Rollins v. McIntire

87 Mo. 496
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 Mo. 496 (Rollins v. McIntire) 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
Rollins v. McIntire, 87 Mo. 496 (Mo. 1885).

Opinion

Ray, J.

The petition in this case contains two counts ; the first of which seeks to divest the defendant of .the'legal title to block seven, in the county’s addition to the town of Mexico, in Audrain county, Missouri, [502]*502and vest the same in the plaintiff, on the ground that the defendant took the deed under which he claims and holds the property in question, with full notice and knowledge of the prior rights and equities of the plaintiff thereto. To this count there is, also, a prayer for general relief. The second count is in the nature of an action of ejectment, and is in the usual form. The answer to both counts is a general denial. There was a separate-trial on each of these counts ; that on the first count, or equity branch of the case, was had before the court at the October term, 1881, and resulted in a general finding for the defendant, and judgment accordingly ; that on the count in ejectment was afterwards had before a jury, in February, 18S2, and resulted in a verdict'for the defendant and judgment accordingly. After-unsuccessful motions for new trials, the plaintiff appealed, the case to this court.

It may be premised that, at both trials, a large mass of testimony, documentary and oral, -was introduced, which need not here be set out in detail. It may be added, also, that most of this testimony was introduced by one party or the other, on the trial of both counts. It may be remarked, also, that it is objected by defendant, that the evidence fails to identify the block in question *; or to show that the county addition to the-town of Mexico had been surveyed, and the plat or map thereof filed or deposited in the recorder’s office in said county, prior to the sale of said block in 1889, hereafter-mentioned. This objection, however, is, we think, not well taken. Indeed, it is only hypothetically suggested . in defendant’s brief, which, we think, virtually concedes the point. At all events, it clearly appears from the various orders of the county court, and other documentary evidence from the same source, that said survey, in point of fact, had been made, and a map or plat thereof filed or deposited in the recorder’s office, prior to said sale, where it remained for many years. It is true, this map [503]*503or plat appears never to have been acknowledged or recorded, as it should have been, but was seen and kept in the office for many years, although lost or not to be found in the office, a.t the date of these trials. J. P. tilark, who was circuit clerk and ex-officio recorder of said county in 1845, and for some years thereafter, testifies that he frequently saw the old plat of the county addition in the office, among its files. With these remarks we pass that objection, without further notice, as being-unsupported by the evidence and without merit.

As to the first count, or equity branch of the case, there seems to be no dispute -as to the other facts touching the controlling question in the case, which may be summarized as follows: In 1889, as shown by the record, one James E. Fenton bought said block at the county commissioner’s sale, and paid for the same then, or prior to 1847, but got no deed for the same at the time. The record also shows, as above stated, that the plat of said addition to said town had never been acknowledged or recorded, as required by the statute then in force, but it nowhere appears that said Fenton had any notice of that fact. Both parties claim title under this sale to Fenton, as follows: In 1840, a judgment was duly rendered in the Audrain circuit court against said Fenton and others, on which, in 1855, an execution was issued and levied upon said block, as the property of Fenton, and at the sale thereof, had in October, 1855, one William P. Harrison, became the purchaser and received a sheriff’s deed therefor, which was duly recorded, in said county, in May, 1856.

The plaintiff; derives his title under said Harrison, by proper conveyance and judicial proceedings, which were completed in 1871; whereupon he took actual possession thereof, and proceeded to enclose the same with a substantial fence at a cost of some fifty dollars, which remained on the premises until some time in [504]*504the year 1874 or 1875, when the fence was removed by .divers trespassers, at different times, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff. It also appears that plaintiff, in compliance with an order of the city authorities, also, built a plank walk on one side of said block and that he paid one-half of the taxes on said block, from the time of Harrison’s purchase in 1855 to 1871 ; after which he paid all the taxes on the block, down to the time of the trial. In June, 1856, after Harrison had made his said purchase at sheriff’s sale and received his deed therefor, and the record thereof, the county of Audrain, by its commissioner, made a deed to said Penton by which it conveyed said block and thereby quit-claimed to him all its rights to the same. This deed, it appears, was made to said Penton, solely on account of his said purchase at said commissioner’s sale in 1839. After this, in June, 1859, said James E. Penton conveyed said block by quit-claim. deed to his son, James D. Fenton, which was also duly recorded. After that, some time about 1877, the defendant took possession of said block, claiming to have a deed therefor from said James. D. Penton of that date. This deed, however, as the record shows, when introduced in evidence on the trial of the second or ejectment count, bore date November 11, 1881, and had never been recorded.

On this state of the record two questions ' arise, which are duly presented and argued by counsel for the respective parties. It is claimed for appellant, Rollins, that his vendor, Harrison, by said purchase at sheriff’s sale became the owner of the equitable title to said block, and as such entitled to demand and have from said county a conveyance of the fee therefor, and that said James E. Fenton and James X_). Penton and this defendant afterwards accepted said deeds, under which they claim with knowledge of plaintiff’s equitable right to the premises. Digman v. McCollum, 47 Mo. 372.

For the defendant it is insisted, (1) That at the [505]*505date of said Harrison’s purchase at sheriff’s sale, said James E. Fenton had no valid or vendible interest in said block, by reason of his said purchase thereof in 1839. (2) That if he had such interest, said execution sheriff’s sale and deed thereunder were invalid and inoperative to pass and transfer the same to said Harrison, and that said plaintiff has acquired no interest therein, equitable or otherwise, and is not entitled to the relief asked for. In the case of Downing v. Ringer, 7 Mo. 585, ‘when a person sold a town lot before a plat of the town was made out, acknowledgéd and deposited in the recorder’s office, as prescribed by the third section of the act concerning towns, the contract was held absolutely void. That case was a suit on a promissory note given for the purchase money for said lot, and where no plat had thus been made out, acknowledged and recorded, as required by statute. In the case of Mason v. Pitt, 21 Mo. 391, it was said: “ The failure of the proprietor of a town to record a plat of it will not prevent the title from passing to a purchaser. The statute imposes no penalty on the vendee.” This case was an action of ejectment for lot forty-eight in the town of Winston, in which the plaintiff relied upon and offered a deed for said lot from the proprietors of said town, the plat of which had not been recorded, and the court, in speaking of the Downing case, 7 Mo. 585, use this language: “The case of Downing v.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Mo. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-mcintire-mo-1885.