Mulherin v. Simpson

28 S.W. 86, 124 Mo. 610, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 328
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 12, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 28 S.W. 86 (Mulherin v. Simpson) 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
Mulherin v. Simpson, 28 S.W. 86, 124 Mo. 610, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 328 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Barclay, J.;

This is an action of ejectment to recover a piece of land in Pike county. The piece is described in the petition: “All of the south part of the fractional west half of the northeast fractional quarter of section 11, township 52, range 1, east, that lies within the boundaries of survey number 2971, granted by the Spanish government to Auguste Chouteau, supposed to contain thirty-nine acres.”

The plaintiff is Mr. William H. Mulherin.

The principal defendant is Mr. Samuel M. Biggs, who became a party, on his own motion, as the owner of the land, the other defendants, Mr. Simpson and Mrs. Pulton, disclaiming title, and asserting a right to possession as tenants of Mr. Biggs.

The petition (filed, Aug. 1,1889) is in the ordinary statutory form. B. S. 1889, sec. 4631.

The cause was tried with the aid of a jury, and the latter returned a verdict for the defendants.

Plaintiff then appealed after the necessary steps for a review.

There were two main issues presented by tire plaintiff’s evidence at the trial: first, that of his right to recover on the ground of mere possession; second, his right to recover upon a possession, supported by color of title.'

On both of these issues the evidence was conflicting.

It will not be necessary to the proper treatment of the points raised in the pending appeal, to set forth the testimony at large. It will be enough to indicate its general effect and purport, with reference to the rulings on which errors are assigned.

1. Plaintiff claims as purchaser of the interest or estate formerly owned by Mr. John E. Porgey, who was the principal witness for plaintiff.

[615]*615So far as plaintiff’s right of recovery based on mere possession is concerned, that issue was distinctly submitted to the jury, and found by the latter in favor of defendants, under instructions, some of which will be more particularly specified further on.

2. In order to show color of title, plaintiff endeavored to establish that the land in suit fell within, the limits of a Spanish grant to Auguste Chouteau, since confirmed by the United States government. Chouteau’s Heirs v. United States (1835), 9 Pet. 137.

Mr. Forgey’s claim to the land was sought to be traced to that source of title. He attempted to prove, by his own verbal testimony, that a deed to him (Forgey) by Mr. Nere Yalle (who had acquired part of the original Chouteau tract) was mutually intended to cover the land now in suit, though it did not, in fact, by its terms include it.

The court, upon objection, excluded the offer of oral evidence to that effect.

But, later in the trial, Mr. Forgey was allowed to testify that Mr. J. Gilman Chouteau (representing the same interest as Mr. Yalle) had executed to Mr. Forgey a corrected deed to the land Mr. Forgey had actually acquired through Yalle.

But it appears, from the terms of the corrected deed, that it conveyed the east half of the northwest quarter of section 11, etc., whereas, the land in suit is in the west half of that quarter section, as indicated by plaintiff’s own petition.

Notwithstanding the ruling above mentioned, Mr. Forgey as a witness was allowed later to state, that the description in the deed of Mr. Yalle was not correct, and that Mr. Chouteau’s deed had corrected it. The Chouteau deed was read in evidence, during the course of the trial.

In this condition of the case we are at a loss to see [616]*616what prejudice plaintiff could have sustained by the ruling, excluding the evidence of mutual mistake in the description in the Yalle deed to Porgey, irrespective of any question of the abstract correctness of that ruling. ■

It is the duty of this court to disregard all such errors as may have had no prejudicial bearing upon the rights of the losing party on the merits of the case as developed in the trial court. R. S. 1889, secs. 2100, 2303.

3. It is contended that the circuit court erred in allowing Mr. Riggs to be made a party defendant; and in permitting the other defendants to justify under his title.

On the first phase of that contention it is sufficient to say that no exception was taken to the order, sustaining the motion of Mr. Riggs to come into the case as a defendant.

No exception to a ruling on such a motion can be interposed for the first time in the supreme court. It must be seasonably made in the trial court, otherwise it can not be reviewed on appeal. R. S. 1889, sec. 2302.

On the other branch of this assignment of error, the defendants, Mr. Simpson and Mrs. Fulton, were originally defendants, charged with being in possession, adverse to plaintiff’s rights. They disclaimed ownership by .their answer; and alleged that they held as tenants at will of Mr. Riggs. The answer of the latter recognized that tenancy.

In that state of the record, a right to possession of the land in Mr. Riggs, based on his record title, would protect all holding under him, as his codefendants claimed to do.

The plaintiff in ejectment must recover, if at all, on the strength of his own title, or right to possession.

[617]*617Mr. Riggs claimed title, through mesne conveyances, under a patent from the United States government to Thomas Boxley in 1829. His chain of conveyances was complete; and unless he had lost his rights by the adverse occupancy of others, he plainly was entitled to possession, upon his paper title (which the court rightly interpreted and construed), if the piece of land in question came within the calls in the description, as a matter of fact. This being found by the jury to be so, the other defendants in possession were entitled to defend against plaintiff upon Mr. Riggs’ title—especially as the pleadings showed their friendly and subordinate relation to that title.

4. It is next insisted that the court erred in sustaining an objection to a question put to Mr. Eorgey, as a witness, namely: “Did you take possession under the purchase from Yalle?”

Notwithstanding the objection and exception, however, the witness was permitted to reply that he sold the land in controversy to plaintiff. The latter, in due time, gave in evidence his acts in regard to the possession as follows, yiz.:

“I took possession of the land in 1873.

“Q. Where is the house? A. On the fifty-one acres. -The fifty-one acres are not in controversy.

“Q. What did you do with this land in controversy? A. Nothing. The water was over it.

“Q. Did you build a fence on it? A. Nothing at that time. Later on; in 1879, I built a brush fence.

“Q. Did you do work on the land? A. Yes, sir; about $100 worth. When it was levied, the water did not overflow it any more. I kept possession of it from 1873 to 1875, and got it back in 1879, and held possession two years.

“Q. Refresh your memory. Was it not in the latter part of 1882? A. I think it was. Defendants [618]*618Simpson and Fulton have had possession of it ever since.”

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Related

Chouteau's Heirs v. United States
34 U.S. 137 (Supreme Court, 1835)
Bledsoe v. Simms
53 Mo. 305 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 86, 124 Mo. 610, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulherin-v-simpson-mo-1894.