Rains v. Moulder

90 S.W.2d 81, 338 Mo. 275, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 4, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 81 (Rains v. Moulder) 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
Rains v. Moulder, 90 S.W.2d 81, 338 Mo. 275, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 476 (Mo. 1936).

Opinions

Suit to determine and quiet title to approximately 650 acres of real estate (hereinafter at times, for convenience, designated the "Rains" land) in Camden County.

The petition, in conventional form, was filed February 12, 1931. Answer and cross-petition was filed October 20, 1931, on behalf of the adult defendants, in which the minor defendants, Reta Moulder and Maxine Moulder, through their guardian adlitem, joined.

The answer and cross-petition sets up title in the defendants. It alleges, in substance, that the common source of title was George J. Moulder, owner in fee, who died intestate March 23, 1922; that said George J. Moulder occupied said land as his homestead at the time of his death; that Emma Moulder, widow of said George J. Moulder and defendants Thomas Moulder, Lincoln Moulder, Mary Belle Bardis, John Dewey Moulder (who had attained their majority at the time of the death of said George J. Moulder), Roscoe Moulder, Mary Cable, Joe David Moulder, Fay Moulder, Reta Moulder and Maxine Moulder (then minors), all children of said George J. Moulder, survived said George J. Moulder as his sole heirs at law; that the administrator of the estate of said George J. Moulder at an attempted administrator's sale, under orders of the Probate Court of Camden County, Missouri, had in connection with a petition for the payment of demands allowed against said estate (not, however, chargeable against said homestead), executed a deed conveying said land to the purchaser [Emma Moulder] at said sale; that said purchaser thereafter conveyed said land to plaintiff; that said administrator's sale was null and void because of noncompliance with jurisdictional statutory requirements and because the lands attempted to be sold included the homestead, which had never been set apart, of said George J. Moulder; that the Union Electric Light Power Company, a corporation, had condemned an easement over approximately 108 acres of said land in the District Court of the United States in an action against all litigants involved in this action to quiet title, and that the award [$17,500] is in the registry of the United States District Court *Page 280 for the Western District of Missouri awaiting order of distribution. The prayer, among other relief, asked the court to define and adjudge the estates, rights, titles, and interests of all the parties, plaintiff and defendants, severally, in and to said lands, and that the title to said lands be forever quieted in defendants, subject to the easement aforesaid.

Plaintiff's reply admits the allegations concerning the condemnation proceedings, the common source of title in said George J. Moulder, the allegations as to the widow and heirs at law of said George J. Moulder, and alleges, in substance, according to the statement in defendant's brief, "that plaintiff's grantee, Emma Moulder (who was the widow of said George J. Moulder), had purchased in good faith at the administrator's sale and that the purchase price paid by her had been applied to the payment of debts allowed against the estate of said George J. Moulder; that plaintiff obtained a warranty deed from said Emma Moulder, and, under an honest belief that he acquired good title, went into possession of the lands and made valuable improvements thereon and paid taxes and interest and principal upon the loan thereon;" that said debts, so paid, were liens against said lands superior to the claims of said defendants; that plaintiff purchased said land, made said improvements, and paid said interest and principal with the knowledge of said answering defendants; and prays, in substance, among other things, that the court adjudge and decree plaintiff to be the owner in fee of said land, and defendants to be estopped from and to have been guilty of such laches in asserting their purported claims as now bars them from asserting said claims, and for such other and equitable relief as the court may find plaintiff entitled to.

The proof tended to establish the allegations in defendants' answer and cross-petition and plaintiff's reply, and no contention exists as to material facts. George J. Moulder died intestate, occupying the tract here involved as his homestead. Defendants are all of his children. N.V. Moulder was administrator of his estate. The personal estate being insufficient, the administrator petitioned the probate court, to sell the "Rains" land and also 240 acres of other land of said estate (hereinafter referred to as the "Mauss" land) to pay the allowed demands. Proceeding under said petition the "Rains" land was appraised at $3,844.90, exclusive of a first mortgage of $2,500 and the widow's dower of $1,155.10; and the "Mauss" land was appraised at $1,537.96, exclusive of the widow's dower valued at $462.04 — a total appraised value of $5,382.86. Thereafter, said administrator attempted to sell all of said real estate to Emma Moulder, exclusive of said dower interest and said mortgage on the "Rains" land for the sum of $5,382.86 — its appraised value — and, the sale being approved, the administrator, on April 10, 1923, executed his administrator's *Page 281 deed purporting to convey all the interest of said George J. Moulder in the "Rains" land and the "Mauss" land to Emma Moulder. The chancellor found, and the facts established (not questioned by either party) that said attempted administrator's sale was void; because of the attempted sale of the homestead of said George J. Moulder for the payment of debts not legally charged against such homestead during his lifetime, and because the proceedings by which said probate court attempted to acquire jurisdiction to order or approve said sale were not had or conducted in accordance with the statutes.

Emma Moulder procured the funds to effect her purchase from the Camden County State Bank, a banking institution, and secured said loan, which was for $5,500, by her mortgage on all of said lands, subject to the first mortgage of $2,500. On September 6, 1923, she conveyed the "Rains" land by warranty deed, purporting to convey the fee simple title, to the plaintiff herein in consideration of the sum of $9,000 which plaintiff paid by taking title subject to the aforesaid $2,500 mortgage by paying and satisfying the aforesaid $5,500 mortgage, and by paying the balance of said purchase price in cash to Emma Moulder. About a year later Emma Moulder sold the 240 acre tract to Mr. Mauss.

The statement in defendant's brief recites that "plaintiff thereupon went into possession of said land and continued to occupy the same until the trial of this action and later. Plaintiff occupied said lands under an honest belief of title and erected the improvements thereon. . . ."

After hearing the evidence, the trial court appointed commissioners to set off and admeasure dower and homestead. The commissioner's report was filed and approved by the court; 80 acres, described in said report, was set off as a homestead, and approximately 72 acres, described in said report, was assigned as the dower estate of Emma Moulder, passing to plaintiff under her deed.

The court decreed the defendants the owners of the fee simple title to the lands in controversy; subject, however, to the homestead estate of the two minor children and the aforesaid dower estate, the balance due on the aforesaid $2,500 mortgage, and an equitable lien in plaintiff in the sum of $373.80 for principal paid on said $2,500 mortgage and in the sum of $8,282.86 for the amount to which plaintiff was held entitled to subrogation by reason of the payment of the debts and demands against the estate of George J.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 81, 338 Mo. 275, 1936 Mo. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rains-v-moulder-mo-1936.