Heckescher v. Cooper

101 S.W. 658, 203 Mo. 278, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 658 (Heckescher v. Cooper) 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
Heckescher v. Cooper, 101 S.W. 658, 203 Mo. 278, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 12 (Mo. 1907).

Opinion

FOX, R J.

This cause is now pending in this court upon appeal from a judgment rendered in the McDonald Circuit Court in favor of the defendant. This was an action in ejectment for the recovery of section 25, in township 22, range 31 west. The petition is in the ordinary and usual form in cases of this character and there is no necessity for inserting it here. To this petition the defendant filed the following answer:

“Now, at this day comes Zach Cooper, the above-named defendant, and for answer to the petition of the plaintiff herein, denies each and every, all and singular the allegations in the said petition made and contained, except as hereinafter specifically and directly admitted.
“The defendant avers that he is now in the possession of the following described lands lying, being and situated in the county of McDonald and State of Missouri, to-wit:
“Beginning twenty-four rods west of the southwest comer of section twenty-five, township twenty-two [280]*280north, range thirty-one .west of the fifth principal meridian, in the county of McDonald and State of Missouri, thence north sixteen and one-half degrees west, ten rods; thence north twenty-one and one-half degrees west, twenty-eight rods; thence north six degrees west, twenty rods and fourteen links; thence north sixty-three degrees west, fourteen rods; thence north twenty-three and one-half degrees west, thirty-two rods; thence north sixty-nine degrees west, eighteen rods; thence north thirty-five degrees west, eight rods; thence north sixty-three degrees west, four rods and eleven links; thence north thirty-eight and one-half degrees west, fourteen rods; thence north seventy-seven degrees west, twenty-four rods; thence north sixty-four degrees west, thirteen rods; thence north twenty-eight degrees west, sixteen rods; thence north twenty-five degrees east, sixteen rods; thence north forty-nine degrees west, five rods and fifteen links; thence south fifty-six degrees west, twenty rods; thence south seventy-five degrees west, eight rods; thence north seventy-three degrees west, seventeen rods; thence north fifty-seven degrees west, fourteen rods; thence north seventy-one and one-half degrees west, sixty rods; thence north fifty-nine degrees west, sixteen rods; thence south forty-seven degrees west, ten rods; thence south thirty-two degrees east, sixteen rods; thence south twenty-six and one-half degrees east, fifty-five rods; thence south seventy-one degrees east, twenty-three rods; thence south five and one-half degrees east, thirty-twO' rods; thence south eighty-four degrees east, forty-one rods; thence south thirty-six degrees east, eight rods; thence south fifty-four degrees east, fourteen rods; thence south fifty degrees east, fifty rods; thence south twenty and one-half degrees east, thirty-six rods; thence south sixteen degrees east, to the section line; thence along said line to place of beginning, containing in all sixty-[281]*281three and eighty-seven hundredths acres, more or less [except a strip, belt or parcel of land twenty-five feet wide and running entirely around the premises above described next to the line above indicated and within the enclosure formed by the lines above indicated and described.]
“And the defendant further avers that he has been in open, notorious, hostile, adverse, exclusive, uninterrupted, visible, actual and continuous possession of each and every part of the above described lands from the second day of March, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, until the present time, and during all and every part of that time has claimed to be and has been the absolute owner of said land in fee simple and has claimed the same hostile to and adversely to the pretentions of the plaintiff herein and his grantors and all persons whomsoever.”

Upon the trial of this cause the plaintiff introduced a clear record title vesting title in him, commencing with letters-patent ■ from the Government, dated November 29, 1870. There being no dispute as to the clear record title of the plaintiff to the land in controversy, we deem it unnecessary to set forth in detail the patent and deeds conveying the property. Plaintiff then rested his case and defendant introduced testimony as follows:

W. N. Lett testified, substantially: As deputy county surveyor I surveyed and platted the land in question and occupied by defendant in section 25, running the lines approximately with his crooked rail fence, surveyed lines being straighter than the fence; in some places running outside the fence and in others inside the fence. My plat does not represent the fence, in which there are many bends and turns; but the lines are so averaged, that about the same number of acres are in the survey as in the fence. He has had his fence there enclosing the field, house and stable, to my knowl[282]*282edge, about eight years; it was spoken of in the neighborhood as Cooper’s place on Cranny’s branch. I saw nothing to distinguish-it from other places occupied by squatters; never heard about any particular claim he set up to it; I deviated from the fence in making the survey and plat, both inside and outside, but the general run of the enclosure is approximately with the lines as surveyed and platted; the land I surveyed runs at an angle through the section and goes into' eight of the forties, as the plat shows; extends about a mile diagonally, running from southeast to northwest direction generally, covering about 63.97 acres, but I can’t tell how much land there is in any one qf the forty acres Covernment tracts; cannot accurately describe the land inside the fence enclosure; it is very irregular; but I don’t think I surveyed any line more than twenty-five feet outside the fence itself, but cannot be positive; part of my survey was where there was no fence, but where fence appeared to have been sometime before; I had to go by what seemed, and what I was told, as to what was and had been fenced. The plat as made by this witness is hereto attached.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 658, 203 Mo. 278, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heckescher-v-cooper-mo-1907.