McElhinney v. Kraus

10 Mo. App. 218, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 106
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Mo. App. 218 (McElhinney v. Kraus) 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
McElhinney v. Kraus, 10 Mo. App. 218, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 106 (Mo. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is ejectment for one hundred and seventy acres of land, more or less, lying in the north-western corner of United [220]*220States survey 1956, bounded north partly by United States survey 909, and partly by lands of John Kraus ; east by lot two of Angelrodt’s subdivision, formerly of Barth ; south by Duerak’s; and west by the boundary line of survey 1956. Elizabeth Bart man, the lessor of defendant, was made a co-defendant at her own instance. The answer is, not guilty, and the Statute of Limitations. It was stipulated that the premises are in survey 1956, reported by Bates on February 2, 1816, confirmed to James Mackey under the act of Congress of April 29, 1816, surveyed in 1818, and returned to the recorder of land-titles on January 30, 1823.

Plaintiff introduced the following documentary evidence : An instrument in the nature of an exchange of lands, dated May 10, 1799, recorded in St. Louis County on July 15, 1847, in the archives, and being archive No. 1087. This instrument is executed by Jacques Mackey, commandant, etc., in consideration of certain lands conveyed to him by John Bell, and purports to convey to John Bell two hundred superficial arpens, situate on the upper part of the river Bonhomme, joining land of William Bell on the north line of all its depth ; being about twenty-five arpens deep by eight wide, and being a portion of the tract granted by the government to Mackey. Also archive No. 1084, dated November 2, 1803, recorded August 15,1817, amongst the archives in St. Louis County, executed by John Bell, which purports to convey the land described in the next preceding instrument, to Leonard Farah. Also a deed, dated and acknowledged October 5, 1824, and duly recorded, by which Leonard Farah and wife convey to James Johnson two hundred arpens, French measure, on Wild Horse Creek, Bonhomme Township, St. Louis County, bounded north by Philip Belt, east by the heirs of James Mackey, south by Stephen Hancock, Sr., and west by parties unknown. Also, a deed from James Johnson and wife to James Bayer, dated and recorded in August, 1830, for a tract of one hundred and eighty-two and one-half acres on [221]*221Wild Horse Creek, Bonhomme Township, bounded north by James Bayer, west by public land, south by Stephen Hancock’s heirs, and east by land claimed by B. C. Allister. The land is further described by courses and distances,, from tree to tree and stone to stone. A deed from James Bayer and wife to Reuben S. Bacon was then introduced, dated February 6, 1837, and duly recorded, for the same land described in the last deed. Lastly, plaintiff offered a deed from the widow and four of the children of Reuben S. Bacon, to plaintiff, dated February 14, 1871.

George W. Bacon testified, on behalf of plaintiff, that he knew the land in controversy; that it was the land described in the various deeds read ; that the witness was born in St. Louis County in 1820. James Johnson lived on the land in controversy when witness was a boy. James Bayer, after Johnson, cultivated the lot conveyed to him, but did not live on it. After Bayer, Bacon cultivated it, and the land adjoining on the north, living on the latter. Bacon left in 1838 or 1839, and, when he left, leased the land in controversy to one Lipscombe, for a term of three or five years. Bacon has been dead twenty-five years. After the lease expired, the laud was not cultivated. Only about twenty acres of the land in controversy were cultivated. After leaving, Bacon never had actual possession. His heirs lived out of the county. They consisted of a widow, Mary Ann, who died about fifteen years ago, and of seven children: John, who died leaving one child; Jane, who died leaving one child, Eugene Rule, not heard of since 1845; Charles; Virginia, married to Ellison Hill; Thomas ; Benjamin, not heard of for twenty-five years ; and Stephen.

Plaintiff also introduced evidence tending to show that, in February, 1871, he gave a. three-years’ lease of the land in question to one Davis, who .took possession under his lease, built a log-house on the laud, and fenced and cultivated twenty acres. Davis, on September 15, 1871, delivered possession to the agent of Barth, who claimed the [222]*222land, and who paid him for his improvements. There- was-also evidence that the land is now in the possession of defendant Kraus, as tenant for Mrs. Bartman, under a lease-at a rent of $75 a year.

At the close of plaintiff’s case, an instruction in the-nature of a demurrer to the evidence was overruled. Objections were interposed to all the documentary evidence.

We think that the court committed no error in refusing to take the case from the jury. The certified copies of the records of ancient archives were competent under the-, statute. Rev. Stats., sects. 2305, 2306, 2309 ; Smith v. Madison, 67 Mo. 694. We do not see that there is any such patent ambiguity in the conveyance from Mackey to-Bell as must render the deed void. The description in the deed from Johnston to Bayer is certainly definite enough; and the testimony of George Bacon is, that the. lot in controversy was successively in the occupation of the parties-to these instruments, from Mackey to Bacon.

Defendants introduced in evidence a deed from the sheriff of St. Louis County to Alexander McAllister, dated May 16, 1825, conveying, under judgments and executions against the executors of James Mackey, deceased, all his interest in three thousand two hundred and sixty arpens on Wild Horse Creek in Bonhomme Township, being a part of four thousand four hundred and sixty arpens confirmed to Mackey; the property conveyed being bounded north-east by Graham and vacant land, north-west by the Missouri River and Colgan and others, and south by vacant lands. Also, a deed dated December 2, 1832, from McAllister and wife to Ernest C. Angelrodt, for the same property. Also, a deed dated July 8, 1858, from Angelrodt and wife to Robert Barth, for lots 1 to 10, both iuelusive, containing one thousand two hundred and forty-one acres in the Missouri River bottom, near Lewis’s Ferry, being the same acquired of McAllister, except three parcels conveyed before to Tyler, Coleman, and Oberman. [223]*223This property is sold according to a plat of E. C. Angelrodt’s property. Deeds were also introduced tending to show that this property had been acquired by Elizabeth Bartman, in 1877, by foreclosure of a deed of trust upon the same, given in 1864 by Barth to her, to secure a loan of $18,600.

Defendants also introduced evidence tending to show that Angelrodt, in 1840, made a survey and subdivision of what he had not sold of the larger tract, subdividing it into ten lots, numbered from 1 to 10, which plat he had recorded ; the lines having been run and corners staked off by his own direction. The land sued for was shown to be lot 1 of this subdivision of Angelrodt as marked on the plat. The lots in the plat are of different dimensions, ranging from seventy-one to nearty two hundred acres.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Mo. App. 218, 1881 Mo. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelhinney-v-kraus-moctapp-1881.