Hoxsey Hotel Co. v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n

163 S.W.2d 766, 349 Mo. 880, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 163 S.W.2d 766 (Hoxsey Hotel Co. v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n) 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
Hoxsey Hotel Co. v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n, 163 S.W.2d 766, 349 Mo. 880, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 417 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

*883 PER CURIAM:

This action involves a strip of land front-, ing 10 feet on Jefferson Street in the City of Mexico, Missouri, and extending eastwardly 136 feet along the south wall of the building known as the Alamo Hotel. The plaintiff brought suit to quiet title against the appellants, the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri (hereafter referred to as the Association), and Morris R.. Kemp, who were, respectively, the beneficiary of a purchase money deed of trust and the owner of the Alamo Hotel. The appellants joined as additional parties, James W. Gallaher and Forest' T. Noel, former owners of the 10-foot strip in controversy, and Jayne. T. Noel, the wife of Forest T. Noel. The'appellants filed a cross bill. The first count claims title to the 10-foot strip by adverse possession. The second count claims easements of passageway, light and air. The third count is ambiguous, but apparently seeks reformation as .to the 10-foot strip, and was so treated in the court below and in the briefs of both parties in this court. Each count contains an additional general prayer for further or other relief. The trial court made a geneal finding in favor of the plaintiff and against the appellants, but he also filed a memorandum which discloses the theory on which each count was decided.

About 1917 or 1918, J. W. Gallaher and his brother-in-law, J. E. Streif, owned a rectangular tract at the southeast corner of Liberty and Jefferson streets in the City of Mexico, Missouri. This tract is referred to in the record, for convenience, as Tract 1? In the southwest corner of said tract they built a portion of what is now the Alamo Hotel. While the building was being constructed it developed that the southern wall encroached 2.8 feet on the abutting property to the south, owned by the Chicago & Alton Railroad Company. As a result, Gallaher and Streif acquired title to a 2.8-foot strip to the south, fronting on Jefferson Street, but extending back only 120 feet, that is, lacking 16 feet of reaching the rear or easterly line of the aforesaid Tract 1. This strip is referred to as Tract 2. The building as originally constructed had its south wall flush with the south line of Tract 2 and encroached on the railroad property to ' the extent of a small concrete light well, covered by an iron grating, which afforded light and air to the basement in the front part of. the building. There was a door from the lobby of the hotel opening onto the railroad property from the south side of the building close to Jefferson Street. There were windows all along the south wall. *884 The hotel was enlarged about 1921 by extending the building north to Jefferson Street. It was' again enlarged about 1923 or 1924 by extending the south part of the building eastwardly until it came within 6 feet, 10 inches of the rear of Tract 1. This involved another encroachment on the railroad property, since Tract 2, a 2.8-foot strip, was 16 feet short of meeting the extension of the east line of Tract 1.

On February 28, 1924, about the time this addition was built along the south line of the property to the east, Gallaher individually acquired a stiip of land from the railroad company which fronted 10 feet on Jefferson Street and included the 10-foot strip in controversy, but had a considerably greater depth to the east, and included the 2.8-foot strip upon which the southeast corner of the building encroached. The consideration was $1400. The 10x136 feet portion of the strip fronting on Jefferson Street is the strip in controversy and is referred to as Tract 3. It adjoins the southern wall of the Alamo Hotel and extends 6 feet, 10 inches further east. A portion of the land .that Gallaher thus acquired from the railroad company included a small strip having east and west dimensions of 16 feet and north and south dimensions of 2.8 feet, referred to as Traqt 4. This small tract lies immediately to the east of Tract 2 and immediately to the north of the east 16 feet of Tract 3, the strip in controversy. Tracts 1, 2, 3 and 4 together form a. rectangle at the southeast corner of Jefferson and Liberty streets, having north and south dimensions of approximately 127 feet and east and west dimensions of 136 feet.

About 1927 or 1928 the lessee of the Alamo Hotel converted all of the rooms along the south side of the hotel back of the lobby, except the rear storage room, into apartments. Additional doors (making five in all) were cut in the south wall, and the previous inside doors, which had led, successively, through these rooms (formerly storage or display rooms), were walled up, with the result that the only access to these apartments and the rear storage room along the south side of the building was by way of Tract 3, the strip in controversy. About this time a prior board walk was replaced with a concrete walk which towards the front of the building took up all but 4 inches of the frontage of the 10-foot strip, but narrowed to approximately 3 feet, 6 inches along the apartments to the rear. Along the south side of the walk towards the front or Jefferson Street was an iron railing (since removed), and the walk surrounded, except on the building side, the light well and the iron grating, which was flush with the surface of the ivalk. Towards the front or Jefferson Street side of the building the walk was close to the surface of the ground, but towards the rear the ground sloped back and the walk was approximately a foot - high, being built of solid concrete, flush against the wall of the building, and the stone doorsteps of the rear doors overlapped the top of the walk an inch or two. This walk extended back past the rear door on the south side and stopped within *885 about 6 feet of the rear or southeast corner of the building. From this corner a fence (with a gate) extended to the south across the width of the strip in controversy, and then went an undisclosed distance to the east onto other property. The record contains a number of photographs showing the physical condition of the south side of the building and the strip in controversy, and it appears that this had been substantially its condition since about 1927 or 1928. These pictures show a total of five doors on the east side and that the’ walk and the light well, covered by the grating, are not only physically attached, but are as much an integral part of the building as improvements of this character could be. To the south of the strip in controversy is a lawn on property owned by the railroad company. However, the lawn was kept up by the lessee of the hotel company and was to some extent used by its guests. During the summer time lawn chairs would be placed on the wide part of the walk with a sign that they were for the use of the guests of the hotel, and there were awnings which extended out from the building over the strip in controversy.

Gallaher was for a number of years the agent, field man. and examiner of the Association, and it was on his.recommendation that loans were made. Gallaher and his brother-in-law Streif, placed a loan on the Alamo Hotel with the Association, which was from time to time extended. The deed of trust covered only. Tracts 1 and 2, and did not cover Tract 3, the strip in controversy, or Tract 4, the small strip including part of the southeast corner of the building.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W.2d 766, 349 Mo. 880, 1942 Mo. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoxsey-hotel-co-v-farm-home-savings-loan-assn-mo-1942.