Harger v. Barrett

5 S.W.2d 1100, 319 Mo. 633, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 687
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 24, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 1100 (Harger v. Barrett) 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
Harger v. Barrett, 5 S.W.2d 1100, 319 Mo. 633, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 687 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

AVALKER, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain land in Cass County, ■ belonging, in his lifetime, to William W. Brooks. The determination of the matter at issue involves a construction of a clause in the will of William W. Brooks, in which he bequeathed, under the conditions therein stated, the corpus of his property to an unincorporated association in Cass County, designated as the Pleasant Ridge *637 ■Baptist Church. The plaintiffs, respondents here, sue for themselves and all other members of the said church. The bequest to the church involving a public charity, the then Attorney-General was made a party defendant, as representing’ the public. The other defendants— appellants here — sustain the following relationship to William W. Brooks: William W. Antill was his nephew, being a son of his sister; the Bouses were brothers, sisters, nephews and nieces of Chloe McKinney Brooks, the wife of William W. Brooks. Wayne Campbell, a minor, was not of kin, either to William W.. Brooks or his wife, but was a beneficiary' in the will of the personal effects of the wife who made no disposition therein of any real property.

William W. Brooks was the owner of a tract of two hundred and forty acres of land in Cass County. He died testate on the 12th day of April, 1902. He left surviving him his wife, Chloe McKinney Brooks, and their son, Walter Lee Brooks, their only child.

To his wife he bequeathed the income and profits of his property of whatever kind and nature, to have and to hold so much of same as she may need for her comfortable support during her widowhood.

To his son, Walter Lee Brooks, he bequeathed all of the remainder of the net income of his property after the payment of the testator’s debts and the comfortable support and maintenance of his wife as aforesaid. The income to the son was to be absolute during his life 'only after freeing the property of all taxes, his mother’s support and the expenses incident to the care of the property. The corpus of his property (the property itself) he devised and bequeathed to the children of his son, born to the latter after the date of the will. The reason for this limitation is stated, but it is not necessary to the determination of the issue here seeking solution. The sixth clause of the will, upon which the controvers}^ herein is based, is as follows:

‘ ‘ Sixth: 'Should my said son die without child or children hereafter born to him (and my wife die without further children by me) then and in that event I desire the corpus of my- property to go to the-Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church, for the erection or improvement of a church house and what is not needed for the purpose to be used as may be directed by said church.”

The son, Walter Lee Brooks, died intestate in 1919, leaving a widow; Myrtle Brooks, but no children. His mother, Chloe McKinney Brooks, died testate, so far as her personal effects were concerned, in March, 1922.

The contention of the plaintiffs is that upon the deaths of the son and the widow, of William W. Brooks, they became, as members of the Pleasant Ridge Baptist Church, seized of the real estate of William W. Brooks, under the provisions of the sixth clause of his will above set forth.

*638 All of the defendants contend that the said sixth clause is void, and no other provision having been made in the will for the vesting of the title to the lands of the testator that they,are seized of interests therein which they ask ■ the court to adjudicate and determine. , • ' "T

The claim of William W. Antill is as a collateral heir of his uncle. William W. Brooks. The claims of the Bouses are as collateral heirs of Chloe McKinney Brooks, who it is contended was seized of an interest in the real estate of her husband.

The guardian ad litem of Wayne Campbell claims that Ms ward is entitled to an interest in the real estate of William W. Brooks under a clause in Chloe McKinney Brooks’s will which, following a specific bequest of personal property to Wayne Campbell, provides that “all other property not disposed of in my will and codicil I desire to go to Wayne Campbell.”

The trial court entered a decree quieting the title to the land in controversy in the plaintiffs, from which the defendants have appealed.

I. This case involves not only the construction of the will of William W. Brooks, but incidentally that of his wife, Chloe McKinney Brooks.

Whether testamentary construction will alone suffice to authorize the exercise of equitable jurisdiction need not concern us in the determination of the matters at issue. The statute (Sec. 1970, R. S. 1919) under which the action was brought, is comprehensive in its terms and relief thereunder may be invoked by any person claiming any title, estate or interest in real property, whether the same be legal or equitable, certain or contingent, present or in reversion or remainder and whether the party be in possession of the property or not. The pleadings herein ask equitable relief; the case was tried and determined as one in equity, and we are therefore authorized in so classifying it. [Titus v. Development Co., 264 Mo. l. c. 239, and cases, 174 S. W. 432.] Thus classified, the well-established rule in equity pleading may be invoked that one or more members of a voluntary association, whether organized for private or public purposes, may sue for or in behalf of 0.p We so ruled in Lilly v. Tobbein,

103 Mo. l. c. 488, 15 S. W. 618. This was a suit to establish a rejected will and while technically an action at law on account of its possessing certain equitable features it was held that it was properly brought in the names of certain members of the church suing in their own behalf and that of other members. The application of the rule as to the necessary parties plaintiff is accentuated under the facts at bar, Here the nature of the action is not as in the Lilly *639 case, technically at law, but from its subject-matter, as indicated by the pleadings, attested by the facts and the purview of the statute under which it 'is brought, equitable in its nature. No strained construction therefore is necessary to sustain the conclusion that as to the parties plaintiff, this suit is properly brought.

If this were not true, the tram and the manner in which the contention as to the defect of parties is made, would preclude its non-sideration under our statute. As to time, the contention first finds exnression in aDuellants’ brief: as to manner it. is thus brought to our attention. Our statute (Sec. 1226, R. S. 1919) provides that if an incapacity of the plaintiffs to sue appears on the face of the petition, defendants must raise the point by special demurrer, or be held to have waived it; or, if the incapacity does not appear upon the face of the petition, it must be raised by answer or it is likewise waived. [Crowl v. Am. L. Oil Co., 255 Mo. 306, 164 S. W. 618; Ashton v. Penfield, 233 Mo. 391, 135 S. W. 938; Fulwider v. Gas, L. & P. Co., 216 Mo. 582, 116 S. W. 508.] If, therefore, the' rules of equity had not settled this question, it has been waived by the defendants.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.W.2d 1100, 319 Mo. 633, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harger-v-barrett-mo-1928.