Patterson v. Wilmont

245 S.W.2d 116
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 14, 1952
Docket41990
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 245 S.W.2d 116 (Patterson v. Wilmont) 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
Patterson v. Wilmont, 245 S.W.2d 116 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

245 S.W.2d 116 (1952)

PATTERSON et ux.
v.
WILMONT.

No. 41990.

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.

January 14, 1952.

*117 Dearing & Matthes, J. W. Thurman, and W. Dwight Schubel, all of Hillsboro, for W. H. and M. K. Patterson.

H. L. C. Weier, Festus, for Eva Rocine Wilmont.

CONKLING, Presiding Judge.

The instant difficulty now for attention had its humble origins in an insignificant neighborhood incident wherein one neighbor objected to another using a certain hill road. Full grown, it has all attained no greater stature than a mere boundary line dispute between other neighboring owners of small adjoining tracts of land in the rural hills of Jefferson County, a region where surely there was more hill land than there was amity. After reading the transcript before us it seems that the admonition of The Psalmist, "Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for breathren to dwell together in unity", in at least this instance, went unheeded. But—when neighbors become angry with each other, litigation generally results. The land actually involved is but 12 feet wide and only 130 feet long. Its value does not appear, but it could not be much. As observed in the photograph exhibits filed here the terrain is very rough, productive of brush and boulders in great abundance, and the hillside is quite steep. The circuit court adjudicated title to real estate, hence our jurisdiction.

This action began as one in ejectment, and for injunctive relief. The suit was by Wm. H. Patterson and his wife Marion (hereinafter sometimes called plaintiffs) against Eva Rocine Wilmont (hereinafter sometimes called defendant). The land involved is three separate quite small tracts alleged to be in Sulphur Springs, Missouri. The petition is in three counts. Defendant answered and filed a counterclaim in three counts.

Court I of the petition prayed the ejectment of defendant from a certain strip of land therein alleged to be 10 feet wide, and hereinafter referred to as "Tract C". Count III of the counterclaim described this Tract C as 12 feet wide and 130 feet long, claimed title thereto "by limitations under the provisions of" what is now Section 516.010, references are to RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., unless otherwise specified, and prayed that title to Tract C be quieted in defendant. Upon Count I of the petition the court found against the plaintiff and for the defendant. Upon Count III of the counterclaim the court found for the defendant and against plaintiff, found the tract, the title to which was in issue, was 12 feet wide and 130 feet long, quieted title thereto in the defendant, holding that the "title to said real estate * * * has vested in defendant by limitation under the provisions of Section 1002 of the Revised Statutes of 1939, now Section 516.010, and that the title or claim of the plaintiffs in and to said real estate is by the limitation of said statute barred."

Count II of the petition prayed injunctive relief to restrain defendant from obstructing the use by plaintiffs of an alleged easement in and to a certain described roadway; alleged plaintiffs were entitled to use and had used the roadway more than 10 years; and that defendant was preventing plaintiffs free use thereof. We hereinafter refer to this roadway as "Tract A". As to this Tract A, Count II of the counterclaim alleged defendant was entitled to the possession thereof, that plaintiffs *118 were unlawfully withholding possession to defendant's damage and prayed plaintiffs' ejectment therefrom and damages. Upon Count II of the petition the court found the issues for plaintiffs and against defendant, and upon Count II of the counterclaim the court found for plaintiffs and against defendant, and found plaintiffs entitled to the free use of the roadway and to the enjoyment of their easement, and granted the injunction prayed.

Count III of the petition prayed injunctive relief to restrain defendant from obstructing the use by plaintiffs of their alleged easement in and to another certain described roadway; alleged plaintiffs were entitled to use and had used said roadway more than 10 years; and that defendant had obstructed the roadway and thus prevented plaintiffs' use thereof. We hereinafter refer to this as "Tract B". Count I of the counterclaim alleged defendant was entitled to possession of Tract B and prayed the ejectment of plaintiffs therefrom, and damages. Upon Count III of the petition the court found the issues for plaintiffs and against defendant; and upon Count I of the counterclaim the court found the issues for plaintiffs and against defendant, and found plaintiffs were entitled to the free use of the roadway and to the enjoyment of their easement, and granted the injunction prayed.

The cause was tried without a jury. Both the plaintiffs and the defendant have appealed from the trial court's decree.

The plaintiffs won below as to Counts II and III of their petition. As to the assigned error of the court below in ruling Count I of their petition (Tract C, supra) plaintiffs contend here that (1) there is not sufficient substantial evidence in the record to warrant or support the decree entered, (2) there is no evidence that defendant's possession was actual, notorious, continuous and so hostile as to constitute "an unequivocal claim of ownership for the statutory period", and (3) there being no proof as to "claim of ownership" defendant cannot acquire title by adverse possession.

The defendant lost below upon Counts II and III of the petition, and was denied the relief prayed in Counts I and II of her counterclaim. As to those portions of the decree of the trial court adverse to defendant and ruling Count III of the petition and Count I of the counterclaim (Tract B), defendant's brief does not even approach the specification of a single allegation of error. Certain of the purported Points and Authorities in defendant's brief purport to discuss only claimed phases of the evidence; some state a purported abstract proposition of law; one purports to mention "a twelve foot strip of land" without further identifying it or assigning error; one mentions whether a certain witness intended to claim "beyond the true boundary line", without identifying the tract of land or the boundary line of which counsel was there writing, and without assigning error; and others abstractly and indiscriminately purport to loosely mention alleyways, easements, roads, witnesses, ten year periods of limitation, etc., and what not, but assign no error. It is stated in defendant's purported Points and Authorities that "The judgment establishing the roadway designated "A" on plaintiffs' Exhibit I is erroneous for the reason that the description of said roadway does not conform to the pleadings and the evidence * * * (and) is void for uncertainty of description." We will accept that last above quoted as an allegation of error, as required by our Rule 1.08(3) and confine our consideration to that one point of defendant's appeal.

But the difficulty apparently experienced by some of the bar in complying with a rule as clearly written and as free from ambiguity, as is Rule 1.08, is not readily understandable. We dislike to believe that those who fail to comply with this rule fail to do so because of indifference or carelessness. But would not any other conclusion be a reflection upon counsel who fail to comply? The lack of page references to the transcript in statements and in printed argument in briefs is astoundingly increasing. Since the adoption of the new Code almost no cases have been dismissed *119 in our appellate courts upon what were once classified as technicalities.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.2d 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-wilmont-mo-1952.