Miller v. Proctor

49 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 43, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 708
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 8, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 S.W.2d 84 (Miller v. Proctor) 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
Miller v. Proctor, 49 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 43, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 708 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

This is an action in ejectment for certain land which plaintiffs claim to own as tenants in common. They allege that on and since April 2, 1928, they have been entitled to possession of the land, but that defendants unlawfully have withheld possession. The land is the following described tract in Morgan County, Missouri, to-wit: Commencing at a point one hundred and sixty-five feet east of the Southwest corner of the Northwest quarter of Section Twelve, Township 42, Range 16, running thence north three hundred and thirty feet, thence east four hundred and forty yards, thence south three hundred and thirty feet, thence west four hundred and forty yards to the place of beginning and containing in all ten (10) acres. The answer of defendants Proctor was a general denial, a plea of estoppel in that these defendants paid full value for the land without notice of plaintiffs' claim thereto, and a plea of the Statute of Limitations. Defendant Hogsett answered by general denial and that he was a tenant from year to year. The parties waived a jury and the court, upon trial, gave judgment for plaintiffs for possession and costs. A motion for a new trial was overruled and defendants appealed. Defendants urge that the trial court erred in admitting in evidence, over objection, a certain recorded notice and also a partition suit decree which had not been recorded in the recorder's office, and in not finding that plaintiffs' claim was barred by the Statute of Limitations.

H.R. Phillips, who died intestate December 26, 1864, was agreed to be the common source of title. Plaintiffs are the grandchildren of H.R. Phillips and the children of Mary F. Miller (a daughter of H.R. Phillips) and of Henry B. Miller, her husband. Mary F. Miller, the mother of plaintiffs, died July 1, 1887, and Henry B. Miller, the father of plaintiffs, died April 2, 1928. Plaintiffs claim right of possession from the date of the death of their father, and they began this action October 12, 1928. H.R. Phillips left as his heirs four children, including plaintiffs' mother, Mary F. Miller. The land in controversy in this suit is part of the land which H.R. Phillips owned at the time of his death and which passed by descent to his heirs. Mary F. Miller inherited a one-fourth interest in all the land of her father, Phillips. After the death of Phillips, Henry B. Miller, father of plaintiffs, bought the interests of two of the heirs of the Phillips land, and in 1881, Miller, as owner of an undivided one-half share, so acquired by purchase, and his wife, Mary F., as owner of an undivided one-quarter interest, received by inheritance, brought a suit against Nora Taylor, the owner of the remaining one-fourth interest, for the partition of all of the Phillips land. The Circuit Court of Morgan County, by interlocutory decree, entered October 22, 1881, found the interests of Miller and wife and of the defendant, Nora Taylor, to be as hereinbefore stated. Partition was decreed, and *Page 47 commissioners were appointed to make division. The commissioners, at the next term of court, reported that they had divided the land in kind between the parties according to their respective interests giving to H.B. Miller eighty-five acres, appraised at one-half the value of the premises in suit, giving to Mary F. Miller, wife of H.B. Miller and mother of plaintiffs in the instant action, ten acres appraised at one-fourth the value of the premises, and to Nora Taylor forty-five acres appraised at one-fourth the total value. The report of the commissioners accurately and fully described the allotment made to each of the parties. The ten-acre portion awarded to Mary F. Miller, mother of plaintiffs, is the tract from which plaintiffs are now seeking to eject defendants. The Circuit Court of Morgan County, by its final judgment in the partition suit, found that the report of the commissioners was in accordance with the interlocutory decree of partition, and that no exceptions to the report had been filed. The judgment then proceeded: "It is ordered and adjudged by the court that the report of said commissioners be in all things approved and that the partition by them made among the parties hereto be confirmed as binding and conclusive upon all parties to these proceedings and all persons claiming under them." We will examine later the objections made by defendants in this action to the admission in evidence of the partition suit records here epitomized. Henry B. Miller later purchased the part of the land which had been allotted to Nora Taylor.

After the death of Mary F. Miller in 1887, Henry B. Miller, her husband, married again. By deed dated February 17, 1893, and duly recorded, Henry B. Miller and his second wife, Lucy, conveyed to E.J. Williams the south half of the Southeast quarter of the Northwest quarter and thirty-five acres, the east part of the Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 12, Township 42, Range 16. This conveyance of approximately seventy-five acres included the land here in controversy, namely the ten-acre tract, which, by the partition decree, had been set apart to Mary F. Miller, mother of plaintiffs and first wife of Henry B. Miller. The land so sold by Miller to Williams passed by mesne conveyances to the defendants Proctor.

Ira S. Nail was in possession of the land under one of these conveyances from January 26, 1911, until February 25, 1926, when he and his wife made a deed to defendant, J.R. Proctor. While Nail was in possession plaintiffs caused to be recorded in Morgan County a notice addressed to Nail informing him and all others to whom the notice might come that plaintiffs as heirs at law of their mother, Mary F. Miller, would, at the death of their father, Henry B. Miller, demand full possession of the ten-acre tract in suit (describing it); *Page 48 that they had an absolute title to the land, and that their father only had the right of the use of the land so long as he lived, which he transferred to E.J. Williams, February 17, 1893. As has been stated, the father, Henry B. Miller, lived until April 2, 1928. The trial court overruled the objection of defendants to the admission in evidence of the record of this notice. The grounds of objection were that the notice was not addressed to any party to the suit; that there was no showing of a delivery of the notice or a copy of it to defendants Proctor at the time of their purchase, and that the instrument not having been acknowledged according to law, it had no place in the records of Morgan County and it was not notice to anyone. Defendant J.R. Proctor testified that he had knowledge of the notice, gained from an abstract of the title to the land, for about two years and that he had corresponded with the plaintiffs about their claim to the ten acres. The objection to the notice will be examined in its order.

[1] I. Defendants object that the partition proceedings, not having been recorded in the land records of Morgan County, were not binding on defendants. To support this position defendants rely upon Section 1134, Revised Statutes 1929, which was in the statute books before the partition suit of 1881. The pertinent parts of that section are as follows:

"In all cases where any court of record shall render final judgment, adjudging or decreeing a conveyance of real estate, or that any real estate pass, or shall render any final judgment quieting or determining the title to any real estate, the party in whose favor the judgment or decree is rendered shall cause a copy thereof to be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county wherein the lands passed or to be conveyed or the title to which is quieted or determined lie, within eight months after such judgment or decree is entered.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W.2d 84, 330 Mo. 43, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-proctor-mo-1932.