Reid v. Gees

210 S.W. 878, 277 Mo. 556, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 878 (Reid v. Gees) 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
Reid v. Gees, 210 S.W. 878, 277 Mo. 556, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 45 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Action to determine title and partition certain real estate in - St. Charles County, at one time the commons of the City of St. Charles, Missouri.

In the petition plaintiff alleges that he and Anton G. Gees owned in equal parts a 999-year lease on the property, and that defendant Hagemeier and Gees claim interest in such real estate adverse to him. The second count is the ordinary one in partition. The leasehold is alleged to have begun July 1, 1838.

By answer defendant Gees avers that defendant, Hagemeier is his tenant, and has no further interest therein: that he is the owner in fee thereof, and that there is no valid lease on the premises commencing July 1, 1838. The answer then thus proceeds for a space:

“And defendants state that if there ever was a lease upon said premises, or what purported to be a lease for 999 years, it was a -lease purporting to have been made by the trustees of the Town of St. Charles, [563]*563County of St. Charles, State of Missouri, dated (as stated in said petition), and that the date and delivery .of such instruments was upon Sunday, for which reason said instrument was void, as a lease, for 999 years; and that, at the time, the Town of St. Charles and its trustees did not have any authority from the Legislature of this State to make any lease whatever; that the only authority they then had was to sell the fee of said land and to give the owner of any lease, then existing, peremptory right and priority in the purchase of said real estate, in fee; that these defendants are informed and believe, that on Sunday, July 1, 1838, one Alexander T. Douglas, purported to he the clerk of the trustees of the Village of said St. Charles or clerk of the Town of St. Charles, made a certain writing, in the nature of a lease, to one James Lindsay, which purported to he for a term of 999 years, which paper was afterwards, on the 25th day of May, 1853, improperly spread upon the records of said county, and is a cloud for the title of the defendant, Anton G. Gees; that said lease purports to be of Commons then belonging to the inhabitants of the Town of St. Charles; that at the time of the execution of said lease, the Legislature of the State of Missouri had not authorized the making of the same; that the tile to said Commons, including the premises described in the petition, was originally derived from the King of Spain; and the right, title and interest (being title in fee) was acquired by the Government of the United States; that the equitable title to such real estate was conveyed from the Government of the United States, subject to the private grants made by the said king which over-lapped said territory, to the inhabitants of said Town of St. Charles, by an act of Congress, approved June 13 A. D. 1812; and that afterwards the legal title to said premises was conveyed to said inhabitants of said St. Charles, by an act of Congress of the United States, approved January 27 A. D. 1831, which act of Congress provided, among other things, that the title should so vest, to be sold [564]*564or disposed of, or regulated, in such manner as might be directed by the Legislature of the State of Missouri; that pursuant to said acts of Congress, the Legislature of this State did not provide for the leasing of said property, but did provide for the sale of said property, by an act of the Legislature of this State approved December 28 A. D. 1832, and by subsequent acts; that in and by said act of the Legislature, it was provided that:
“ ‘Sec. 1. The trustees of the Town of St. Charles be, and they are hereby authorized, to sell in fee simple forever, all, or any part, of the town lots, out lots, com-monfield lots, or Commons, belonging to said town. The said trustees shall, by ordinance, fix upon such time, place, terms and manner of sale, as they shall consider most advantageous to the town.
‘ ‘ ‘ Sec. 2. The said board of trustees be, and they are hereby authorized, to execute deed in fee simple, to any person who may have leased any part of the town lots, out lots, commonfield lots or Commons for the part by him leased; providing the person holding such lease shall-first pay the amount at which his part of the land is estimated in his said leasq and surrender the lease to the corporation of said town.
<£ ‘Sec. 3. The said board of trustees, whenever they sell, or convey any part of said lots or Commons shall execute to the purchaser a deed, with Special Warranty against the claims of the said town, and all persons claiming under it; which deed shall run in the name of “the inhabitants of the Town of St. Charles,’’ shall be signed and acknowledged by the president of the board of trustees of said town, and shall be effectual to convey to the purchaser, all legal and equitable claim which accrued to the inhabitants of said town, by grant from the Spanish government, or the several acts of Congress, confirming title to said lands.’
“That the plaintiff is neither the purchaser, the creditor, nor an heir, capable of inheriting any interest in said lease or leasehold estate; and that the right [565]*565under which he asserts his claim to a half interest in said leasehold, is dark in his petition, so dark that these defendants are. nnahle to ascertain from the petition in what manner or from whom he claims to derive title; that said petition does not in any of the counts thereof, or in all of the counts thereof, taken as a whole, state facts constituting a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff.”

Then follows a plea of the several Statutes of Limitations. It is then further averred that the alleged and purported lease was surrendered. by the then claimants thereof to the City of St. Charles on May 6, 1871, since which time there has never been even a purported lease. That Nathaniel Reid and Isabella Reid (who were the claimants of said lease and'who surrendered it) purchased the property from the City of St. Charles as they had the .right to do; that they borrowed $6000 on the property; that their mortgage or deed of trust was foreclosed, and at the sale John Rankin bought the lands; that by ejectment suit Rankin recovered the possession of the land, and that this defendant Anton Gees, by mesne conveyances, acquired the Rankin title. The answer then further proceeds:

“That no right, title or interest remained in said Nathaniel Reid or Isabella Reid, in and to any part of the real estate described in the petition, at any time after the recovery from them in said action of ejectment; that no heir of either of them has, or can claim, any interest in or to said real estate, or said leasehold; and that the .plaintiff has no inheritable blood, from either said Nathaniel Reid or Isabella Reid, or James Lindsay, Sr.; that sáid James Lindsay, Sr., by an instrument, dated the 5th day of April A. D. 1848, conveyed said' real estate (that is to say, his leasehold interest and said lease), one-half to Nathaniel Reid and one-half to Isabella Reid; and afterwards, it being supposed that there was a defect in the conveyance to said Isabella Reid, said James Lindsay, on the second day of February A. D. 1849, executed his further deed, [566]

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 878, 277 Mo. 556, 1919 Mo. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reid-v-gees-mo-1919.