Hoselton v. Hoselton

65 S.W. 1005, 166 Mo. 182, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 1005 (Hoselton v. Hoselton) 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
Hoselton v. Hoselton, 65 S.W. 1005, 166 Mo. 182, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 322 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This action is ejectment for the possession of two hundred and forty acres of land in Audrain county. Both parties claim the land under one John Hoselton, who died testate in Hlinois in 1882. By the third clause of his will he gave to his son, Amos Hoselton, two hundred and forty acres of land lying in Audrain county, Missouri, “as long as the said Amos Hoselton shall pay or cause to be paid taxes on said land, and in case of the failure to pay taxes, the said land to go to his four children, named Henry, Mary Augusta, Linwood and Eob Hoselton.” Plaintiffs are the children of Amos [186]*186Hoselton and claim title both under the will of their grandfather, Iohn Hoselton, and by deed executed to them by their father dated February 11, 1898.. Defendant is the second wife of Amos Hoselton, to whom he was married in 1819, by which marriage there were two children, aged, respectively, nine and sixteen years, at the time of the trial, and who were at that time living with their mother on the land.

In February, 1880, Amos Hoselton, with this defendant as his wife, moved upon the said lands, where he lived with his family until in the year, 1891, when he abandoned her. She has remained in possession with her two children, occupying the same as a homestead, ever since this abandonment. The defendant has kept the taxes paid up on the said lands ever since her said husband left her, he having kept them paid before that time.

Amos Hoselton owned forty acres of land at a coal bank, upon which he had, a shanty, a mile and a half from this farm, and sometimes he took his wife there while he worked the coal bank, to remain temporarily. At no time when he had his family at the coal bank did he surrender possession of the land in question, but did during all of the time retain and use it as a homestead.

The case was tried by the court, a jury being waived.

Plaintiff asked the court to declare the law to be as follows :

“1. Although it appears from the evidence that the defendant, Mary Hoselton, is the wife of Amos Hoselton, and it is further shown by the evidence that the said Amos Hoselton abandoned his said wife and left her on and in possession of the land sued for, if it is further shown that said Amos Hoselton has not for four or five years prior to the institution of this suit lived on the said land or paid or caused to be paid the taxes due thereon, then there should be a verdict for the plaintiffs.

“2. Even if the defendant, Mary Hoselton, paid the [187]*187taxes on the said land for the last five years, if it is shown by the evidence that the said Amos Hoselton during that time-had not lived with her, but had abandoned the said defendant and she paid the taxes on her own accord and not at the request of the said Amos Hoselton, then the verdict should be for the plaintiffs.

“3. If it is shown by the evidence that in Eebruary, 1898, Amos Hoselton executed and delivered a general warranty deed for the lands in question conveying said lands to the plaintiffs and the said deed was recorded in the recorder’s office in Audrain county, Missouri, on March 7, 1898, then the plaintiffs are entitled to a verdict whether the defendant, Mary Hoselton, joined in the said deed or not.”

Said declarations of law were refused and plaintiffs saved their exceptions.

Plaintiff -also asked the court to give the following declarations of law, but the court failed to give or refuse the same.

“1. Under the pleadings and evidence the court returns a verdict for plaintiff.

“2. If it appears from the weight of evidence that Amos Hoselton has failed to pay the taxes due on the land for the possession of which the plaintiffs herein sue, or has failed to cause them to be paid, for a period of four years or more prior to the institution of suit, then the verdict should be for plaintiffs.”

To which action plaintiffs excepted.

Plaintiffs’ position is that by the terms of the will the land in question was a devise to Amos Hoselton, creating in him an estate on limitation, with a conditional limitation over to plaintiffs. That the words “as long as,” are words creating an estate upon limitation. Upon the other hand, defendant claims that the will was improperly admitted in evidence, but the only objection to its introduction in evidence was a general one, so that we are left entirely to conjecture as to what [188]*188the real objection was, and as the presumption is in favor of the correctness of the ruling of the trial court in admitting it in evidence, this point will be ruled adversely to defendant’s contention.

The distinction between a condition and a limitation is this: “A limitation determines an estate upon the happening of the event itself, without the necessity of doing any act to regain the estate.” [2 Devlin on Deeds (2 Ed.), sec. 974.]

“The distinction between an estate upon condition, and the limitation by which an estate is determined upon the happening of some event, is, that in the latter case the estate reverts to the grantor, or passes to the person to whom it is granted by limitation over, upon the mere happening of the event upon which it is limited, without any entry or other act; while in the former the reservation can only be made to the grantor or his heirs, and an entry upon breach of the condition is requisite to revest the estate. The provision for reentry is therefore the distinctive characteristic of an estate upon condition; and when it is found that by any form of expression the grantor has reserved the right, upon the happening of any event, to re-enter, and thereby revest in himself his former estate, it may be construed as such.” [Attorney-Gen. v. Merrimack Mfg. Co., 14 Gray, l. c. 612.]

“Where a condition subsequent is followed by a limitation over in case of a breach of the condition, it becomes a conditional limitation. No one but a grantor or his heirs can take advantage of a breach of a condition.” [2 Devlin on Deeds (2 Ed.), sec. 974; Tiedeman on Real Property (2 Ed.), sec. 281.]

If then the devisee in the will did not pay the taxes on the land according to its terms and conditions, the limitation of his interest in the land was determined, and the estate passed to his children, named under the will, the plaintiffs in this suit, without any entry or other act upon their part. Therefore, the estate vested in Amos Hoselton by the will was [189]*189an estate upon limitation, that is, “so long as he pay or cause to be paid the taxes on the land;” so that unless the provisions of the will in regard to the payment of taxes on the land is void for uncertainty in that no time is specified in the will in which the taxes were to be paid, or, his title was forfeited because of the non-payment of taxes by him, he still owned it up to the time of its conveyance by him to plaintiffs on the eleventh day of February, 1898. But we do not think the limitation of the estate void for uncertainty, for the taxes might have been paid by the devisee at any time after the land taxbook was made out and received by the collector. And at any time thereafter until sold for the taxes against it. The time of their payment was not restricted to any particular time by the will, and it is but fair that the devisee should have the same time in which to pay them that is accorded taxpayers generally to pay taxes upon their land, which as indicated they may do at any time before its sale for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 1005, 166 Mo. 182, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoselton-v-hoselton-mo-1901.