McFadin v. Simms

273 S.W. 1050, 309 Mo. 312, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 692
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 1050 (McFadin v. Simms) 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
McFadin v. Simms, 273 S.W. 1050, 309 Mo. 312, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 692 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*322 RAGLAND, J.-

This suit is a sequel to Simms v. Thompson, reported in 291 Mo. at page 493 and following. Practically, the same questions urged in that case are again presented in this. That being an appeal from an order of the circuit court overruling* a motion to vacate one of its judgments for error of fact, we were limited to a consideration of such of the questions as could be raised and determined under a writ of error coram nobis at common law. The questions which because of puch limitations we then declined to consider we will *323 endeavor to dispose of now. As to the others, there is no necessity for again ploughing the same ground. The statement of facts presently to be made will be shaped accordingly, leaving the opinion in the former case to supply such additional details as may be desired.

Minitree Catron in the year 1836 and from that time on continuously until his death, which occurred on the 13th day of August, 1862, was a resident of Lafayette County, Missouri. In the year 1838 he purchased from the United States, and the United States conveyed to him by patents, three several tracts of land situated in Carroll County, Missouri, which together formed a contiguous body of approximately 160 acres. He left a last will which was duly proved and which with the certificate of probate was thereafter, on the 4th day of September, 1862, duly recorded in the record book kept for that purpose in the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court of Lafayette County. By said will he devised all of said lands to his daughter Prances Eveline McFadin “for and during her natural life, and after her death the said lands to be equally divided among all of her children share and sharé alike.” A copy of the will was never recorded in the Recorder’s office of Carroll County.

On the 20th day of November, 1865, John McFadin, husband of Frances Eveline, executed a bond to one Edward Hamill in the penal sum of $2,000, to be void upon the condition: that he, McFadin, execute and deliver to said Hamill “a g'ood and warrantee deed” to the land heretofore referred to, “upon payment of one thousand dollars for which note for nine hundred dollars has been given and one hundred dollars paid in cash.” The instrument was recorded in the office of Recorder of Deeds of Carroll County, May 30, 1866. On January 5, 1867, John McFadin and his wife, Frances Eveline, executed á deed containing covenants of general warranty wherein and whereby for a consideration of $1,000 paid to them they purported to convey the same land in fee to Mary A. Simms. The deed was duly recorded in the Recorder’s office of Carroll County, June 12, 1867. Both *324 the bond and deed recited that John McFadin was “of Lafayette County, Missouri.”

Mary A. Simms and her husband, John, went on the land which the McFadins purported to convey to them in the early part of 1868. It was then wild and unenclosed — -“prairie and hazel brush.” They built a house and barn on it, fenced it, put it in cultivation, established their home there. They thereafter during the life of Mary Simms continuously resided on the land, farming and cultivating it. She died intestate on or about November 1, 1887. After her death John Simms, her husband, continued in the possession and control of the land until his death, which occurred May 20, 1901.

In 1909 the heirs of Mary Simms preparatory to offering the land for sale caused an abstract of the title to be made. The abstract so made showed: the entries of the several tracts by Minitree Catron in 1838¡, as shown by the plat book of entries on file in the Recorder’s office of Carroll County; the issuance of patents corresponding to the entries and their record in the General Land Office, as evidenced by certificates of an attorney of Washington, D. C.; the bond executed by John McF'adin to Edward Hamill; and the deed from McFadin and wife to Mary A. Simms. There thus appeared two breaks in the record title; there was no conveyance of Catron’s legal title and none of Hamill’s possible equitable title. The Simms heirs submitted the abstract to an attorney and were advised by him that a suit under the statute to determine and quiet title was necessary. Thereafter a petition was prepared in which the Simms heirs were designated as plaintiffs, and Minitree Catron, “the unknown wife or widow, and the unknown heirs, the unknown descendants, the unknown devisees and the unknown assigns of Minitree Catron,” Edward Hamill, and “the unknown wife or widow and the unknown heirs, the unknown descendants, the unknown devisees and the unknown assigns of Edward Hamill,” were made defendants. The petition after alleging that plaintiffs *325 were the owners in fee simple and in the peaceful possession of the land proceeded as follows:

“Plaintiffs further state that the defendants claim some title, interest or estate in said premises adverse to that of plaintiffs the nature or character of said title, interest or estate which defendant or any of them claim cannot he more definitely stated (except as is hereinafter done) because it is unknown to plaintiffs except that it is adverse to plaintiffs.
“Plaintiffs further state that there are persons interested in the subject-matter of this petition whose names plaintiffs cannot insert herein because they are unknown to plaintiffs, said unknown persons being the defendants herein designated and referred to in caption as unknown, to-wit, the unknown wife or -widow and the unknown heirs, the unknown descendants, the unknown devisees and the unknown assigns of each of the following named persons respectively: Minitree Catron, Edward Hamill . . .; that the title, interest or estate which said unknown persons (defendants) claim or'might claim in said land or any part thereof, is such as- they derived by the statutes of descent and distribution, of dower and homestead of the State of Missouri, by devise, by deed of conveyance or by assignment from said persons respectively, to-wit, Minitree Catron (and) Edward Hamill. . . . Plaintiffs cannot further describe the interest of said unknown persons, defendants herein, nor how said interest, if any, was derived, because such is unknown to plaintiffs; and plaintiffs have described herein the right title, interest and estate, if any, in said land of the said unknown defendants and how said interest, title and estate was derived so far as plaintiffs’ knowledge extends.”

The petition was verified by John W. Simms, one of the plaintiffs, in the following language:

“John W. Simms having been duly sworn states on his own behalf and. on behalf of his co-plaintiffs herein that the allegations of the above and foregoing petition are true.”

*326 The petition was filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Carroll County, July 22, 1909. An order of publication based thereon, directed to the nonresident and the unknown defendants, and returnable to the September term, 1809, of the court, immediately followed. With respect to the form and substance of the order and its publication the provisions of Sections 575 and '580, Revised Statutes 1809, then in force, were' substantially complied with. At the return term a judgment was rendered in the cause.

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Cooper v. Cook
148 S.W.2d 512 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1941)
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293 S.W. 414 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 1050, 309 Mo. 312, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfadin-v-simms-mo-1925.