Porter v. Reed

27 S.W. 351, 123 Mo. 587, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 254
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 26, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 27 S.W. 351 (Porter v. Reed) 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
Porter v. Reed, 27 S.W. 351, 123 Mo. 587, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 254 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

— On the twenty-first of March, 1889, John Porter brought his action returnable to the April term, 1889, of the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, against Eliza J. Reed and Jasper Reed, her husband, Martha A. Witcher and Tandy K. Witcher, her husband, Fanny Fitlingberger and Jacob Fitlingberger, her husband, Mary Miller and George W. Miller.

His petition, omitting the caption, was in the following words:

‘ ‘Plaintiff states that he is the owner of, and entitled to the possession of, and' is actually in possession of, the following described land in Jackson county, Missouri, to wit, the west half of the northeast quarter of section seven (7), township forty-nine (49), range thirty-two (32). Also part of the east half of the [590]*590northeast quarter of said section seven (7), township forty-nine (49), range thirty-two (32), described as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of said last mentioned half quarter, thence running east to the northeast corner of the northeast quarter of said section seven (7), thence south forty poles, thence west to the west line of said east half of the northeast quarter of said section seven (7), thence north forty poles to the beginning, containing twenty acres and being the north twenty of the east half of the northeast quarter of section seven (7), township 49, range 32.
“Also a part of the northwest quarter of said section 7, township 49, range 32, bounded as follows: Beginning at the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of said section 7, thence running south eighty •poles, thence north, 67y degrees west, forty (40) poles to a corner on the east bank of the Big Blue river, thence down on said Big Blue river to its intersection with the north line of said section 7, thence east to the beginning, containing about ten acres.
“Plaintiff states that he has been continuously in the adverse possession and ownership of said land since March 4, 1872, under the following deeds, to wit:
“A warranty deed dated January 12, 1872, recorded March 4, 1872, in book 93, page 578, in the recorder’s office, at Independence, Missouri, executed by Hiram Miller, Henry C. Miller, James W. Miller, John D. Miller, Ann Collin, John F. Collin by J. Brown Hovey and George W. Buchanan their attorneys in fact.
“A deed from Alfred J. Galbraith by George W. Buchanan, his attorney in fact, dated also January 12, 1872, and recorded on March 5, 1872, in book 88, page 578, of the records of Jackson county at Independence, Missouri.
[591]*591“A deed from James A. Etter and wife, Mary Jane, dated January 18, 1873, and recorded March 3, 1873, in book 105, page 400, of the records of Jackson county at Independence, Missouri.
“Plaintiff states that by said deeds he obtained the entire title to said lands and avers that in the year 1858 all the title and the actual possession of said land was vested in one Henry Miller; that said Henry Miller died in said year, 1858, or in January, 1859, and that he left no will; that at his death he left as his heirs his widow Elizabeth Miller and his children, Hiram Miller, Henry O. Miller, James W. Miller, John D. Miller and Ann Miller.
“That George W. Buchanan administered on the estate of said Henry Miller, deceased, and settled said estate without disposing of said land; that at the death of said Henry Miller one Fanny Russell, who was living with said Henry Miller in his lifetime as his housekeeper was left in occupancy of said land; that said Fanny Russell had with her on said land defendants Eliza Jane Reed, known then as Eliza Jane Miller, Martha Ann Witcher, then known as Martha Ann Miller, Fannie Fitlingberger, then known as Fanny Miller, Henry Miller, and George W. Miller; that Eliza Jane Miller afterwards, in 1867, was the wife of one Henry Akers, Martha Ann Miller was in 1867 wife of Tandy K. Witcher, and Fanny Miller was in 1867 wife of Jacob Fitlingberger; that said defendants were the children of said Fanny Russell and they remained with their mother on said land during the troubled times of the civil war in actual occupancy of said land; that after the war and in 1867 said Hiram Miller, Henry O. Miller, James W. Miller and Ann Weatherby, formerly Ann Miller brought suit in ejectment against said Failny Russell and her said children Eliza Jane Akers by the name of Jane Akers, and her [592]*592husband Henry Akers, and Fanny and Jacob Fitlingberger, her husband, Martha Ann and Tandy K. Witcher, her husband, and Henry and G-eorge W. Millerthat said suit was brought in the circuit court of Jackson county, at Independence, and was numbered on the dockets of said court as 7380.
“That afterwards on the thirtieth day- of September, 1869, said cause came on to be heard before a jury who found the issues for the plaintiffs and judgment was duly rendered thereon, and is of record in record O,' page 514, of the circuit court records at Independence, Missouri, awarding said lands to said plaintiffs, Hiram Miller, Henry C. Miller, James W. Miller, John D. Miller and Ann Weatherby, and affirming their title to the possession thereof; that on said judgment said parties were accordingly put into possession of said lands; that said Ann Weatherby then married one John F. Collin; that plaintiff by the deeds aforesaid, came into ownership of all the title of said parties in and to said lands; that defendants never made any pretense of claim to said land from the time plaintiff bought and took possession thereof till the twenty-second day of September, 1887, when they sued plaintiff in ejectment, claiming title to said lands; that said Eliza Jane, had in the mean time got rid of said Henry Akers and had married Jasper Eeed; that said case .was brought in the circuit court of Kansas City, Missouri, and was numbered 10606 in said court; that plaintiff was put to heavy expense in employing attorneys and preparing to defend said cause;_ that, nevertheless, on the day when said cause was set down for trial, defendants dismissed their said cause without trial; that afterwards on the fifteenth day of August, 1888, defendants again sued plaintiff in ejectment for eighty acres of said land in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, at Inde[593]*593pendenee, Missouri, which case was numbered on the docket of said court as 1827; that plaintiff was again put to heavy expense in employing attorneys to defend said cause and in procuring depositions and witnesses from many parts of the country; that on the eighteenth day of March, 1889, said cause was called for trial and defendants again dismissed said cause without a trial; that the defendants threaten to again sue plaintiff for possession of said lands, unless he will make to them what they call a ‘fair proposition’ to buy from them a quitclaim of their alleged rights in and to said lands; that defendants mean thereby that plaintiff must either consent to pay them a large sum of money for their worthless deed to said land or they will continue to harass him with vexatious and inconsequent litigation, such as the two cases which they have already brought and dismissed as above set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W. 351, 123 Mo. 587, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-reed-mo-1894.