Holcomb v. Pressley

255 S.W. 1062, 301 Mo. 208, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 20, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 255 S.W. 1062 (Holcomb v. Pressley) 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
Holcomb v. Pressley, 255 S.W. 1062, 301 Mo. 208, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 123 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*211 GRAYES, J.

The petition in this case in two counts. The first count is an ordinary petition in ejectment for two-thirds of two small tracts of land in Lincoln County. The second count is the usual petition to quiet title to the same lands.

The answer to each count is practically the same, except as to the second count the answer of defendants asks that the title be ascertained and declared to be in them. By the answer it is averred (1) that defendants' admit possession, and deny that plaintiffs are entitled to possession; (2) that plaintiff Cassie A. Wombles executed a deed to her third of the land to John W. Foreman, through whom they claim title, aiid the said Cassie A. Wombles is estopped from now claiming title, and further has been guilty of laches in not previously asserting her claim of title under the pleaded facts; and (3) that the plaintiff Warren Holcomb and wife conveyed their interest in said lands to one Mary A. Koster, but by error of the scrivener the land was described as Range 1 East, when it should have been Range 1 West; that this was a mutual mistake of fact by the parties, and that both the grantors and *212 grantee intended to and understood that they had conveyed lands involved in this suit and not lands in Range 1 East; that Holcomb did not own any lands so located, but did own and intend to convey the lands involved here; that defendants claim title by mesne conveyances from the said Hosier, and hold their title by the entirety, created by their deed.

The reply of plaintiff Cassie Ann Wombles pleaded that she was a minor at the making of the alleged deed, and at the time was a married woman, and has been a married woman ever since, and that by reason of.her minority her alleged deed was void. The record shows no reply by Warren Holcomb.

Upon trial the court found that Cassie A. Wombles was the owner of one-third of the lands, and defendants the owners of two-thirds of the lands; that plaintiff Holcomb had no interest therein. On the ejectment count of the petition the court found for Cassie A. Wombles for said one-third interest so decreed to her under the second count of the petition. Holcomb abided the judgment of the court. From the judgment against them and in favor of the plaintiff Cassie A. Wombles, the defendants have appealed.

Harding Holcomb, who died in 1877, is the admitted common source of title. At his death he left, as his only heirs, Leonard Holcomb, Cassie Ann Wombles, Warren Holcomb and his widow, Nancy J. Holcomb. The lands involved in this suit and other lands were set off to the widow in a partition suit in 1881. She conveyed to Foreman her dower and homestead interest by warranty deed, and Foreman and his grantees have occupied it ever since. Nancy J. Holcomb died in 1916. Other matters can be noted in the opinion.

I. Much is said in the brief upon the insufficiency of the evidence to establish th e fact of the minority of plaintiff, Cassie Ann Wombles, at the making of the '-Med in November, 1880. Connected with such contention are questions as to the competency of evidence offered as tending to show that fact. With the *213 views we have of this case we shall not go into these matters. For the purpose of the present case we shall proceed upon the theory that she was both a minor and married at the making of the deed. These two disabilities (infancy and coverture) may be concurrent, but they serve different purposes. [14 R. C. L. sec. 14, p. 230.] Thus it is by this authority said :

“Hence a deed executed by an infant feme covert pursuant to the statutory requirements stands on precisely the same footing as a deed executed by an infant feme sole. The deed is not binding, nor is it void; but it is voidable. But if she convey the land after reaching full age, in full compliance with the statutes enabling a married woman to convey, her deed will be effectual either to ratify or to avoid the deed made during infancy. ’ ’

In 8 R. C. L., p. 950, it is thus stated: “The disabilities of coverture and infancy are separate and independent, and the mere fact’ that both occur in connection with the same act does not give either of them any greater or less force than each would have separately.”

It has been ruled in this State, Norcum v. Sheahan, 21 Mo. 25, that the husband and wife, who deeded the wife’s land during her minority, could either affirm or disaffirm the deed by a deed after she reached her majority. ' The making of a deed is but one method of affirming or disaffirming a deed made during minority. Other acts of the minor after reaching majority would be just as effective. What the wife may do toward disaffirming is, in many instances, dependent upon statutes. But these matters we will consider later. In this case the plaintiff in 1919, or thirty-nine years after the making of her deed to Foreman, executed and spread of record a deed of disaffirmance. What she did then could have been done many years prior thereto. At the present and under this point we purpose to rule the exact status of her deed of 1880. This status is clearly stated in 8 R. C. L., p. 949, thus:

“But the decided weight of authority now is that any deed of an infant is voidable only, so that the title passes by it and remains in the grantee until some clear act of *214 disaffirmance is done by the grantor after coming of age. No distinction is made on account of sex, and the disability of a female infant is not affected by marriage. How far subsequent marriage of a female infant grantor extends the time within which she may disaffirm her deed is treated elsewhere, as are also the necessity for disaffirmance in general and the subject of the contracts of infants for necessaries.”

After a review of our case law-we so ruled in Parrish v. Treadway, 267 Mo. 91. The plaintiff’s (Cassie Ann Wombles’) deed was not void, but only voidable, and was subject to her affirmance or disaffirmance after her majority. One method of disaffirmance is the bringing of a suit, and the suit in this case would serve the purpose if the act was timely. Suing is not the only method of disaffirmance. But this and other matters we take next.

II. Since 1889 this plaintiff, although under coverture, has had the right to sue. [Sec. 6864, R. S. 1889.] This plaintiff could at least have taken legal action for the cancellation of her deed under this statute at that time.

We are cited to a line of cases in possessory actions ruling that a married woman was not compelled to bring such possessory action until she become discovert. My individual views upon that subject have been expressed in some of our recent cases, but I do not urge them here. [See Powell v. Bowen, 279 Mo. l. c. 298.] Suffice it to say that my views evidently resulted in the passage of a new section in 1919. [Laws 1919, p. 496.]

What I now say is, that those cases, now cited and relied upon by respondent, were cases seeking possession of lands. In other words they were possessory actions. The Statute of Limitations as to real actions, Section 1305, Revised Statutes 1919, is in broad terms and would bar a married woman from bringing the suits therein mentioned. This was Section 1879 of Revised Statutes 1909.

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Related

Norcum v. Sheahan
21 Mo. 25 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1855)
Parrish v. Treadway
183 S.W. 580 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
255 S.W. 1062, 301 Mo. 208, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-pressley-mo-1923.