the justice’s docket were all marked paid. The testimony further shows that on that date, the plaintiff herein went to the land in controversy and called out James A. Owens, the plaintiff in said forcible entry case and tenant of Carrie E.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 1129, 217 Mo. 662, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haden-v-goodwin-mo-1909.