O'Donnell v. Mathews

284 S.W. 204, 221 Mo. App. 657, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 153
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 204 (O'Donnell v. Mathews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Donnell v. Mathews, 284 S.W. 204, 221 Mo. App. 657, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 153 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This proceeding is'based upon a petition praying for the partition of certain land in Jackson county, Missouri, sale of the property and payment from the proceeds thereof of the costs and expense of the sale, including attorney’s fees, and asking for the reasonable value of permanent improvements made by plaintiffs while they were claiming’ in good faith to own the entire estate in the land, and for such other and further relief as to the court might seem just and proper. The amended answer admits ownership .of the land as alleged in the petition; admits that the land could not be sold without great prejudice to the owners; admits that plaintiffs had been for a long time in .actual possession of the land. It then denies generally “every allegation in plaintiff’s petition contained except the allegations herein specifically admitted” and alleges that since Axxgust 22, 1915, defendant was entitled to the possession of .and to receive his proportionate part of the rentals and profits from the land; that plaintiffs had denied him such possession and participation in said rentals and profits; that plaintiffs had retained the exclusive possession and receipt of all said rentals and profits from the land; that the reasonable value of the rentals and profits since said date was $1500 per annum; that plaintiffs had committed waste upon the prop *659 erty in failing to keep the roof upon the dwelling’ house located upon the property in repair, .as the result of which rain water had damaged the residence to the extent of $500'; that plaintiffs had used the residence to store grain and other farm products and had damaged the same in this manner in the amount of $300 and that plaintiffs had removed a brick building upon the premises to defendant’s damage in the sum of $1000. The answer prays judgment against plaintiffs for defendant’s proportionate p.art of said rentals since August 22, 1915, and for the sum of $1800 for waste committed by plaintiffs, “and that said sums be adjudged a.nd decreed a lien upon the interests of plaintiffs in said property.” A stipulation was entered into reciting that whereas plaintiffs — •

“. . . are making certain claims for taxes paid and improvements made and defendant is making certain claims for rents and profits and waste, and
“Whereas, it is not convenient to try said issues at this time, and the parties deem it to their mutual advantage to have an interlocutory decree of partition entered and! sale made and entered’ and distribution of proceeds of sale made after paying costs and expenses of the action to date of distribution and costs and expenses of the sale. ’ ’

The stipulation further provided that the trial of the issues of taxes, improvements, rents, profits and waste should be postponed and had as speedily as may be, either before or after the confirmation of sale and distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the land; that such claim should be tried—

“. . . on the basis that, and as if, the proceeds of such sale were still in the hands of the court and either party, plaintiffs or defendant, shall be entitled to offset or to have and be paid by and recover of the other (opponent) party or parties such sum and sunis as such respective party or parties may be held to be or have been entitled to have, paid out of such proceeds or otherwise on.account of or for such respective claims and any of the same; and the opponent party or parties shall be bound to respond, refund and pay accordingly, and shall be so adjudged to do.”

The decree in partition was rendered on March 2, 1922, and the report of the commissioner who made the sale was confirmed on May 22, 1922. On October 3, 1923, the issues of rents, profits and waste, improvements and taxes were tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $2416.65 on the issue of improvements and $209.61 on the issue of taxes paid, and in favor of defendant on the issue as to rents and profits in the sum of $2382. Plaintiffs remitted the sum of $34.65 from the amount awarded for improvements and $8.61 from the amount awarded for taxes and judgment was entered off-setting plaintiffs’ award for im *660 provements against defendant’s award for rents and profits and judgment was rendered in the sum of $201 in favor of plaintiffs on account of taxes paid by them on defendant’s interest in the land. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

The facts show that by deeds made in 1856 and 1857 the land in question was conveyed to Fannie A. D. Matthews for her life with remainder to her children. In 1866 the land was mortgaged by her and her husband to one Joseph Kinney, the mortgage purporting to cover the title in fee simple. At the time of the execution of this mortgage, some of the children of Mr. and Mrs. Mathews had died and the parents had by this means inherited an interest in the remainder of the fee subject to the life estate. Kinney’s mortgage was foreclosed in 1871 and the land at the foreclosure was bought by his son, Joseph B. Kinney, who subsequently brought suit against Mr. and Mrs. Mathews for possession, claiming the entire estate in fee. The Supreme Court in Kinney v. Mathews, 69 Mo. 520, decided in 1879, held that Mrs Mathews acquired a life estate only in the land with remainder to her children but that such interest as she had in the land had been acquired by Joseph B. Kinney at the foreclosure sale. In 1882, Joseph B. Kinney conveyed said land to Mary O’Donnell, sister of plaintiffs. In 1892 the latter conveyed the land to her four brothers; two of whom are the present plaintiffs, the other two subsequently conveyed their interest in the land to plaintiffs. Mrs. Mathews died on August 22, 1915, leaving the defendant as her only surviving child a,nd the owner of all the title except that owned by plaintiffs which was 1086/6300 in the greater part of the land and 4236/6300 in a 4-2/3 acres tract.

In 1880 Joseph B. Kinney caused the land to be sold for taxes and a tax deed to a portion of the land under the 'tax sale was made to his mother, Matilda Kinney, who joined in the conveyance to Mary E. O’Donnell. Shortly after the death of his mother, defendant brought suit against plaintiff to quiet title to the land and for the cancellation of said tax deed. The court rendered a decree cancelling the tax deed and decreed the title to be in the respective parties as above indicated. The case ivas appealed to the Supreme Court which on July 19, 1921, affirmed the decree. [See Mathews v. O’Donnell, 289 Mo. 235.] The present suit was filed on August 10, 1921.

The improvements sued for by plaintiffs herein are for clearing done in 1892 and subsequent years, the building of a cellar in 1901, the building of a barn and the digging of a well at the barn in 1903, the construction of a summer house in 1903, a granary in 1908, the setting out of an orchard-in 1908, the fencing of parts of the land in 1912, the placing of a corrugated tin roof on the dwelling and digging a well thereat in 1912, and the erection of an iron tank for watering stock in 1913.

*661 It is insisted that plaintiffs are not entitled to recover for defendant’s proportionate part of the improvements ’ because it is claimed a life tenant cannot recover from the remainderman for improvements. -This is the general rule. [Gray v. Clement, 246 S. W. 940; Missouri Central Building

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 204, 221 Mo. App. 657, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/odonnell-v-mathews-moctapp-1926.