Keen v. Schnedler

92 Mo. 516
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 516 (Keen v. Schnedler) 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
Keen v. Schnedler, 92 Mo. 516 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Black, J.

The plaintiff and the defendant, Schnedler, are owners of adjoining real estate, in the county of St. Charles, and this action of ejectment is the result of [522]*522a dispute as to the true location of the line between them. The suit was begun in the St. Charles circuit court, in 1880, and, on plaintiff’s application, the venue was changed to the Warren circuit court. The judgment in favor of plaintiff was reversed in the court of appeals, and the plaintiff appealed.

Watson formerly owned the wfiole of the property, and, on the fifteenth of October, 1856, conveyed to Mc-Claren 107.12 acres. The description in this deed begins at the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of section 27, township 48, range 5, east, etc., and thence runs in a southwesterly direction, by a defined line, to a point 2.61 chains south of the south line of that quarter section, thence west, by a line parallel to the quarter section line, 22.78 chains “to the line of a tract of land sold by Samuel S. Watson and wife to Francis Hansell; thence north 3J degrees, east,” to north line of said northwest quarter ; thence east with the north line thereof to the beginning. Under a deed of trust given by Mc-Claren, the property was sold to Overall on the thirteenth of October, 1860, who conveyed the same premises to plaintiff on the seventh of November, 1860.

Watson, on the fifteenth of October, 1856, conveyed the other parcel, containing 54.11 acres, to Hansell. The description in this deed begins at the northwest corner of said section 27; thence south with the section line 43.35 chains; thence east by line parallel to quarter section line 11.39 chains, “to the line of a tract this day sold to Robert McOlaren ; ” thence north three degrees and thirty minutes east, to north line of section 27; thence west along the north line of said section 13.57 chains to the beginning. On the nineteenth of January, 1860, Hansell conveyed this property to Wilke, with the exception that he reserved a few acres in the southwest corner, and, to make up this, the description on the west goes over into section 28, and takes in a strip of land fifty-three links wide on the north line, thus [523]*523making Ms north line 14.10 chains in length. On the sixteenth of August, 1875, Wilke conveyed the same land to the defendant, Schnedler. It will be seen that the plaintiff ’ s land is on the east, and defendants’ on the west, of the dividing line, and that both deeds from Watson were made on the same day, and each deed calls for the other in fixing the dividing line on the south. The northwest corner of the land conveyed by Watson to Hansell is the corner to sections 21, 22, 27, and 28, and, by the deed from Hansell to Wilke, the northwest corner is removed fifty-three links west of the section corner.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff is the owner of certain lands, describing them precisely as they are described in his deeds, and then states that the defendant entered, and unlawfully withholds from plaintiff, a strip, one chain and twenty-three links wide, off of and along the west side of the described lands. Wilke was made defendant on his own motion.

The evidence shows that, from 1857 to 1871, or 1872, the plaintiff and his predecessors, on the one hand, and the defendant’s predecessors, on the other, held and cultivated up to what is called the line of the old rail fence. Portions of this fence were, from time to time, taken away and replaced on the same line. The fence was removed in 1871 or 1872, and, from that time to 1875, the plaintiff on the one side and Wilke on the other used the old fence row for a turning row for their teams in cultivating their respective lands. When Schnedler bought of Wilke, he had the land surveyed by Ertz, who drove stakes at the corners of the dividing line, and, some nine months thereafter, planted stones in the same places. There was a prior survey, made by Fielding for Wilke when he purchased from Hansell, and some of the evidence tends to show that these two surveys correspond, and that Fielding placed a stone at the northwest corner, fifty-three links west of the section corner,, [524]*524but other evidence tends strongly to show that he placed no stone there; his plat shows none. In 1877, the defendant built a new fence between him and plaintiff, on the line of the Ertz survey, and, at the commencement of this suit, was in the possession of all west of this fence.

. Pursuant to an order of the court made in this case, Mr. Gill, the county surveyor, surveyed and made a plat of these lands. He says he surveyed both parcels of land by the calls in the respective deeds, and that, according to the calls in Keen’s deeds, his land would lap over the Ertz rocks one chain and twenty-seven links on the south line, and fifty-three links on the north line ; that, according to the calls in Sclmedler’s deeds, his line did not go to, but would be east of, the Ertz rocks, fifty-three links at the north, and sixty-six links at the south.

The evidence tends strongly to show that there is but one rock at the northwest corner of defendant’s land, and that that is the section corner, for it is in line with the section corner rocks to the north, and that Ertz, in making his survey, started from this rock, and not from a point fifty-three links to the west. This being so, it accounts for the difference between the Ertz and Gill surveys. The latter is shown to have been carefully made. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that the new fence built by the defendant is, at the north end, four and one-half feet, and at the south end sixteen or seventeen feet, east of the old fence row. There is evidence, also, to the effect that the new fence is in the line of the old one.

1. It is insisted that the St. Charles circuit court erred in awarding a change of venue to the Warren circuit court, on the application of the plaintiff, because the petition therefor did not state when knowledge of the alleged prejudice, etc., came to the applicant. This ruling cannot be reviewed here, for, while it appears from [525]*525the bill of exceptions filed in the Warren circuit court at the close of the trial, that defendants excepted to the ruling of the St. Charles circuit court, still no bill of exceptions was filed in that court. The exception, to be of any avail to the defendants, should not only have been taken at the time the order was made, but it should have been preserved by a bill filed in the St. Charles circuit court, and at the term thereof when the order was made. State v. Ware, 69 Mo. 332. All exceptions taken during the - trial of a cause will rest in the breast of the court tuntil the motion for a new trial is overruled, though that be done at a subsequent term, and the exceptions may be preserved by a bill filed at the term when the motion is overruled. Givens v. Van Studdiford, 86 Mo. 149, and cases there cited. But the present is an entirely different question. The court to which the cause was sent could allow no exceptions taken in the other court.

2. Although the deed from Watson to McClaren had n<pt been recorded, still it was properly admitted in evidence. The deed was good, as between the parties, and all persons, except such as had purchased for value and without notice thereof. Cape Girardeau M. & P. Road Co. v. Renfroe, 58 Mo. 265.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keen-v-schnedler-mo-1887.