Lewis v. City of St. Louis

69 Mo. 595
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 69 Mo. 595 (Lewis v. City of St. Louis) 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
Lewis v. City of St. Louis, 69 Mo. 595 (Mo. 1879).

Opinion

Norton, J.

This cause comes here by appeal from the [596]*596St. Louis court of appeals, and is an action of ejectment» commenced by Simon E. Lewis in the circuit court of St. Louis county, against the city of Oarondelet, in 1860, for the recovery of lot 16, in survey No. 2, of the common of Oarondelet, north of the river Des Peres, in said county, containing nine arpents and forty-nine hundredths. The petition is in the usual form, and the answer contains a general and a specific denial of the allegations therein In 1870, by virtue df an act of the General Assembly, the city of Oarondelet became merged into the city of St. Louis, and in April, 1870, the city of St. Louis, on its own application, was substituted as defendant. The death of Simon E. Lewis having been suggested in September, 1873, the present plaintiffs, on the 3rd of April, 1874, were substituted, as the legal representatives of said Lewis, as plaintiffs in his stead. Upon a trial of the case by the court, judgment was rendered for plaintiffs, from which defendant appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals, where, upon trial, the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed, from which the defendant has appealed to this court.

Plaintiffs, in support of their title and right to recover, offered in evidence a lease by Oarondelet of the lot in question to Delphy Carlin, dated 19th- day of July, 1843, and running ninety-nine years, for the yearly rent of $5.88, payable at the end of each and every year. The lease also contained, among other stipulations, the following: That if at any time the year’s rent of any one year, or any part thereof, should remain unpaid six months after due, the board of trustees of the town of Oarondelet might, by order or resolution, to be entered of record among the acts and proceedings of said board, declare such lease void; whereupon said lease should determine and end, and the trustees might enter and take possession of the demised premises. The plaintiffs also offered evidence showing the assignment of this lease to one Grimsley, and by him to Brownlee, and by Brownlee to Simon E. Lewis, whose descendants and representatives plaintiffs claim to be. Plaint[597]*597iffs also offered in evidence a certified copy of a will o f Simon E. Lewis, dated in 1870, a copy of the probate thereof, and an alleged copy of letters testamentary, all from the probate court of Grant .county, State of Wisconsin. This evidence was objected to on the ground that neither the will, nor a duly certified copy thereof, had been filed or recorded in St. Louis county. The objection was overruled, and the evidence received. Plaintiffs also offered evidence tending to show that the plaintiffs were the children and representatives of the said Simon E. Lewis.

The first eight sections of said will made various bequests, and the ninth provided that after all the bequests were complied with, the remainder of his estate should be equally divided between his wife and children and their descendants, and nominated his wife, Mary C. Lewis, and his son, John S. Lewis, as his executors, empowering them to sell, dispose of and convey any and all real and personal property which they might deem necessary in the settlement of his estate. Plaintiffs also offered in evidence a deed to the property' in dispute, dated November, 1874, from Mary 0. Lewis and J ohn S. Lewis, executors of Simon E. Lewis, to the plaintiffs in this suit. This deed was objected to on the ground that the acknowledgment was-defective, and that it had never been recorded, and was irrelevant.

The evidence on the part of the plaintiffs tended to show that on the 19th day of January, 1858, one Barth, the agent of Lewis, offered to pay to the collector of Carondelet all that was due from Lewis on the lot of land in controversy; that he paid the sum of $14, all that was demanded, and supposed that it included rent as well as taxes, but on subsequent examination of the receipts given him, it only covered the taxes. Plaintiffs also offered evidence showing a tender to the proper officer of the city, in the fall of 1858, of all rent due on said property from [598]*598Lewis, which was not received, because of an alleged forfeiture of the lease which had been taken.

The defendant, on its part, offered in evidence a certified copy of the resolution of the council of the city of Carondelet, of date May 10th, 1858, in substance declaring that the rents reserved upon various leases (of which the lease to Carlin was one) are in arrear, and have been unpaid for six months since the same became due and payable, and still remain unpaid, and resolving that the said leases be, and they are, declared void. Said preamble and resolution, closing with the words above mentioned, were adopted by the council, and the mayor of the city approved and signed the same. The defendant read in evidence what purported to be a copy of the foregoing preamble and resolution, which concluded with the words: “Approved May 10th, 1858. Michael Chartrand, Mayor.” The above copies were objecte3 to on the ground that they were not true exemplifications of the record, which was offered to be established by comparison with the original record book of the proceedings of the council then in court. The objection was overruled, subject to the right of plaintiffs to impeach the same. The defendant also offered in evidence a certified copy of a resolution of the council, of date November 13th, 1866, forfeiting a number of leases for non-payment of rent, and among the number was the lease to Carlin of the lot in controversy. This resolution was approved and signed by the mayor, as required by the charter, and was spread in full on the record of their proceedings. The chief errors complained of, and to which our attention has been called, were as to the action of the court in receiving evidence objected to by defendant.

i. evidence: for. eigu probate of wni, a judicial proceeding: statute construed.

The objection made to the reception of the certified copy of the will and its probate, on the ground that a copy of the same had not been recorded in St. . . .. . -. Louis county, we think, not well taken, and ^ 7 7 . its reception was fully justified by the opmion of this court heretofore rendered in the case of Bright [599]*599v. White, 8 Mo. 421, where it was held that such evidence was receivable, on the ground that the probate of the will was a judicial proceeding in another State, and that, when properly attested, it was to be received as evidence in any other court in the United States. The doctrine of this case was approved in Haile v. Hill, 18 Mo. 618, where it is said that the probate of a will is regarded as a “judicial proceeding,” to the record of which “ full faith and credit” is to be given when certified to in conformity to the act of Congress of 1790.

It was not objected that .the record was not properly certified; the only objection being that section 34 of the act concerning wills required a copy to be recorded in St. Louis county before it could be received in_evidence. To give this section the construction contended for, would make it conflict with section 51 of the act concerning evidence, and the eases we have above referred to. It may be observed that section 34, supra, had a place on our statute book when the above cases were decided. Rev. St. 1835, §§ 19, 20, p. 619, and Rev. St. 1845, §§ 36, 37, p. 1084.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Mo. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-city-of-st-louis-mo-1879.