Kidd v. Brewer

297 S.W. 960, 317 Mo. 1047, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 16, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 960 (Kidd v. Brewer) 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
Kidd v. Brewer, 297 S.W. 960, 317 Mo. 1047, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 634 (Mo. 1927).

Opinions

This is a suit to reform certain deeds upon the ground of mutual mistake in describing the property; and for the cancellation *Page 1050 of a certain quitclaim deed made subsequent to the execution of the deed sought to be reformed, and to divest defendant Gregg of title to two strips of ground and vest title in plaintiff.

A general outline of what was done may best precede the statement of the particular attending circumstances, which govern in the determination of the case. As the case was brought and as between plaintiff and the defendant Gregg, there was immediately involved ownership of two strips of ground approximately five feet in width, parts of the west half of Lot 3 in Home Heights Subdivision, St. Louis County; but as the case stands upon appeal, the issue is as to only one of those strips. The north line of said Lot 3 of Home Heights Subdivision fronts on St. Louis Avenue. Lot 3 contains 6.88 acres. At the time of the beginning of the transactions forming the subject of this suit, said Lot 3 was owned by two men. One Kuhn owned what was spoken of as the east half of the lot, and the defendant Brewer owned what was spoken of as the west half of said lot. The west (Brewer's) half contained 3.50 acres, and the east half 3.38 acres. Kuhn is not a party to this suit, but the west line of his land, as fenced and occupied by him, enters into the acts of the parties in locating parts of the west half of the lot (Brewer's property), described in the deeds sought to be reformed. Kuhn's fence was on, or within, a few inches of the north-and-south center line. The north line of Brewer's property extended along the south line of St. Louis Avenue from Kuhn's northwest corner westward 255 feet and some inches. It extended south from the south line of St. Louis Avenue 575 feet, or 600 feet south from the center of said Avenue. Brewer's residence fronted on St. Louis Avenue, and his residence and out-buildings were situated on what, for convenience, may be spoken of as the northeast quarter of his property.

On August 9, 1919, Brewer agreed to sell and convey to plaintiff Kidd all of the west half of said Lot 3, except 125 feet in width of the northeast part. At that time he gave Kidd an earnest-money receipt, the property being described as all of the west half of said Lot 2, "except the east 125 feet fronting on St. Louis Avenue of said lot, with the improvements thereon, and extending south to within three feet of rear of barn thereon, or 300 feet north of the south line" (of said Lot 3). The part excepted and to be retained by Brewer was to have a frontage on St. Louis Avenue of 125 feet, beginning from Brewer's east line, or, the line between the property of Brewer and the property of Kuhn. The evidence, oral and written, makes that clear. All of the remainder of the west half of Lot 3 was to be conveyed to Kidd. Brewer and Kidd did not know the exact width of Brewer's property. Brewer and plaintiff's son took a tape line, started at Brewer's northeast corner, Kuhn's northwest corner, and measured off 125 feet west. They set stakes to mark the points. But, in the warranty deed from *Page 1051 Brewer to Kidd, executed August 20, 1919, description in said deed was given upon the theory that the west half of Lot 3 extended east and west 250 feet, instead of approximately 255 feet. The deed did not describe the property by saying it was all of the west half of Lot 3, except a tract or part thereof, whose north boundary line ran 125 feet west from the northeast corner of Brewer's property, as was intended by Brewer and Kidd; but, the deed undertook to describe the property to be conveyed, by metes and bounds, and it took the northwest corner of Lot 3 as a beginning point, and proceeded upon the erroneous theory that the west line of the property to be excluded was distant 125 feet east from the west line of Lot 3, when in fact it was distant approximately 130 feet.

Under the description the deed failed to convey to Kidd a strip five feet in width along the west side of the land to be excepted, and failed to convey a strip five feet in width along and upon the east side of the west half of Lot 3, south of the property to be excepted. Thus, unknown to Brewer and Kidd, it left to Brewer a tract, or lot, approximately 130 feet in width from east to west, instead of 125 feet from east to west, fronting on St. Louis Avenue, and it also left standing in Brewer a strip of ground approximately five feet in width from east to west, extending from the south line of Lot 3, to the south line of the ground retained by Brewer.

In 1920, defendant Gregg bought from Brewer the property retained, or intended to be retained, by Brewer, and on September 7, 1920, Brewer and wife executed to defendant Gregg a warranty deed. The testimony tending to show what Brewer and Gregg intended will be referred to later. This deed to Gregg was so drawn as also to fix the northwest corner of the property of Brewer, the retained part to be conveyed, as being 125 feet east of the west line of Lot 3. Thus, as described in the deed from Brewer to Gregg, the north line was made to run from a point 125 feet east of the west line of Lot 3, "and thence, east, 125 feet and four and one-half inches, more or less, to the north-and-south center line of said Lot 3." The call of 125 feet and four and one-half inches did not reach the center line, Brewer's line, by nearly five feet. On July 22, 1922, defendant Gregg caused the ground to be surveyed, and discovered that there was a strip of ground, approximately five feet wide, running from north to south on and along the entire east side of the west half of Lot 3, which the deeds made by Brewer did not cover. Immediately after Gregg learned that this strip had not been conveyed by Brewer, he induced Brewer to made a conveyance to him of this strip of ground. Brewer gave him a quitclaim deed, dated July 25, 1922. Therein the strip was described by metes and bounds as follows: "Beginning in the south line of St. Louis Avenue 250 feet four and one-half inches, more or less, east of the west line of said Lot 3, thence eastwardly *Page 1052 four feet nine inches, more or less, to a point; thence south wardly 575 feet, more or less, to the southern line of Lot 3; thence westwardly four feet nine inches, more or less, to a point 250 feet, four and one-half inches, more or less, east of the west line of said Lot 3; thence northwardly and parallel with the west line of said Lot 3, 575 feet, more or less, to the south line of St. Louis Avenue. the point of beginning." Gregg paid Brewer $25 for "his trouble." The trial court found that the quitclaim from Brewer to Gregg was ineffective, as a conveyance of the south end of the strip, and found for plaintiff, as to all that part of the strip lying south of the south line of the lot reserved by Brewer, and conveyed by him to Gregg. Gregg did not appeal. The court found for defendant Gregg as to the strip of five feet upon and along the west side of the lot of Gregg, as bounded in Brewer's deed to Gregg; and Kidd appealed.

Kidd's appeal is taken, because, in reforming the deed from Brewer to Kidd so far as to give Kidd the south end of the five-foot strip, which meant a holding that Brewer intended to exclude and to retain only 125 feet fronting on St. Louis Avenue, the court did not go farther, and so reform Brewer's deed to Gregg, as to leave Gregg 125 feet fronting on St. Louis Avenue, running west from the Kuhn line, with a depth of 275 feet, and thereby also give to Kidd the strip of five feet upon and along the west part of the lot of Gregg, as that lot was described in Brewer's warranty deed to Gregg.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 960, 317 Mo. 1047, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kidd-v-brewer-mo-1927.