Sebree v. Patterson

92 Mo. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 451 (Sebree v. Patterson) 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
Sebree v. Patterson, 92 Mo. 451 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Ray, J.

This was an action of ejectment, in the Daviess circuit court, for the undivided one-half of the east half of the northeast quarter of section nineteen, township fifty-nine, range twenty-six, in said county. The petition is in the usual form, and was filed April 7, 1881, by Robert H. N. Sanders, as plaintiff, and against said Patterson, as defendant. At the ensuing June term of said court, Levi Murray and Sidney Shackelford, on their motion, were made parties defendant, and the cause ordered to proceed against all three.

In January, afterwards, the defendants filed their answer, which is to the effect following: (1) A general [454]*454denial; (2) an equitable title in defendant, Patterson, to the land in controversy; and then set up as a defence to said action, in the language following: “Defendants further answer, and for further defence state, that plaintiff ought not to be permitted to say that, on the eleventh day of March, 1881, he was entitled to the possession of the premises sued for, and that the defendant, Patterson, entered into said premises and unlawfully withholds from the plaintiff the possession thereof, to his damage, etc., because these defendants say that, in the year 1839, the land described in the petition was entered by the plaintiff and one James E. Bouldin, and that they, at about the same time, entered a large amount of other lands, in various parts of this state, all of which were paid for with the money of said Bouldin; that long after the entry of said land, to-wit, in the years A. D., 1841 and 1842, the plaintiff sold all his interest in all of said lands to said James E. Bouldin y that, by mistake of the scrivener, the numbers of said lands in controversy were omitted from said deeds then, made by plaintiff to said Bouldin for his interest in all of said lands, and that it was then and there intended,, by both the plaintiff and said Bouldin, that the deeds-then made should convey to said Bouldin all his interest in all of the lands so entered by and in the name of both plaintiff and said Bouldin; that, thereafter, to-wit, on the thirteenth day of October, 1869, said Bouldin sold and conveyed the lands in controversy, with other lands, to the defendant, Shackelford; that, on the twentieth day of December, 1872, said Shackelford sold and conveyed, by general warranty deed, the lands in controversy to defendant, Levi Murray, who, thereafter, and Long prior to the fourth day of March, 1877, sold and conveyed the same, by general warranty deed, to the defendant, Patterson ; * * * that the defendant, Patterson, is in the lawful possession of the land described in plaintiff’s petition, claiming the fee-simple title [455]*455thereto, under good and sufficient deeds of conveyance thereof.”

The answer further contained a certain “matter in estoppel,” growing out of a conversation between the original plaintiff, Sanders, and the defendant, Murray, just prior to the purchase, by the latter, from defendant, Shackelford, of the land in controversy, in which Sanders disclaimed all right or title to the land in controversy, and upon the faith of which that purchase, and the subsequent sale to defendant, Patterson, were made. The answer also set up the ten-year statute of limitations.

After the filing of said answer, the death of Sanders, ■ the original plaintiff, was suggested, and the cause revived in the name of Mary V. Sebree, and her husband, Urial Sebree, and Jennie Brown, and her husband, Gf-eo. E. Brown, who, thereafter, filed their reply to said answer, consisting of three branches: the first of which is a special denial of the new matter set up in the second branch of the answer; the second is in the nature of the twenty-year statute of limitations, and is in the following language: “Plaintiffs, by way of further reply, say that defendants ought not to be permitted to say that, in the year 1841, or 1842, or at any other time prior thereto, plaintiffs’ ancestor, the said Robert H. N. Sanders, sold all his interest in said real estate to said Bouldin, or that, by mistake of the scrivener, the numbers of the land were omitted from the deeds mentioned in defendants’ answer then made by said Sanders to said Bouldin, or that it was then and there intended by said Sanders and Bouldin to convey all the interest of said Sanders in said real estate, for that plaintiffs say that defendants’ and their grantor’s, James E. Bouldin’s, cause of action,’ if any they had on that behalf, accrued more than twenty years prior to the beginning of this suit, and plaintiffs plead said limitation in bar of defendants’ said defence to plaintiffs’ cause of action” ; [456]*456and, third, a general denial of all new matter set np in the answer.

The cause was submitted to the court upon the pleadings and the evidence. No instructions were asked or given. The court found the issues for the defendants, and thereupon adjudged they go hence, without day, and recover of the plaintiffs their costs, in this behalf expended, and that they have hereof execution. Prom this judgment, the plaintiffs, after an unsuccessful motion for a new trial, appealed to this court.

At the trial, it was admitted that Sanders, the original plaintiff, had died intestate ; that the present plaintiffs are his sole heirs at law ; that defendant, Patterson, was in possession of the land in controversy at the time of the institution of the suit, holding the same adversely to the plaintiff, under claim and color of title ; that said land was unimproved wild land, not fenced or occupied by any one, until 1873, some eight years before the commencement of this suit. It was also admitted that the land in controversy was originally entered in 1839, in the joint names of said Sanders and Bouldin, and that, afterwards, in 1843, a patent, in due form, was issued thereon, conveying the premises, jointly, to said Sanders and Bouldin, which plaintiffs read in evidence on their behalf.

The defendants, to sustain the issues on their part, thereupon offered and read in evidence a deed for said east half of the northeast quarter of section 19, township 59, range 26 (embracing the land in suit), from said Bouldin to said Shackelford, dated October 9, 1869; a like deed from said Shackelford to said Murray, dated the twentieth of December, 1872; and, also, a similar deed from said Murray to defendant, Patterson, dated March 11, 1877. The defendants, also, offered to read in evidence, over the objection of plaintiffs, a “tax deed” for said land, from the collector to Daniel Smoot, bearing date December 7,. 1866, and, in [457]*457connection therewith, a quit-claim from said Smoot to said Shackelford, to the admission of which plaintiffs objected, for the reason that said deed was void on its face. Defendants, also, over plaintiffs’ objection, offered defendant, Murray, as a witness to prove the estoppel pleaded in the answer, to whose competency as a witness the plaintiffs objected, for the reason that the original plaintiff, Sanders, being a party to said estoppel, and being then dead, said Murray, the other party thereto, was, by statute, disqualified as a witness in reference thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Mo. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sebree-v-patterson-mo-1887.