Phillips v. Broughton

193 S.W. 593, 270 Mo. 365, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 593 (Phillips v. Broughton) 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
Phillips v. Broughton, 193 S.W. 593, 270 Mo. 365, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 30 (Mo. 1917).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, J.

— This is a suit in ejectment to recover the north fractional half of the southwest fractional quarter of fractional section 13, township 22, range 13 east, containing 141.1 acres, situated in New Madrid County, Missouri. The suit was transferred on change of venue from the New Madrid Circuit Court to the Butler Circuit Court, where trial was had before the court, without a jury, resulting in a judgment, for the defendants. Plaintiff duly perfected an appeal.

The petition is in nsual form.

[369]*369The answer is in five counts, admits possession of the property in defendants, bnt denies each and every other allegation in the petition. The ten-year and thirty-year Statutes of Limitation are also pleaded as defenses.

The fifth count of the answer is in the nature of a cross-bill, and alleges that the defendants are the owners of and in possession of said land and that they are informed and believe that plaintiff claims some title or interest in said land, the nature and character of which is unknown to defendants, but that defendants are informed that plaintiff is basing his claim to said land on’ a decree entered in the circuit court of New Madrid County at the September Term, 1908, in a proceeding wherein Murray Phillips was plaintiff and these present defendants were defendants. It is alleged that said decree is void because the court entering the same had no jurisdiction over the property described in said decree, and that said decree was not responsive to the petition attached to the copy of the summons served on the defendants, but wholly failed to describe the property as set out in said decree; thát defendants failed to file any answer or appear in any manner in said suit because they, in good faith, believed that said suit was not intended and did not in any manner affect any of the land described in this suit. In the prayer the court is asked to cancel and set aside said decree and to ascertain and determine the title to said land.

The reply denied the new matter set up in each count of the answer.

Plaintiff introduced evidence showing that the paper title to said land was in the plaintiff. The evidence further shows that said land was timbered land and none of it was prepared for cultivation and that a short time prior to the institution of this suit the record owner had some men on the land clearing it and that about six or eight acres had been cleared when defendants ordered said men off the place and took possession of the same. The disputed land is situated between the land owned [370]*370by plaintiff and land owned by tbe defendants. Plaintiff testified that he did not know that this woodland, around which tbe defendants bad a fence, was- a portion of bis land until a surveyor (tbe date of tbe survey is not given) ran a line and it was discovered that tbe defendants’ fence extended a quarter of a mile too far south; that it is wood land and unoccupied.

The evidence upon the part of the defendants tended to establish the following facts:

The plaintiff was recalled for further cross-examination and testified that the suit which be bad formerly instituted in New Madrid County against tbe same defendants involved the same property as is now involved in this suit.

L. P. Steele, a surveyor of New Madrid County, testified that be bad known the land for three or four years and that' during that time Mr. Broughton bad been in possession of it. On cross-examination be testified that when be made the survey be found a fence along the south side of the land in suit (the south side adjoined the undisputed land of plaintiff); that it was not much of a fence, and it looked like a part of the fence bad been torn down; that tbe fence on tbe west side was apparently a good one, but that the, witness did not go around tbe north or east side of tbe tract.

Henry E. Broughton, Collector of New Madrid County for the past fourteen years, testified that said land was used by tbe defendants as a pasture during tbe last ten or fifteen years; that in tbe year 1897 tbe witness and bis brother (bis brother, now deceased, being tbe person under whom defendants claim) were partners, engaged in buying and selling cattle, and at that time a fence was built around tbe land in question and they kept cattle in there. Tbe fence which they built contained nine or ten wires, and that prior to tbe building of this fence there was a three or four-strand wire fence around this land, but tbe witness did not know bow long it bad been there or who built it. Tbe witness testified that tbe land in dispute bad been known as tbe Broughton land ever since tbe witness, who was fifty-four years [371]*371old, could remember. This witness testified that defendants paid taxes on about sixty-one acres of this disputed land.

Defendants introduced in evidence two deeds conveying to persons under whom they claimed about fifty-six acres of the land in dispute. It does not appear that the grantors in these deeds had any record title, and from the showing made their interest would amount to only color of title.

H. E. Broughton, Jr., one of the defendants, testified that the defendants or those under whom they claimed built a nine-wire fence around the disputed property twelve or fourteen years ago and that the land had been enclosed by a fence ever since and had been used by the witness’s father as a pasture; and that there was a fence around the place before the nine-wire fence was built. Upon cross-examination this witness testified that his brother ran plaintiff’s negroes out of this land when they were there clearing the same; that the defendants, and those under whom they claim, claimed to own- all of this timber land enclosed by the fence and used the same as pasture “during all this time.”

Defendant Nannie Broughton testified that the defendants claimed to own all the property inside of the fence and that they first learned that their right was questioned by plaintiff about two years ago when he begun clearing it up; that when they found out that he was claiming the land they stopped him. This witness testified that she was served with a summons in the first suit instituted by the plaintiff in New Madrid County against these defendants; that when the summons and copy of the petition was served upon her she asked the sheriff what it meant and the sheriff told her that it meant that “Murray wants to borrow money and it seems the Hunter heirs are all mixed up in a law suit some way and he can’t get it unless the Hunter heirs all sign this paper; ’ ’ and that she thought the sheriff knew what he was talking about and, for that reason, she didn’t go to court and make a defense in the suit. The witness testified that her husband died February 10, [372]*3721904, and she kept a diary of everything that occurred; that in 1891 there were three strands of barb wire put around the woods pasture to keep the mares and colts in there, and that in 1897 the nine-strand wire fence was put around the land so they could pasture cattle in there.

Defendants introduced in evidence the summons and the petition in the first suit between these parties, which resulted in the decree in favor of the plaintiff entered by the New Madrid Court at its September Term, 1908. Said petition, omitting formal parts, was as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W. 593, 270 Mo. 365, 1917 Mo. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-broughton-mo-1917.