La Rue v. Bungenstock

249 S.W. 402, 297 Mo. 577, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 402 (La Rue v. Bungenstock) 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
La Rue v. Bungenstock, 249 S.W. 402, 297 Mo. 577, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 323 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*581 BROWN, G.

This is ejectment for the recovery of certain lands in Atchison County, alleged to be the property of the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s second amended petition upon which the cause was tried is, omitting formal parts, as follows:

“That he is the owner, and possessed in fee, and entitled to the possession of the following described real estate, situate, lying and being in the County of Atchison, in the State of Missouri, to-wit: A strip of land about two feet wide at tine east end, about three feet wide in the center and about a foot wide at the west end, and lying south of the following described line: Beginning two feet north of the southeast corner of the northeast quarter of Section Pour, of Township Sixty-three, of Range Forty-one; thence northwesterly seven rods; thence west bearing slightly south sixty-four to the middle of the old channel of the Nislmabotna River.
“And a strip of land lying south of the following described line: Beginning at the point last above described; thence southwesterly ten rods; thence north by west ten rods; thence west by south ten rods to the bank of the old bed of the Nishnabotna River; the last above described line is off the true line, which divides the plaintiff’s land from the defendant’s land, at the beginning *582 of said line it starts on the line and at a distance of ten rods from the beginning it is off the true line six feet; north ten rods further on said described line it is off the true line twenty-two feet; and where the said described line ends on the bank of said river said line is off the true line ten feet; that the amount of land belonging to plaintiff and taken by defendant is about one acre, laying in a wedge shape, it may be more, no accurate measurements as to quantity having been made,
x “‘Plaintiff alleg'es that the defendant has built his fence on the above described lines, and the first above described line materially interferes with plaintiff’s ingress, egress and regress from his dwelling house to the public road east, and is unsightly, and throws the public highway too close to his dwelling’ house and to plaintiff’s great annoyance, and that said outlet is the only outlet plaintiff has to the public road.
“That by an agreement made and entered into between plaintiff and defendant the line dividing plaintiff’s land from defendant’s land was fixed and was. to be and is where the last water run in the old channel of the -Nishnabótna Eiver; that plaintiff immediately took possession of said land; that said agreement was made and entered into more than ten ypars go; that plaintiff has been in open, notorious, actual, continual, peaceable and adverse possession of said land under said agreement for more than ten years, next before the filing of this petition, under color of title, to-wit, from the year 1902.
“That while plaintiff was such owner and so seized and possessed, and entitled to the possession of said land, the defendant afterwards on the-day of --, 1920, without right unlawfully did enter into' and upon the same, and oust and eject plaintiff therefrom, and ever since that day has wrongfully withheld and still withholds the possession thereof from plaintiff, to his damage in the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars; that the value of the rents and profits of said land from the-day of-, 1920, and while the plaintiff has been excluded therefrom, is one hundred dollars.
*583 ’“Wherefore, plaintiff asks judgment for the restitution of said land and premises; for the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars for the wrongful withholding said land and premises, and one hundred dollars for the rents and profits of said land, and for his costs in this behalf expended.”

No demurrer1 or other dilatory pleading was interposed to this petition, to- which the defendant answered denying generally its allegations, pleading the Statute of Limitations of ten years, and alleging that he himself had been in actual possession of the same land for more than twenty-five years next before the institution of the suit.

To this the plaintiff replied by general denial, and pleading his own open, notorious and adverse possession for more than ten years, and that defendant assisted him in digging the ditch which they agreed upon as the boundary between their lands.

Upon these issues, which were stated at great length in the answer and reply, the. parties went to trial to a jury, which returned the following verdict:

“We, the jury, find for the plaintiff.
“We, the jury, find that at the time of the commencement of this suit the plaintiff was entitled to the possession of the following described real estate, situate, lying and being in the County of Atchison, State of Missouri, to-wit:
“All that land lying north and west of the ditch in old channel of the Nishnabotna River extending to the fence erected by the defendant in the spring of 1920. Said fence commencing at the gas pipe mentioned in evidence, and thence in a southwesterly direction from said gas pipe to a post in plaintiff’s fence, said post being in the old bed of the Nishnabotna River. The jury assesses1 the rent and profits of said land from the first day of March, 1920, to the day of trial, at the sum of two dollars.”

The land involved in the suit is situated in the old bed of the Nishnabotna River where it passes through *584 Section 4, of Township 63, Range 41, of the Government survey. Originally the river ran through this section, but its course was deflected at a point north of the State line after the Government survey was made, and its old channel is still undergoing the natural process of obliteration. It was meandered by the Government survey, which only extended to its banks. It is unnecessary to refer to the ownership of the lands which were uncovered when the river ceased to flow over them, otherwise than to say that the lands so uncovered included the little parcel which is the subject of this appeal. It flowed between the lands owned by the parties to this suit, and plaintiff’s claim has grown out of an alleged arrangement to divide the lands between the banks of the old stream between themselves. It is asserted by the plaintiff, and not denied by defendant, that the arrangement was that the dividing line should be the thread of the last flow of the water in this old channel. This was marked by a ditch kept open by them, and the plaintiff asserts and the evidence tends to prove that they also agreed that the portion of the fence to be built by each should be constructed on his own side of this ditch, which began at the quarter section corner ctfi tija, east side of Section Pour, which'was marked by a stone, and extended in a westerly direction till it discharged into what is called in the record “the big ditch” further toward the southwest. The evidence also tends to show that 1122 feet westerly from this stone there was a piece of gas pipe set in the ground; and 104 feet further in a southwesterly direction, in the old channel, was a post in the fence constructed by plaintiff under that arrangement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 402, 297 Mo. 577, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-rue-v-bungenstock-mo-1923.