Rumsey v. Otis

34 S.W. 551, 133 Mo. 85, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 551 (Rumsey v. Otis) 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
Rumsey v. Otis, 34 S.W. 551, 133 Mo. 85, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 117 (Mo. 1896).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

Less than three acres of land of the yearly rental value of $1.50 an acre is the bone of this contention. Plaintiff sues her brother, the defendant in ejectment, for an undivided one seventh of the south half of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 30, township 66, range 34, Nodaway county.

In 1864, Thomas Stringer, living in Illinois, owned this land in Nodaway county, Missouri. Merrill Otis and Tama Otis were the father and mother of plaintiff Sarah Rumsey. Merrill Otis and his wife and children were nonresidents. Edward Otis, a brother of Merrill Otis, lived in Nodaway county. Benjamin Slaughter was the resident agent in Nodaway county of Thomas Stringer.

In October, 1864, Edward Otis purchased of Stringer, through his agent Slaughter, the tract of which the land in controversy was a part for his brother [90]*90Merrill Otis. When the deed came from Illinois it contained the name of Tama Otis, the wife of Merrill Otis, as grantee. The money was paid and the deed was delivered to Edward Otis. This deed was dated October 24, 1864, and was not recorded until April 18, 1884. Within three months Merrill Otis and his wife moved upon the land. Tama Otis died in 1877 intestate, and Merrill Otis died testate in 1889. Edward Otis and Stringer had also been dead for many years at the time of the trial.

It stands admitted that Reisin Otis, Sarah Ann Rumsey, the plaintiff, George Otis, Newton Otis, Absalom Otis, Mary F. Collins, and Edward Otis are the children and sole heirs at law of both Tama and Merrill Otis, deceased.

■ In 1879 and 1880 Merrill Otis conveyed to each of his said children an eighty acre tract of land and the defendant received as a part of his eighty the twenty acres in controversy here. The deed from Merrill Otis to defendant was a general warranty deed of date October 15, 1880. Plaintiff Sarah A. Rumsey also received a warranty deed from her father to eighty acres.

The evidence tended to prove that when Slaughter sent the memorandum to Stringer to make the deed he inclosed a slip directing how it should be made,' and when it came with Tama Otis’ name as grantee he called the attention of Edward Otis to it as a mistake and Edward merely said, “That’s all right.” Merrill Otis lived on the land and claimed it as his own until his wife’s death and after her death until he conveyed it to his children. None of- his children knew their mother’s name was in the deed.

That Merrill Otis paid for the land there can hardly be a doubt, nor that he always claimed it until he conveyed it. After the death of both Tama and Merrill Otis and after his estate had been finally settled [91]*91the plaintiff commenced this action as the heir of her mother to one seventh. When the deed from Stringer to Tama Otis was recorded it bore evidence of having been changed. The name of Tama had apparently-been erased and that of Merrill inserted in lieu thereof, and being over twenty years old it was held by the recorder of deeds.

The plaintiff’s claim of title is based upon the assumption that the deed was delivered to her mother, whereas the trial court found there had never been a delivery of the deed to her mother, either actual or constructive.

The declarations of law asked by plaintiff and modified by the court indicate alike the claim of plaintiff and the view of the court. They are as follows:

The plaintiff requested the court to give the following declaration of law:

“No. 1. If the court finds from the evidence that one Thomas Stringer was the owner of the land in controversy, and that he, through his agent, Slaughter, sold the same to Merrill Otis, and that Merrill Otis, either by himself or by instructions to his agent, had the name of Tama Otis, his wife, inserted in the deed from Stringer as grantee, and the said name of Tama Otis was inserted in said deed as grantee, and said deed was by the agent of said Stringer delivered to the agent of Merrill Otis with intent to pass title to said land and the purchase money therefor was then paid to the agent of said grantor — then and in that case there was a delivery of the deed and the title passed to said Tama Otis and the finding should be for plaintiff.”

The court refused to give this declaration as prayed, but gave it after modifying it by words set out in parentheses as follows:

[92]*92“No. 1. If the court finds from the evidence that one Thomas Stringer was the owner of the land in controversy and that he, through his agent, Slaughter, sold the same to Merrill Otis and that Merrill Otis either by himself or by instructions to his agent had the name of Tama Otis, his wife, inserted in the deed from Stringer as grantee and the said name of Tama Otis was inserted in said deed as grantee, and said deed was by the agent of said Stringer delivered to the agent of Merrill Otis with intent (of Merrill Otis) to pass title to said land (to said Tama as a settlement, gift, or present to her) and the purchase money therefor was then paid to the agent of said grantor — then and in that case there was a delivery of the deed and the title passed to said Tama Otis, and the finding should be for plaintiff.”

To the action of the court in refusing to give said declaration as prayed, and to the giving it as modified, the plaintiffs at the time excepted.

The plaintiff further prayed the court to declare the law as follows:

“No. 2. • If the court finds from the evidence that at the time of the purchase of the land in controversy from Stringer by Merrill Otis, said Merrill Otis was heavily in debt or had a large judgment against him, and to avoid having to pay the same or for the purpose of defeating his creditors in the collection of the debt he had the same deeded to his wife, Tama Otis, then and in that case the title to said land would pass to said Tama Otis from the time of delivery of said deed by the agent of Stringer notwithstanding the deed may not have been actually delivered to Tama Otis, but held by Merrill Otis.”

The court refused to give said declaration as prayed, but gave it after its being modified by inserting words contained in parentheses as follows:

[93]*93. “No. 2. If the court finds from the evidence that at the time of the purchase of the land in controversy from Stringer by Merrill Otis said Merrill Otis was heavily in debt or had a large judgment against him and to avoid having to pay the same or for the purpose of defeating his cr¿ditors in the collection of the debt he had the same deeded to his wife, Tama Otis (and the deed delivered to any one for her, with the consent of Merrill Otis), then and in that case the title to said land would pass to said Tama Otis from the time of delivery of said deed by the agent of Stringer, notwithstanding the deed may not have been actually delivered to Tama Otis, but held by Merrill Otis.”

To the action of the court in refusing to give instruction number 2 as prayed, and in giving it as modified, the plaintiff at the time excepted.

The plaintiff further prayed the court to instruct and declare the law as follows:

“No. 3.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 551, 133 Mo. 85, 1896 Mo. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rumsey-v-otis-mo-1896.