Johnson v. Fluetsch

75 S.W. 1005, 176 Mo. 452, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 30, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 1005 (Johnson v. Fluetsch) 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
Johnson v. Fluetsch, 75 S.W. 1005, 176 Mo. 452, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 111 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

This is an action of ejectment for the following lands in Gasconade county, in this State: the north half of the southwest quarter of section 3, and west half of lot number one of the northeast quarter, and the east half of lot number one of the northwest quarter of said section 3, all in township 44, range 5, west, except 25 acres, described by metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of said east half of lot one of the northwest quarter of said section three and running thence east forty chains, to the northeast corner of the west one-half of said lot number one of the northeast quarter of said section three; thence south six chains and twenty-five links to a stake; west forty chains to a stake; from thence north six chains and twenty-five links to the point of beginning..

Ouster is laid as of January 10, 1899. Monthly [459]*459rents and profits are alleged to be of the value of fifteen dollars, and damages for detention $200.

The answer is, first, a general denial.

Second, that defendant’s remote grantor, one John E. Stephan, had entered the lands in controversy at the United States Land Office in St. Louis, on the 8th day of May, 1849, with a military bounty land warrant num- . bered 30960, issued to one Phillip Rausch, and by him assigned to said Stephan; that when said entry was made the register of said land office execute'd and delivered to said Stephan a certificate of such entry; that by mistake or accident, the proper officers had failed or negT lected to post such entry on the proper books of the said land office, and the land warrant with which the entry was made was, by mistake or accident, lost or not properly returned to the General Land Office; that.said Stephan immediately after said entry, took possession of said real estate, and shortly thereafter, by warranty deed, sold and conveyed said land to one Henry Oschner, and that by several mesne conveyances said land had been conveyed to defendant; and that plaintiff, at the time he acquired the legal title to said land by a patent from the Government, had notice of the claims and equities of defendant. The prayer was that plaintiff be divested of all title acquired by him by virtue of said patent, and that the title in fee be vested in defendant, and for other proper relief.

This part of the defendant’s answer plaintiff sought to have stricken out, but the court overruled his motion.

The reply was a general denial; and further, that at the date of plaintiff’s entry of land said lands appeared by the records of the United States Land Office to be vacant, and that no entry had been made by anyone ; that said lands are shown to be vacant and subject to en- • try since the year 1880 by a certified book of original entries from the United States Land Office on file in the office of the recorder of deeds of Gasconade county, Missouri, and had so appeared vacant and subject to entry [460]*460for more than five years prior to the date of the purchase of said lands by plaintiff; that defendant fcnd his grantors had notice that said lands were shown to be vacant by said records of more than twenty years prior to plaintiff’s entry, but that they had failed to perfect their title; that because of such failure plaintiff was induced to make his entry, and did so without notice of defendant’s alleged claim, etc.

On these pleadings the case went to trial before the judge, a.jury being waived.

The evidence of the substantial and material facts in the case is undisputed.

About May 8, 1849, one Philip Rausch was the holder of Military Bounty Land "Warrant No. 30960, issued to him. John F. Stephan bought this land warrant from him, going before a justice of the peace in St. Louis to have the transfer made in writing and acknowledged. Stephan immediately went to the land office in St. Louis, and on said last date, with said land warrant, entered the land in controversy. The register of the land office took up the warrant, and issued to Stephan the following certificate:

“Register’s Office, St. Louis, Mo., May 8, 1849. Military Land Warrant No. 30960, in the name of Philip Rausch, has this day been located by John F. Stephan, upon the north half of the southwest quarter, east half of lot No. 1, of the northwest quarter, and west half of lot No. 1 of the northeast quarter of section 3, in township 44, of range 5 west, subject to any pre-emption claim which may be filed for said land within thirty days from this date. Contents of tract located, 160 acres. The date of assignments in all cases must be given at the time they are acknowledged, and no assignment of this certificate will be regarded.
“Tito. Watson, Register.”

Confirmatory of this evidence and certificate is the following:

The tract book of lands in Gasconade county, cer[461]*461tified to by the register and receiver of the land office at St. Lonis, July 19, 1852, in connection with the description of the lands in controversy, contains the following memorandum: “Located with bounty land warrant, about April, 1849, but the name of the purchaser does not appear on our books.”

Plaintiff attempts to meet this evidence- by a subsequent memorandum made October 9, 1880, in red ink on the same book by the register and recorder of the Boonville Land Office to which the St. Louis Land Office books seem to have been transferred, as follows: ‘ ‘ October 9, 1880 — Erroneous—The tracts appear vacant on the record. R. and R.”

It further appears rather indefinitely, by the testimony of officers of the Boonville Land Office, that on the books of the office in connection with the description of this land, some pencil memorandum had been made and afterwards erased.

~ Within three or four months after the entry of the land by Stephan on May 8,1849, he went into possession and cleared about two acres.

On October 11, 1850, Stephan, by warranty deed, conveyed the land to Henry Oschner. The deed expressly refers to the entry aforesaid, giving the number of the warrant with which it was made, and there is undisputed evidence that the certificate of entry hereinbefore set out was delivered to Oschner with the deed. This deed was filed for record and recorded October 12, 1850.

The other conveyances, which transferred the land to defendant, were a'last will of Henry Oschner, duly probated, and a warranty deed from his devisee to defendant. The last will was probated in Gasconade county, Missouri, October 2, 1875. The deed from the devisee to defendant was recorded in the same county March 29, 1885.

The application of plaintiff for a patent was made [462]*462May 15, 1898, and the patent issued on said application is dated December 17,1898.

From the time that Stephan went into the possession of the land in the autumn of 1849 until this action was commenced, Stephan and his grantees were in possession of the land, had about sixty acres of it cleared and under cultivation, a good dwelling house on the land in which he lived, and the necessary outbuildings for the use of a farmer.

It also appeared on the cross-examination of'John Stephan, a son of John F. Stephan, that about the year 1875 Mr. Oschner had written to him requesting an affidavit touching his knowledge of the entry made by his father, but that he had not done anything in the matter,

A letter of the commissioner of the General Land Office at Washington, D.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 1005, 176 Mo. 452, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-fluetsch-mo-1903.