Mockbee v. Grooms

254 S.W. 170, 300 Mo. 446, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 170 (Mockbee v. Grooms) 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
Mockbee v. Grooms, 254 S.W. 170, 300 Mo. 446, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 264 (Mo. 1923).

Opinions

Suit to partition three tracts of land, 40 acres, 10.17 acres and 5.87 acres in Jackson County near Kansas City.

In their petition, plaintiffs alleged, that they and certain of the defendants are the heirs of one Reuben Mockbee, deceased, who owned said property at the time of his death, died intestate, without children, but left Sarah J. Mockbee (afterwards, Sarah J. Searcy), as his widow. That she elected to take half of said property in lieu of dower, and that she died testate devising her interest in said property to the heirs of said Reuben Mockbee, deceased. That by reason of the premises the title to said property is vested in plaintiffs and said defendants. That three of the defendants, to-wit, Allie Stout and Lenorah Davenport, children, and William Christopher Reynolds, grandson, claim an interest in said real estate, as the heirs of said Sarah J. Searcy, but have no interest therein, and are made parties so the court may determine their interest.

Defendants filed motion to require plaintiffs to elect whether they would claim said property as heirs of said Mockbee, or as devisees of said Sarah J. Searcy, which the court overruled. They then filed answers, putting the allegations of the petition in issue, asserting title in themselves by a counterclaim, and praying the court to adjudge them to be the owners of said property. The reply put the new matter in the answers in issue.

At the time of his death in December, 1878, Reuben Mockbee owned the land in question. He and his wife, *Page 456 Sarah J., at that time resided thereon as their homestead. He died intestate, without descendants, leaving his widow and several brothers and sisters and their descendants, as his heirs, under whom plaintiffs claim. His widow married Christopher Reed Searcy, and duly elected to take half of the real estate left by her former husband, Mockbee, subject to the payment of his debts, in lieu of dower therein. She married said Searcy prior to the 19th of September, 1882. She resided upon said property as her home from the time of the death of her first husband, and after her marriage to Searcy, continuously until her death in October, 1916. She left two children by her second husband surviving her, defendants Lenorah A. Davenport and Allie Stout, and William Christopher Reynolds, her grandson and only child of her deceased daughter, Sarah Quintiller Reynolds. Besides her interest in the land in controversy, Mrs. Searcy owned other lands in the neighborhood, a portion of which she acquired at the administrator's sale of other lands of her deceased husband, Mockbee. Mrs. Searcy died testate, leaving a will in words and figures as follows:

"I, Sarah J. Searcy, of Jackson County, State of Missouri, being now in good health and strength of body and mind, but sensible to the uncertainty of life and desiring to make disposition of my property and affairs while in health and strength, do hereby make, publish and declare the following to be my last will and testament, hereby revoking and cancelling all other or former wills by me at any time made.

"First. I direct the payment of all my just debts and funeral expenses.

"Second. I bequeath to my two daughters, Allie Stout and Lenorah Davenport, all my household goods, horse, cow, chickens and other personal property in and about the premises occupied by me as my home in Raytown, Missouri, which I may own or be possessed at my death; and I direct that my two daughters divide such personal property equally and in any way satisfactory to both. *Page 457

"Third, I devise unto my daughter Allie Stout, and unto her husband, during each of their lives, all of my West farm, save and excepting therefrom the twenty acres purchased from James H. and Mary T. Arnold, the twenty acres purchased from Jacob and Mary D. Crouse, said twenty acre tracts being known and designated as the Arnold Twenty and the Crouse Twenty; and also excepting out of my West farm a strip of ground twenty feet wide along the east side of my West farm, commencing twenty feet west of the southeast corner of the Arnold Twenty acres and extending south along the east side of the twenty acres left me by my father to the country road, which said Arnold twenty acres, Crouse twenty acres and the twenty-foot strip, all as above described, I hereinafter bequeath to my grandson, William Christopher, son of my deceased daughter, Sarah Quintiller. My West farm, with the excepted Arnold twenty acres, Crouse twenty acres and the twenty-foot strip, will therefore have remaining the twenty acres purchased from William Cocks lying immediately west of the Crouse acres, the twenty acres purchased from Bettie Brusau lying immediately south of the Crouse twenty acres, and the twenty acres, except the twenty-foot strip along the east side, lying immediately south of the Arnold twenty acres left to me by my father.

"After the death of both my daughter Allie and her husband, I direct that the real estate above devised to them for their lives shall be sold by my executor to the best advantage and for the best price obtainable and the proceeds of such sale deposited with the Pioneer Trust Company of Kansas City, Missouri, there to remain and draw interest, compounded, at the rate of three per cent per annum; and at the time when the youngest child of my daughter Allie Stout, whether living at this time or to be hereafter born, shall have attained the age of twenty-five years, I direct that all such proceeds, with accrued interest, shall be equally divided between all the children of my daughter Allie Stout who may be living *Page 458 at the time her youngest child attains the age of twenty-five years. In event all of the children of my daughter Allie Stout are not living at the time her youngest child attains the age of twenty-five years, then it is my direction that if such deceased child or children of my daughter Allie Stout have living children, that such child, or children, of my daughter Allie's children shall receive an equal division of such portion of the money so deposited as would have gone otherwise to his or their father or mother. In event all the children of my daughter Allie Stout shall have died before the youngest child attains the age of twenty-five years and there be no living children of such children at that time, then I direct that the proceeds shall become the property of the children of my daughter Lenorah Davenport, and divided between them as directed in Paragraph Four next following. In the event of the death of the youngest or last born child of my daughter Allie Stout before attaining the age of twenty-five years, the child next oldest shall be considered the youngest child; and, in the event of his death before attaining the age of twenty-five years, the child next older than he shall be considered the youngest child and so on, it being my intention and desire that none of the money so deposited shall be distributed or disbursed until such time as all of the living children of my daughter Allie Stout shall have attained the age of twenty-five years, and at that time the money shall be distributed as above provided.

"Fourth. I devise and bequeath unto my daughter, Lenorah Davenport, during her natural life, my North farm consisting of about seventy-five acres, save and excepting therefrom an eight-acre strip extending from north to south along the entire east line of said farm, which I hereinafter bequeath and devise unto my grandson William Christopher, the son of my deceased daughter, Sarah Quintiller. My North farm, with the above excepted eight-acre strip taken therefrom, will be the forty acres purchased from the Mockbee estate, less the *Page 459

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 170, 300 Mo. 446, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mockbee-v-grooms-mo-1923.