Noyes v. Stewart

235 S.W.2d 333, 361 Mo. 475, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 747
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 11, 1950
Docket41474
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 235 S.W.2d 333 (Noyes v. Stewart) 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
Noyes v. Stewart, 235 S.W.2d 333, 361 Mo. 475, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 747 (Mo. 1950).

Opinion

*478 HYDE, C. J.

[ 333] Action to quiet title to 48 acres of land in Lafayette County. The trial court entered a decree declaring plaintiff to be owner in fee simple and defendants have appealed. The question involved the right of a life tenant to have partition against contingent remaindermen by sale of the [334] property and to keep part of the proceeds of such sale as the commuted value of the life estate.

Rubin Iiill, the owner of this and other land, died testate in 1905. His will gave his wife Lucy a life estate in his land (about 97 acres in Lafayette County) and then provided, as follows: “At the death of my wife, I give and devise to my children, Mary Shields, wife of Ben Shields, my son, Thomas Hill, my son, William Hill, and my daughter, Annabel Williams, wife of Earnest Williams, and their bodily heirs, all of my said real estate, but in case any of my said children shall die without issue or bodily heirs living at the time of the death of any such child, then the part of said child so dying shall go to and vest in my right heirs or those who would be my heirs at law had I died intestate at the time of the death of such child so dying without issue living.”

. Rubin’s widow Lucy died in January 1908.. His four children, the two sons and two daughters named in his will, survived; but only the two daughters are now living. Thomas Hill died in June 1919 without surviving-issue; William Hill died in June 1929, survived by defendant GeEtta Hill Stewart and a son who has since been declared to be dead by the Probate Court; Mary Hill Shields and Anna Bell (Annabel) Williams are still living. Defendant' Rubin E. Williams, also known as Thomas Rubin Williams, is the son of Anna Bell Williams; and defendant William Plarris, also known as William E. Williams, is the grandson of Anna- Bell Williams, being the son of her deceased daughter Lula, who died before this suit was begun.

In March 1908, a suit was brought by Mary Hill Shields in the Circuit Court of Lafayette County to partition the 97 acres!’ The defendants were her two brothers Thomas and William, William’s wife and their four children who were then living, including GeEtta Hill; and her sister Anna B. Williams, Anna’s husband and their two children Lula and Rubin. (Rubin is the defendant Rubin E. Williams herein and'Lula’s son William Harris is a defendant herein.) The petition in the 1908 suit set out the Will of Rubin Hill, stated that it had been probated in Lafayette County and alleged that the four children of Rubin Hill were joint owners in fee. The answer of the adult defendants alleged that it was the intention of *479 the-testator to give his children a life estate only; and there was also an answer of the guardian ad litem for the testator’s grandchildren, all of whom were then minors. The Court found that “the plaintiff Mary Hill Shields, and the defendants Thomas Hill, William Hill and Anna B. (Annabel) Williams, are each entitled to an undivided one-fourth interest in said real estate for and during their natural lives, with the remainder in fee to their bodily heirs, and in case any of them should die, without issue, or , bodily heirs, living at the time of his or her death, then his or her part shall go to and vest in the right heirs of Rubin Hill. ’ ’

The Court decreed that the land be partitioned and accordingly appointed commissioners for that purpose. The commissioners divided the land into four irregular tracts, each with a value of $962.90, and assigned them to the four brothers and sisters named i-n the will “for and during their natural lives, with the remainder in fee to their bodily heirs.” The Court approved the commissioners’ report and decreed that these four “have and hold the real estate set off, allotted and assigned to them for and during their natural lives with the remainder in fee to the bodily heirs etc.” However, the Court then ordered that “the entire fee” in the twenty-four acre tract set off to Mary Hill Shields be sold and that out of the proceeds the value of Mary Hill Shields’ life estate be ascertained and paid to her and that the remainder be held in trust by the Court for the bodily heirs of the four brothers and sisters. The sheriff sold the twenty-four acre tract to Thornton A. Campbell for $760.00. Mary Hill Shields was then forty-two and her life estate (after payment of costs) was computed at $463.73 a,nd that sum was paid to her and the-balance of $192.51 was paid to a trustee for the heirs appointed by the Court. The twenty-four acres of land involved sold at that time is [335]. one of the tracts later conveyed to plaintiff Noyes.

In May 1911 a suit was filed in the Circuit' Court of Lafayette County by Campbell, the 1908 purchaser of the Shields ’ 24 acres, and Thomas Hill, to partition the 24 acre tract set off in the 1908 suit to Anna Bell Williams. The Will of Riibin Hill was set out in the petition and it was alleged that Campbell became the owner of the interest of Anna Bell Williams by foreclosure of deed of trust; and that this interest was “for and during the natural life with remainder to the bodily heirs of said Anna Bell Williams.” The defendants were the brother and sisters of Thomas Hill and their children who were defendants in the 1908 suit; and still being minors these children were represented by a guardian ad litem. The decree found that the land could not be partitioned without great prejudice and ordered the entire fee sold. However, it found the interest of Anna Bell Williams, owned by plaintiff Campbell to be “for and during the natural life of the said defendant Anna *480 Bell Williams with, remainder to the bodily heirs of said defendant Anna Bell Williams and if said Anna Bell Williams dies without bodily heirs then to the heirs of Rubin Hill deceased.” The land was sold for $760.00 to Frank R. Howe to whom Campbell had previously conveyed the Shields’ 24 acres by quitclaim deed. The life estate of Anna Bell Williams, who was then 34, was fixed (after payment of costs) at $433.83 and this' was paid to Campbell and another mortgage creditor Hiclterson, a defendant. The balance of $147.78 was paid to a trustee for the heirs appointed by the Court. After the death of Thomas Hill, Howe got quitclaim deeds from William Hill, Anna Bell Williams and Mary Hill Shields. Howe’s administrator conveyed both 24 acre tracts by administrator’s deed to H. J. Dierking in 1939. Dierldng conveyed to plaintiff by warranty deed in 1946.

Defendants contend that the judgment in the 1908 Shields’ partition suit, ordering the sale of the 24 acre tract set off to Mary Hill Shields, exceeded the relief sought and was void. We think this contention must be sustained. There was no attempt to make unknown contingent remaindermen parties. The Court appointed commissioners to partition the whole 97 acre tract between the four interests considered. They did partition it and their report was confirmed. Everything sought by the pleadings was thereby accomplished and every issue raised was determined. There was nothing further presented to the Court by the pleadings upon which it could have had authority to make partition between this life tenant and the contingent remaindermen of her estate. “The decree should have been limited to the issues.” (Gulick v. Huntley, 144 Mo. 241, 46 S. W. 154.) “A decree outside the record issues is-invalid and has been held void even when attacked collaterally.” (Friedel v. Bailey, 329 Mo. 22, 44 S. W. (2d) 9 and cases cited, l. c.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W.2d 333, 361 Mo. 475, 1950 Mo. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noyes-v-stewart-mo-1950.