Peniston v. Schlude

71 S.W. 146, 171 Mo. 132, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 146 (Peniston v. Schlude) 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
Peniston v. Schlude, 71 S.W. 146, 171 Mo. 132, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

Ejectment for lot No. 1 of City Block No. 4037, in the city of St. Louis, fronting 155 feet on the south line of Pattis on avenue, by a depth of 170 feet, and bounded west by Macklind avenue. The suit was begun on November 16, 1897. The petition is in the usual form, and lays the ouster as of December 1, 1892. The answer is a general denial. The case was [136]*136tried by the circuit court, a jury being waived. No instructions were asked by either party, but at the request of the plaintiffs the court made a special finding of facts, which is as follows :

“In compliance with a request for a finding of facts in the above entitled cause, the court finds the facts to be as follows:
“First. That Frances E. Sublette (daughter of Solomon P. Sublette and Frances S. Sublette, nee Hereford)'',, died single and unmarried, on May 16, 1861, and that at the time of her death she was seized in fee of the property in controversy, and at said time she left no children or their descendants, nor father, mother, brother or sister, or their descendants, her surviving. She left surviving her, one maternal grandmother and six maternal uncles and aunts, through whom defendants claim title.
Second. The plaintiffs claim title to a portion of one undivided eighth of said property, as heirs at law of Pinkney W. Sublette, who was a paternal uncle of the said Frances, daughter of Solomon P. Sublette.
‘ ‘ Third. The court finds that the said Pinkney W. Sublette died long prior to May 16, 1861, and left no descendants him surviving.
“It follows, as a matter of law, that plaintiffs are not heirs of said Frances E. Sublette, and have no title to the premises in controversy under thé statute of descents and distribution. Judgment for defendants. ’ ’

From the judgment the plaintiffs appealed. The evidence adduced at the trial is very voluminous and covers over three hundred printed pages. In the view herein taken of the case it is not necessary to state it here. So much as is essential to the determination of the case by this court will be referred to in the course of the opinion.

I.

This is an action at law. No instructions were asked by either party. The case went off on a simple [137]*137and single question of fact in the lower court, to-wit, whether or not Pinkney W. Suhlette, under whom the plaintiffs claim, survived his neice, Prances E. Sublette, who died on May 16, 1861, and under whom the defendant claims title. The trial court found as a fact that Pinkney W. Sublette predeceased Prances E. Sublette, and that finding of fact will not be reviewed by this court, if there is any substantial evidence to support it. [James v. Ins. Co., 148 Mo. 1.] The only question, therefore, open to review is whether there is any substantial evidence to support the finding of facts.

The controversy is this: In. 1857 Solomon P. Sublette died intestate seized of the property in suit, together with other property, leaving his wife and two ■children, Frances E., aged about four years, and William Hugh, aged about fourteen months. The widow survived him for only about one month, and the infant son, William Hugh, died about two months after the widow. Thus Prances became the owner of the property. She died on May 16,1861, aged about nine years, of course intestate and without issue. She left surviving as her nearest of kin, her maternal grandmother and six uncles and aunts on the maternal side. So far as was then known she had no living relatives on her paternal side. The grandmother, uncles and aunts had the property partitioned, and the property in suit is part thereof and is now owned by the defendant, who acquired it by mesne conveyance.

Nothing was heard of any claim to it until November 16,1897, when this suit was begun, and then for the first time it was asserted that Solomon P. Sublette had a brother named Pinkney W. Sublette, who had lived in the far west, among the Indians, nearly all his life, and that he was alive when Prances died in 1861, and consequently was entitled, as her uncle on the paternal side, to share in her estate with the grandmother, uncles and aunts on the maternal side, and in this way was entitled to a one-eighth interest in the property; that Pinkney died in 1865, at Fontenelle, [138]*138Wyoming, and that the plaintiffs are the grantees of the next of Mn of said Pinkney.

On the other hand, the defendants claim that Solomon had a brother Pinkney, bnt that he predeceased Frances, and, hence, was not one of her heirs, and that the Pinkney W. Sublette, who died in Wyoming in 1865, was not the brother of Solomon, but some one else of the same name.

At the trial the plaintiffs undertook, primarily, to prove that Pinkney was alive in 1861, when Frances died. In support of their claim, they adduced the following testimony:

John R. Clopton, of Sedalia, testified that he went west in 1864, and at a crossing of the Yellowstone river he met a white man with a band of Indians, whom his guide called Pinkney Sublette, and others called Bill Sublette; that they were together five or six hours; that he had never known him before and never met him afterwards.

James S. McKinney, formerly of Callaway-county, testified that he went west in 1863, and had spent much of his time there since; that in 1865 he was working for a Mr. Brown who lived on Green river, and owned a ferry between Fontenelle and LaBarge creeks; that he met there a man who said his name was Pinkney Sublette, and who further said he was a brother of William, Solomon and Andrew Sublette; that the man was sick; that he died about a mile and a half above the mouth of the Fontenelle; that he did not attend the funeral, but saw the grave afterwards. [The plaintiffs showed that William Sublette died in 1845, Andrew died in 1854, and Solomon died in 1857.] The witness further testified that he knew Solomon, William and Andrew Sublette, and was related to them.

John.B. Wade, of Sweetwater county, Wyoming, testified that he went west in 1850; knew Pinkney Sublette; met him on Henry’s Fork of Green river; and several times on the Fontenelle; saw him last in July, 1862; stayed all night with him; did not know when he died.

[139]*139Henry Perry, of Uinta county, Wyoming, testified that fie went west in 1850; that fie met a man named Picknin or Pickin Sublette at Fort Bridger, in 1863; was in camp with, him for several days; next saw him on Oreen river in the summer of 1861; that Sublette lived on the Fontenelle; did not know when fie died.

Cfiarles W. Holden, of Fontenelle, Wyoming, testified that fie settled at Fontenelle, Wyoming, in October, 1877, and lias resided there ever since; that fie knew of a solitary grave near the Fontenelle creek, about a mile from where it empties into Oreen river; that there was a stone standing near the grave with the letters, “P. W. S.,” and below them the letter “D” and the figures “1865,” carved on it; that it stood there until 1889 or 1890; that fie never knew whose grave it was.

Thomas B. Crews, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs in this case, testified that fie went west in the fall of 1897 in the interest of the plaintiffs; that fie was present when the grave aforesaid was opened and that they found a human skeleton in the grave; fie also testified to the stone and the letters and figures on it.

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Related

Peniston v. Hydraulic Press Brick Co.
138 S.W. 532 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 146, 171 Mo. 132, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peniston-v-schlude-moctapp-1902.