Harris v. Ross

86 Mo. 89
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 86 Mo. 89 (Harris v. Ross) 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
Harris v. Ross, 86 Mo. 89 (Mo. 1885).

Opinion

Ray, J.

— This is an action of ejectment for the undi[92]*92vided one-half of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section eighteen, township forty-two, range sixteen, in Morgan county, Missouri. The petition was in the usual form, alleging, among other things, that plaintiffs were husband and wife, and that the real estate in question belonged to the wife, Nancy Harris. The suit was brought in the Morgan circuit court, August 20, 1878. The answer, in addition to a general denial, set up the statute of limitations in bar of the action. The replication, in answer to the new matter set up in the answer, alleged that the plaintiff, Nancy Harris, is the .real owner of the land, and that she was a minor, under age, until within three years next before the bringing of this action, and that the statute of limitations is no bar to her recovery.

The material facts of this case, as gathered from the record, are as follows : That one Martha Caplinger, the wife, of Thomas Caplinger, is the common source of title.; that she was seized, in fee, of the undivided one-half of the land in controversy at the date of her marriage with her husband, Caplinger; that there was born of this marriage one child, only, to-wit, Nancy Harris, the plaintiff in this action, who was born October 5,' 1857; that said Martha Caplinger, the mother of said plaintiff, Nancy, was born March 23, 1838, married Thomas Cap-linger October 22, 1856, and died in June, 1858, being at the date of her death a minor, under twenty-one years of age ; that on July 27, 1857, some three months before the birth of her said daughter, Nancy, the plaintiff, said Martha and her husband (in conjunction with her brother, William French, who was seized of the other undivided half of said land), joined in a deed of general warranty for the land in suit to one Masters, under whom the defendant, by mesne conveyances, claims title to the whole •of said land ; that said Thomas Caplinger, the husband -of said Martha, survived his wife, and died August 10, 1861; that defendant, shortly after said conveyance to [93]*93Masters, took possession of said land, and has occupied the same continuously ever since, under claim and color of title, for a period of some twenty-one years; and that the plaintiffs were married in 1874; from all which it appears that the plaintiffs claim in right of the wife, Nancy, who claims to have inherited an undivided half of said land from her mother, Martha Caplinger, who died under coverture and a minor; and that defendant claims title to the whole tract under and by virtue of the said deed of said Martha and Thomas Caplinger, and her said brother, William French, to said Masters, made in July, 1857, as aforesaid, and, also, by adverse possession under the statute of limitations. It, also, further appears that' plaintiffs claim the right of the wife to avoid said deed of her mother, by reason of her minority at the date of its execution, and, further, that the statute of limitations does not run against her, by reason of her minority.

The case was tried by the court, and after the introduction of testimony tending to establish the material facts hereinbefore set out, the court refused, among others, the following declarations of law, asked by the plaintiff :

“1. That if the court believed from the evidence that Isaac C. French died on July 20, 1838, owning the land in controversy, leaving two children, only, William L., born March 6, 1837, and Martha A., born March 23, 1838 ; that said Martha A. married Thomas J. Caplinger October 22, 1856, and died in June, 1858, and left surviving, her husband, who died August 10, 1861, and one child, the plaintiff Nancy, born October 5, 1857, and who was married to plaintiff, George T. Harris, in 1874, the court would find the issues for the plaintiffs, notwithstanding the court might further believe from the evidence that on the twenty-seventh of July, 1857, the said Martha and her husband made a conveyance of her undivided interest in the land to Andrew Masters, and that [94]*94■defendant had been in possession ever since, claiming under said Masters.”
“2. That if the land descended to plaintiff Nancy’s mother, while she- was a minor, and that she died before .she came of age, and plaintiff, Nancy, was a minor when .her mother died, and not twenty-one years of age when -this suit was brought, then adverse possession since 1857 ■nr 1858 was no bar.” ■

The court gave, among others, the following declarations of law for the defendant:

“1. That if Martha J. Caplinger, at the time of making her deed to Masters, on the twenty-seventh of July, 1857, was a married woman, then the execution and delivery of the said deed created by operation of law a possession of the land in controversy in said Masters, adverse to any claim of said Martha Caplinger, and that if said Martha died in June, 1858, leaving plaintiff, Nancy, as her only heir, and that said Nancy has failed to bring her action for possession of the premises for more than ten years from the date of the said Masters’ adverse possession, and more than three years after her mother’s death, then the plaintiff is barred by the statute .of limitations.”
“8. That the only evidence of the revocation of the .said deed of Martha Caplinger to Masters is the bringing ■of this suit on the twentieth of August, 1878, more thau twenty-one years after the said deed was made, which was not within a reasonable time, and said deed to Masters, therefore, estops plaintiff.”
“4. That if defendant, or those under whom he claims, have been in possession of the land since 1857, under' claim of title, the plaintiff cannot recover.”

Whereupon the court found the issues for the defendant, and rendered judgment accordingly; and thereupon the plaintiffs, after an unsuccessful motion for new trial, bring the case here, by writ of error.

Prom the foregoing statement, it appears that Martha [95]*95Caplinger, the common source of title, was, at the date of the deed in question, July 12,1857, a married woman, under twenty-one years of age ; that at the time of her death, in June, 1858, she was twenty years and three months old, lacking nine months, only, of her majority; that she left an only daughter, the plaintiff, Nancy, as her sole heir at law, then an infant some nine months old ; that there was no act of disaffirmance, prior to or other than the institution of this suit, on August 20, 1878, and that plaintiff, Nancy, was twenty-one years ■and three months old when this suit was brought*

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Bluebook (online)
86 Mo. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-ross-mo-1885.