Roach v. Kohn

235 S.W.2d 284, 361 Mo. 597, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 547
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 8, 1951
DocketNo. 41792
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 235 S.W.2d 284 (Roach v. Kohn) 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
Roach v. Kohn, 235 S.W.2d 284, 361 Mo. 597, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 547 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

CONKLING, P. J.

[ 285] The plaintiffs-appellants (hereinafter called plaintiffs) appealed from the trial court’s decree wherein .defendants were held to be the fee simple owners of certain described lands in Pemiscot County, Missouri. Plaintiffs’ instant petition is an equity action to quiet title and determine interest in and to the 120 acres therein described and prayed the trial court’s decree that they (plaintiffs) were the fee simple owners of said real estate.

One J. M. McElvain died on December 20, 1924. His will was probated in Pemiscot County on December 24, 1924. Testator was survived by his widow, Margaret Ann McElvain (since deceased) and his children, Minerva McElvain Burnett, Ralph McElvain and Clyde T. McElvain, Sr., (now deceased); and also by two grandchildren, William McElvain and Martha McElvain. The last named son of testator (Clyde T. McElvain, Sr.) was living at the time of the hereinafter set out events affecting title to the land in issue here. Clyde McElvain, Sr. was survived by his children, the plaintiffs Clyde T. McElvain, Jr., Herbert Raymond McElvain, Jerry McElvain and Josephine Turnage.

[602]*602Under the will of J. M. McElvain, this 120 acres and certain other lands, were by him conveyed to Citizens Trust Company, of Caruthersville, Missouri, in trust, as trustee for the use and benefit of his children and grandchildren. That Trust Company took charge of all those lands and administered them as trustee until August 24, 1928, when an order of the Circuit Court permitted it to resign as such trustee. By order of the court W. E. Goeteher was immediately and on August 24, 1928 appointed as successor trustee. On March 10, 1930, the Citizens Trust Company was- placed in the hands of the State Finance Commissioner for liquidation. Mr. Goeteher, upon his appointment, took possession and, until April 11, 1930, handled all the lands as trustee under the McElvain will. On March 19, 1930 the St. Francis Levee - District of Missouri, 'as plaintiff, had judgment in an action for unpaid 1929' levee taxes on all the McElvain lands theretofore conveyed in trust. Under a special execution those lands were all sold and conveyed to one B. B. Sanders on April 11, 1930. The deed to Sanders, under the execution in the tax suit, was made by W. P. Robertson, Sheriff of Pemiscot County. The defendants in that tax suit were Citizens Trust Company, W. E. Goeteher, trustee under the will of J. M. McElvain, and all of the individual heirs of J. M. McElvain. The minor defendants in the tax suit answered by their duly appointed guardian ad litem. All the other defendants in that tax suit by their counsel .filed answer and offered judgment for the taxes due.

Thereafter, B. B. Sanders made various separate conveyances of the McElvain lands (conveyed to him by the sheriff’s deed after the tax sale) to the various heirs of J. M. McElvain who were beneficiaries under the above will. The 120 acres in issue here were separately conveyed by Sanders to Chester M. Burnett, a son of plaintiff Minerva McElvain Burnett (now the plaintiff Minerva McElvain Roach). The latter then went into possession of this 120 acres and remained in possession until December 7, 1937. In 1934 this 120 acres was also sold for delinquent state and county taxes, but was later redeemed. December 7, 1937 plaintiff Minerva Burnett and her son, Chester M. Burnett and his wife, and- others, executed a warranty deed to -this 120 acres to defendants for $5700.00. The instant defendants then went into possession of this 120 acres and have since continued in possession, farming the land and paying the taxes.

Briefly stated, the instant petition alleges the relationship of the parties; the execution and probate of the J. M. McElvain will; that plaintiffs are the surviving beneficiaries of the trust created by the J. M. McElvain will and are the owners of the 120 [286] acres in issue here; that defendants claim an interest in the 120 acres of a nature unknown to plaintiffs except that defendants-’ claim is based upon the above mentioned deed of December 7, 1937 to defendants; that defendants had notice by the recording of the J. M. McElvain [603]*603■will that grantors in that deed of December 7, 1937 had no authority to convey because of the trust created by that will. The petition prayed that the title be determined, that plaintiffs be adjudged to be “the fee simple owners” and that defendants be adjudged to have no “right, title or interest” in or to said 120 acres. The instant petition alleged no fratid and made no attack upon the administration of the trustee, the 1930 tax suit, or the decree therein.

Defendants’ instant answer admitted that they claimed an interest in the 120 acres; alleged that by the deed of December 7, 1937 they were the fee simple record owners thereof; denied plaintiffs had any interest therein; alleged that for more than 10 years before plaintiffs’ petition was filed defendants had been in the actual, open, notorious, adverse, peaceful and continuous possession of the 120 acres and that any claim by plaintiffs thereto was barred by limitation; and prayed that title be quieted in the defendants. °

In the “allegations of error” in plaintiffs’ brief it is stated generally that the trial chancellor’s decree should have been for plaintiffs; that the decree was against the law and the evidence, and was not supported by substantial evidence. No authorities are there cited. Plaintiffs’ statement in their brief of their “Points Relied On” are but abstract propositions of law, with no attempt to apply them to the case before us and no attempt to specifically point out any claimed error relied on for reversal of the instant decree. The brief does not comply with our Rule 1.08(a)(3), but we nevertheless consider the appeal upon the merits. In the written “Argument” in their brief plaintiffs have gone far afield to discuss some matters which neither by the pleadings, the evidence, the decree nor the brief are properly before us for consideration and ruling, but we cannot separately discuss all those collateral matters in this opinion.

The plaintiffs in this case are the now living heirs of J. M. MeElvain, the testator. During the depression year of 1929 the taxes were not paid on the lands J. M. MeElvain had owned, and in 1930 the above mentioned tax suit was-filed and reduced to judgment. Under special execution all the lands were sold and conveyed by the sheriff to one B. B. Sanders. Thereafter Sanders executed various separate conveyances transferring title to those various tracts (of the original MeElvain lands) to the separate MeElvain heirs. The 120 acres in issue in the instant ease were then conveyed by Sanders to Chester M. Burnett, son of Minerva Burnett. Minerva then moved onto this 120 acres, lived thereon and farmed this 120 acres until December 7, 1937, when she, her son Chester and his wife, and others, sold and by their deed transferred this 120 acres to defendants for $5700.00.

But, in this action to determine title, Minerva (and the other MeElvain heirs) now seek to repudiate Minerva’s deed of December 7, 1937, by which Minerva; her son and others, conveyed this 120 [604]*604acres to defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.W.2d 284, 361 Mo. 597, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-kohn-mo-1951.