Jones v. Park

222 S.W. 1018, 282 Mo. 610, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 2, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 1018 (Jones v. Park) 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
Jones v. Park, 222 S.W. 1018, 282 Mo. 610, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 138 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

*616 GrOODE, J.

This action was instituted against eight defendants besides the appellant Elihu Park, for the partition of 445.76 acres of land in Platte County, Missouri. As all the other parties submitted to the judgment of the court below, the appellant will be spoken of as the defendant, and as he acquiesced in the judgment in so far as it affected twenty-nine acres of the total number of acres involved, that parcel will be understood as not included, unless specially mentioned, when we speak of the lands affected by the judgment.

Elihu Park was the husband of Laura Park, who died June 6, 1916, owning the lands in suit. They were married in Kentucky, where Mrs. Park resided, November 8, 1871, and immediately thereafter came to Platte County, Missouri, where they lived until 1914. One daughter, Mary Park, was born to them October 4, 1874. She married Stuart Thompson, and died June 4, 1900, in the lifetime of her mother, leaving no children or descendants surviving her. Before her marriage Laura Park was.Laura Ragan (or Regan: the name is spelled boL ways in the record), one of the eight daughters of William Ragan, of Montgomery County, Kentucky, who died in 1881, leaving a last will, which was admitted to probate in the County Court of Montgomery County, December 21, 1881. The will was signed, published and witnessed September 2, 1867; but a codicil was added April 20, 1871. The eight daughters, who were the only children of the testator, were living at the dates of Ü. will and of the codicil; and six of them were then married; but Laura (after November 8, 1871, Laura Park) and Anna Eliza (later Anna E. Burchett, were unmarried. Portions of the will are not relevant to the points involved in the present appeal, except that they show the intention of the testator was to equalize the distribution of his estate among his daughters, and, with that statement o their effect, they will be omitted. The material parts are as follows:

*617 "2nd. It is my will that my children Louisa Patterson, Mary C. Reid, Elizabeth Everett, Willie Benton, Sarah Bridges, Fannie Jones, Laura Ragan, Anna Eliza Ragan, shall have equally all my real and personal estate, but the lands shall belong to them and their children for their own separate use and benefit not subject to the control, debts or liabilities of their said husbands; and the same shall belong exclusively to my said daughters. It is my will that if any of my daughters should die, before or after I do, the portion so coming to my daughter to come to and belong to her child or children. . . .

"I will that my personal estate consisting of money, stock, bank stock, etc., shall be sold by my executors and be equally divided among my heirs, but the same shall be laid out in land by my executors, and the lands so purchased, with said money, shall belong to my daughters and their children for their separate use and benefit, but it is my will if my daughters Laura and Anna Eliza, or either of them are unmarried at my death, their portion of my personal estate shall not be invested in land, but the same put to interest by my executors, who shall manage the same and the interest paid annually to my said daughters, and this with their portion of my real estate (the rent thereof) I deem sufficient for their support, but after my said daughters’ marriage, or before if thev so desire, the said fund shall be vested in land as before named, my executor shall execute this trust, and the land so purchased shall belong to my said daughters exclusively, for their own use and benefit and their children.

"It is my will and desire that if the portion of land that falls to either of my daughters shall not be suitable to their condition, the same may be sold, but the proceeds invested in other lands, and no title pass to said land until the title to the land so purchased shall be vested in my daughters and her children, as aforesaid, i . .

"I hereby appoint and constitute Willis Bridges and N. P. Reid, my sons-in-law the executors of this my las will and testament.

*618 ‘‘ Given under my hand and seal this 2nd day of September, 1867.

“William Ragan (Seal). ‘

“Attest.

“Wm. Hoffman. j

“John W. Clay.”

The parts of the codicil which need to be considered are as follows: ■

“I desire to make this additional paper a codicil to the will executed by me on the 2nd day of September, 1867, and in the presence of Wm.- Hoffman and John W Clay. The same to be taken and considered a part of said will.

“1st. My son-in-law Willis Bridges being in extremely poor health and not able to take upon himself the labors of settling np an estate I hereby revoke his appointment as one of my executors, leaving N. P. Reid my sole executor. '

“2nd. My two younger daughters Laura and Anna Eliza Ragan being unmarried should either or both of them die without issue, I hereby will and bequeath her or their share of my estate to the surviving sisters and if any of them be dead, the children of such shall take their mother’s share, under the same limitation and restrictions that the original will conveys their share to them, viz., that it is to be their sole and separate property and not subject to the debts or control of any husban.. they now have or may have hereafter.

“3rd. If I should decide upon dividing my lands out among my children the portion given to each is to be , charged to her at such price as I shall fix upon it' and if any one of my daughters gets more than her share of my estate she is to make the rest equal to her by refunding-sufficient for that purpose. . . .

“Given under my hand and seal this 20th day of April, 1871.

“W. Ragan.

“Wm. Hoffman.

“B. A. Seaver.”

*619 The executor named in the codicil refused to serve and so, on December 24, 1881, W. R. Patterson and W. II. Daugherty were appointed administrators with the will annexed. Said administrators and some of the persons interested as devisees and legatees provided for in the will, or as children of the devisees and legatees, filed a suit in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Kentucky, against the other persons interested as devisees and legatees, or as heirs of said legatees and devisees, for a partition of the lands whereof the testator died seized and which he had devised, and for a construction of the will in order to ascertain the interests of the various parties; also for the appointment of trustees to carry out testamentary directions, as far as trustees were required for that purpose.

Laura Park, her husband Elihu Park and her daughter Mary Park, who was unmarried and a minor at the time the suit was filed, were named as defendants. These defendants were neither residents of nor in Kentucky, but were residents of and in Missouri at the time the sub was commenced and there was no personal service of process on them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 1018, 282 Mo. 610, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-park-mo-1920.