Jacobs v. Stoner

7 S.W.2d 698, 319 Mo. 1093, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 770
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 S.W.2d 698 (Jacobs v. Stoner) 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
Jacobs v. Stoner, 7 S.W.2d 698, 319 Mo. 1093, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 770 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This action was originally commenced in the Circuit Court of Ray County on September 9, 1924. The petition is in conventional form, and is cast in two counts, the first count seeking to ascertain, determine and quiet the title to certain land, alleged to be situate in Ray County, Missouri, and described as follows: the west one-half of Section 30, Township 51, Range 27, containing 320 acres, more or less; the west one-half of the northeast quarter of Section 30, Township 51, Range 27, containing eighty acres, more or less; and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 30, Township 51, Range 27, containing forty acres, more or less; the said described land containing in the aggregate 440 acres, more or less. The second count of the petition is in ejectment for possession of the same land. The action is a companion case to Akers v. Stoner,319 Mo. 1085, ruled in this division at the present term, and both cases were tried, by stipulation of the parties, upon the same evidence, and the pleadings are likewise substantially the same in both cases. The defendant Stoner herein filed no pleading and made default.

The answer of defendant Lena Waller denies generally the allegations of the petition; avers that she is the owner of certain described lands, alleged to be situate in Lafayette County, and has had continuous, exclusive, adverse, and peaceable possession thereof for thirty-five years prior to the commencement of the present action; that she does not know whether the said lands are identical with the lands described in the petition, but admits that she is in possession of such part thereof as is west of the westerly edge of the old Missouri River slough; that defendant Stoner is the grantee of certain described shore lands in Lafayette County, and that defendant Waller acquired, by quitclaim deed from said Stoner, certain described lands, designated as Tract A, the same being accretions to Stoner's said *Page 1097 shore lands; that defendant Waller, by proper deeds of conveyance, acquired title to certain described shore lands in Lafayette County and is the owner of said shore lands, with accretions thereto, described as Tract B; that defendant Waller is the grantee in a patent from Lafayette County, dated December 28, 1914, conveying to her all the right, title and interest of Lafayette County in and to certain described lands in said county aggregating 947.37 acres, which lands embrace and include said Tracts A and B, with the accretions thereto; that on or about July 3, 1915, there was a sudden change or avulsion of the Missouri River, and that the lands described in the answer were, at the time of said avulsion, south and west of the middle of the main channel of the Missouri River, and were in Lafayette County and still remain in said county; that defendant Waller claims no land which was north of the middle of the main channel of said river as it existed at the time of said avulsion, but does claim the described lands as being south and west of the middle of the main channel of the Missouri River at the time of said avulsion, and denies that said lands were or are in Ray County, and therefore denies the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Ray County over the subject-matter of the action; that the lands described in the answer consist of the described deeded lands, with the accretions thereto gradually and imperceptibly formed by gradual changes in the banks and course of the Missouri River; that defendant, and those under whom she claims, have been in open, adverse, notorious, exclusive, peaceable and continuous possession thereof for thirty-five years before the commencement of the action, and has made valuable improvements thereon; that defendant is unable to determine whether the lands described in the answer are identical with those described in the petition, but if the lands described in the petition are included within those described in the answer, then such lands, or parts thereof so included, were, many years ago, washed away by the action of the current and waters of the Missouri River, and the lands now in possession of defendant were formed by accretion in the place and situs of the lands so washed away. The answer also pleads the bar of the several statutes of limitation.

The reply is a general denial of the averments of the answer. The venue was changed to the Circuit Court of Clinton County, where the action was tried to the court, a jury having been waived by agreement of the parties.

The evidence shows that all of the lands described in plaintiff's petition, and in controversy herein, lay north and east of the main channel of the Missouri River as that channel existed during and prior to the year 1875, and for some years thereafter; and the evidence *Page 1098 further shows that some time after the year 1875, the Missouri River began cutting away the land on the Ray County side of the river to the north and east of the channel of the river as it existed in 1875, so that, during the period from 1875 to 1915, the main channel of the Missouri River had shifted, gradually and imperceptibly, far to the north and east of the channel of 1875. Prior to the month of July, 1915, the form of the main channel of the Missouri River was that of a horseshoe, or of the inverted letter U. On or about July 3, 1915, the river, by avulsion, suddenly and in a single night, cut a new channel, distant some two and one-half or three miles south of the lands in controversy, through what is called in the record the "Egypt bottom," in which new channel the waters of the river have since continuously flowed, and were so flowing at the time of the trial of the present action, thereby abandoning the main channel of the river as it existed at and prior to the time of the avulsion in July, 1915. The foregoing facts are not controverted by plaintiffs (respondents). On the other hand, such facts are specifically admitted in respondents' printed brief filed in this court, from which we quote such admission, as follows: "In 1915, the river had entirely cut away the land described in the petition, except about three acres in the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of Section 30. On July 3, 1915, the river suddenly changed its course and cut a new channel several miles south of the land in controversy. About the year 1877, an island began to form in the river opposite the land described in plaintiff's petition. At the time of the avulsion in 1915, this island had grown until it comprised several hundred acres, and included all of the original situs of the plaintiffs' land except the portion occupied by the eastern channel of the river and except the three acres which were still north and east of the river. This island is identical with tracts A and B described in defendant's answer."

The island thus referred to in respondents' brief, and admitted by respondents to be of island formation which had formed or sprung up in the river channel after the lands which had previously existed in 1875 had been entirely cut away by the erosive action of the river, is referred to in the record as "Lena Waller Island," and embraces some 900 acres, more or less, in area. The greater part of the land in controversy, according to the surveys and plats in evidence, is included within the boundary lines of said island.

A rough plat, or blue-print, of "Lena Waller Island," apparently not drawn to any scale, and identified as plaintiffs' Exhibit B, is in evidence, and shows to some extent the relative location of said island with respect to the banks of the Missouri River as they existed just *Page 1099 prior to the avulsion of July, 1915. We append such plat to our opinion herein for the purpose of a better understanding of thelocus in quo.

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Related

Moore v. Rone
355 S.W.2d 398 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1962)
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8 S.W.2d 912 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 698, 319 Mo. 1093, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-stoner-mo-1928.