Marley v. Norman's Land & Manufacturing Co.

232 S.W. 704, 289 Mo. 221, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1921
DocketNos. 21,514, 21,513.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 704 (Marley v. Norman's Land & Manufacturing Co.) 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
Marley v. Norman's Land & Manufacturing Co., 232 S.W. 704, 289 Mo. 221, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 14 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Plaintiff’s action is one to set aside a jugdment of the Circuit Court of Stoddard County, Missouri, in so far as such judgment effects James Marley and the land involved in this suit. The judgment sought to be so cancelled was one entered on the 22nd day of September, 1910, in the case of W. W. Norman v. Jefferson J. Green et al. The Norman suit, supra, was an action to quiet title to two thousand acres or more of land, including the three hundred and twenty acres involved in the case now before us. It was against divers parties (including James A. Marley), if living, and against their heirs and devisees, if dead. Marley claimed to own three hundred and twenty acres of land here involved, and was a party to this blanket suit where all claimants were being jointly sued, whether they claimed an interest in the whole amount of land stated in the petition or not. This Norman suit was filed January 25,1910, and judgment entered on September 22, 1910, as stated above. The judgment was on service by publication. The plaintiff in the present action is the mesne grantee of James A. Marley, and the defendant is the immediate grantee of W. W. Norman. The petition is in two counts, and as we gather it the first count is based upon a charge of actual fraud in the pro *226 curement of the judgment, whilst the second count might be said to be broad enough to cover constructive fraud, mistake and deception, through which James A. Marley was prevented from defending that action.

In 1905 James A. Marley placed of record in Stoddard County, Missouri, a deed which purported to convey to him the land in suit. In 1906, W. W. Norman brought a suit against Marley to quiet title to this land, in Stoddard County Circuit Court. The suit was by publication. Marley heard of it, and arranged with counsel to defend his title. The case went by change of venue to St. Genevieve County, where it was disposed of in 1909, by plaintiff taking a nonsuit after the trial court had indicated adverse action to him. I. R. Kelso was counsel for Norman in this case, and it is shown that he agreed to reinstitute the suit against Marley within a year. The suit begun in 1906 we shall call Suit No. 1. The one brought January 25, 1910, we shall call Suit No. 2.

With the Suit No. 2 pending, Mr. Kelso, as attorney for W. W. Norman, on February 3, 1910, brought Suit No. 3, and had a summons sent to Marley’s home in Illinois, and there served upon him. Suit No. 2 was brought by Judge Green, as attorney for Norman, and at Norman’s direction the notice of publication was run in a paper of limited circulation printed and published in a small town some distance from the county seat. Suits No. 3 and No. 2 were returnable to the same term of the Stoddard County Circuit Court. Marley having actual notice of Suit No. 3 came to Missouri and appeared in defense of that suit. Marley filed a motion for a cost bond in said action on September 12,1910, ten days prior to the decree in Suit No. 2. Said motion for cost bond was continued to March term, 1911, and on the 22nd day of March Norman dismissed the cause.

Both counts of the petition in the instant case contained a prayer not only for the cancellation of the judgment of September 22,1910, but also for the determining *227 of title. The-court granted.plaintiff leave to strike out those portions of the prayers with reference to the ad-judgment of title, and granted defendant leave to amend its answer so as to ask for the adjudication of title. Both parties put in their chain of title to the three hundred and twenty acres of land. The trial court found against plaintiff on the first count of the petition, and for her on the second count, and set aside the judgment of September 22, 1910, but on the respective claims of title decreed title in plaintiff for one hundred and sixty acres of the land and for defendant for the other one hundred and sixty acres. Prom such judgment both sides have appealed. Details of both pleadings and evidence are left to the opinion.

judgment* I. If the trial court erred in setting aside the judgment of September 22, 1910, we have the end to plaintiff’s case. This judgment is a blot upon her title, so long as it stands. This, because it divested James A. Marley of title, and decreed title in W. W. Norman, who conveyed to defendant. The trial court in its decree said:

“On the second count of the petition, as amended, the court finds that by reason of mistake, error and combination of facts and circumstances of the two suits against plaintiff in the Stoddard County Circuit Court, she was. misled, deceived and prevented from contesting her title to the lands involved, and that the order, judgment and decree of this court should be that the decree of the Stoddard County Circuit Court bearing date September 22, 1910, decreeing the title in defendant, should be cancelled, annulled and for naught- held. ’ ’

To get at the facts a little more fully it should be said that James A. Marley claimed to have acquired title to these lands October 2,1905, and his deed was recorded December 26, 1905. He, as well as plaintiff, resided in Illinois. James A. conveyed to W. H. Marley, August 22, 1911, but the deed was not recorded until August 30,1915. *228 By the will of W. H. Marley, probated in Edgar County, Illinois, the title passed in December, 1913, to the plaintiff. The will, together with its probate, were later (in 1916) filed for record in Stoddard County. Casé No. 1 of the line of cases involved here, was a suit by Norman against James A. Marley, and covered only the land in suit. It was finally dismissed in 1909, under the circumstances indicated in our statement.

The present plaintiff is the mother of James A., as we gather from the record. From 1906 on, these two have paid the taxes on the land. It stands admitted that neither the defendant nor its grantors had paid any taxes thereon for a period of thirty-one years.

Mr. Norman explains the suits Nos. 2 and 3, by saying that he had written Mr. Kelso about re-instituting the suit which was dismissed in 1909, but had received no answer, and that he got Judge Creen to bring No. 2, the omnibus suit, in which the name of James A. Marley appeared about the middle of a long list of defendants, and Marley’s three-hundred and twenty acres described with several thousand acres of other land scattered over the county. Norman knew, in law, if not in fact, of both these suits being brought, because the law required him to know the acts of his agent and attorney 'Kelso,, who brought Suit No. 3. In law he knew just what Kelso knew, and if he did, he knew that Marley had been sued by personal service, and only on the three-hundred and twenty acres of land owned by him. He knew in fact all that was done in Case No. 2, and the form of that petition. He had the usual knowledge that publications are not often seen1 by non-residents, and he knew of Marley’s non-residence. He further knew that Marley, having been sued by personal service, would not likely suspect another suit by publication' against him. The whole transaction, from the beginning to the end, was the handiwork of Norman and his own agents, and Norman should be responsible for any fraud in law, fraud in fact, deception, or mishap, which was occasioned by his acts *229 or the acts of his counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 704, 289 Mo. 221, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marley-v-normans-land-manufacturing-co-mo-1921.