Mairs v. Knifong

557 S.W.2d 682, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2327
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 1977
DocketNo. KCD 28740
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 557 S.W.2d 682 (Mairs v. Knifong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mairs v. Knifong, 557 S.W.2d 682, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2327 (Mo. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Judge.

Respondent was successful in defending a quiet title suit upon the theory, as found by the trial court, that appellants were es-topped to deny respondent’s title after having received benefits from the sale of the real estate in an estate of their ancestor, and that appellants were bound by the es-toppel of their ancestors. Appellants claimed the title to a one-half interest in this real estate, located in Linn County, Missouri:

The North 55 acres of the west half of the Southeast Quarter, and the North 15 acres of the Southeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter, of Section 21; the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter, the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter, and the North 15 acres of the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 22, all in Township 60 of Range 20.

The issues are whether, under the facts and the law, the trial court erred in holding appellants were estopped, and alternatively, as urged by respondent, whether he acquired title to the land by adverse possession.

The common source of title to the above described property (165 acres) was James A. Mairs and Emma L. Curtis, who acquired the property as tenants in common in 1909. On January 24,1929, Emma gave a deed of trust on her undivided one-half interest in the property which was foreclosed on April 8, 1932, and by trustees deed therein, one Chester Bagley acquired her title. On December 12, 1932, Bagley and wife conveyed the one-half interest to Sarah A. Mairs.

James A. Mairs died in 1922, and by his will left a life estate in his real estate to his wife, Sarah A. Mairs, with remainder in equal parts to his son, Benjamin Mairs, and to his granddaughter, Frances S. Harrington, or to the survivor of them, in trust to Benjamin until he reached age 25, and as to Frances until she should marry “and have a child which shall arrive at the age of three years.” If Benjamin was to die without issue before he attained age 25, his interest was to go to Frances, subject to her marriage and having a child who attained three years of age. In the event of the deaths of both Benjamin and Frances without issue, the property was to go to the heirs of James’ brother, Joseph W. Mairs. James’ will provided that the probate court appoint a trustee for Benjamin and Frances, but the record here fails to show an appointment of a trustee by any court under the will, even after the termination of Sarah’s life estate. James’ will did not grant a power of sale of the trust property.

Sarah A. Mairs died in 1934. By her 1933 will, she gave all of her estate to R. C. Mullins as trustee for the income benefit of her son, Ben A. Mairs, and her granddaughter, Frances Harrington Smith, for their lifetimes, or to the survivor for life. By Article Fourth of the will, the trustee was given full power of sale of all property, to [684]*684reinvest the same and to pay the income to the two beneficiaries, who were restricted in alienation of their interests or anticipation of the income by a spendthrift provision. Upon the death of the beneficiaries, the property was to go to their issue, or if none, to nephews and nieces. The entire 165 acres was inventoried in the estate of Sarah A. Mairs, deceased.

On June 29, 1937, Ben A. Mairs and wife gave a deed of trust on the 165 acres, securing a note for $150.00 to “Roscoe C. Mullins, as executor of the estate of Sarah A. Mairs, deceased.” The record does not show whether this deed of trust was foreclosed, but it is listed in the inventory in Sarah’s estate as an asset.

It is conceded in the briefs of the parties that Ben Mairs, Sr., died in 1966. A certified copy of the death certificate of Frances Sarah Martin shows that she died June 24, 1964. Other evidence showed that she was the same person as Frances S. Harrington (and Smith) named in the wills of James A. and Sarah A. Mairs. On September 22, 1938, Frances H. Sanders and husband gave a warranty deed to Roscoe C. Mullins, Trustee of the estate of Sarah A. Mairs, deceased, covering an undivided one-fourth interest in the 165 acres. There was, however, no showing that Frances H. Sanders was the same person who was named in the Mairs’ wills. There is also no evidence that Frances S. Harrington died without having a child then three years old, but she did predecease Ben Mairs, Sr.

At the time of Sarah’s death in 1934, she owned a one-half interest in fee simple in the 165 acres by reason of the 1932 deed from Bagley to her. Her life estate in James’ real estate then terminated. The one-half fee interest of James, owned by him at the time of his death, was either then vested in his trustee, or one-fourth thereof in Benjamin if he had then attained 25 years of age, and the other one-fourth interest in Frances, if she had married and had a child of three years of age.

No trustee, however, was ever appointed to administer the trust estate of James A. Mairs after Sarah’s death in 1934. She, however, appointed R. C. Mullins, as trustee, with full power of sale, by her will. Mullins proceeded to inventory the entire 165 acres on March 18, 1935, in the probate court, made final settlement and was discharged as executor therein on July 9,1952. Apparently, Mullins acted as trustee until June 23, 1952, when the circuit court accepted his resignation and upon the request of Ben A. Mairs, appointed L. L. Ingraham as trustee in the Sarah A. Mairs estate. Ingraham, on April 2, 1953, applied for a declaratory judgment defining the rights of beneficiaries of Sarah’s trust, it being alleged that Ben A. Mairs had received $9,359.72 and Frances Harrington Smith (then Martin) had received $4,956.52 from the former trustee, who also had paid Ben’s ex-wife, Anna, $3,572.62 child support, which the trustee asked to be charged against Ben’s interests. On February 3, 1954, upon the court’s docket sheet, is the finding that Ben A. Mairs had received $10,255.34, and Frances $5,842.54, and that Frances was entitled to $4,412.80 before Ben received any further payments. In this proceeding, Frances joined in the prayer and asked that no further payments be made to Ben from income “and/or the proceeds from the near future sale” until the beneficiaries were equalized. The trustee made annual reports thereafter, paying to Frances about $175.00, until she, on August 23, 1956, moved the court to order the trustee to sell the trust property, distribute the proceeds and to terminate the trust, which motion she renewed in subsequent trust reports. It should be noted that the Sarah Mairs trust consisted of several tracts of real estate other than the one-half interest in the 165 acres.

On December 12, 1962, trustee Ingraham applied to the court for an order authorizing the sale on the ground that the real estate was not profitable. Included in the application was the description of the entire 165 acres. On January 8, 1963, the court, by order, authorized the sale of the same land. A trustee’s deed was executed and delivered to respondent on March 9, 1963. This trust deed omits the description of the [685]*68540 acres, the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 22, Township 60, Range 20 (or misdescribes it as the Southwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of that section, which was not in the chain of title of either James’ or Sarah's estates).

What is here present is that R. C. Mullins and his successor, L. L. Ingraham, assuming to act without appointment, right or authority as trustees in the James A. Mairs trust, took charge of the one-half interest of fee land in that trust. Their designations and appointments as trustees were only in the Sarah A.

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Bluebook (online)
557 S.W.2d 682, 1977 Mo. App. LEXIS 2327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mairs-v-knifong-moctapp-1977.