Shewalter v. Pirner

55 Mo. 218
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 55 Mo. 218 (Shewalter v. Pirner) 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
Shewalter v. Pirner, 55 Mo. 218 (Mo. 1874).

Opinion

Voríes, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action of ejectment, brought by the respondent against Gustave Pirner to recover the possession of a lot of lands described in the petition as follows:

Being in the. city of Lexington, Lafayette county, State of Missouri: “Beginning at a point in the west side of Cedar street in the said city, forty-six feet north of the north-east corner of block number thirty-six, as known and designated on the plat of the first addition to the town of Lexington, now on file in the recorder’s office for said county of Lafayette; and being the north-east corner of a piece of land s.old by William S. Field to Joseph Traxell, and running thence in a westerly direction, with the line of said land so sold to said Traxell, one hundred and forty-six feet to a point in a private alley left by said Field, and being the north-west corner of said lot so sold to said Traxell, thence in a northerly-direction on i line parallel with' said Cedar street thirty feet nine in[224]*224cb.es- to the section line between sections thirty-three and twenty-eight in township fifty-one of range twenty-seven, thence east with said section line one hundred and forty feet to a point in the west line of said Cedar street, thence along the said line of Cedar street twenty-nine feet and seven inches to the place of beginning.” The petition is in the usual form.

After the commencement of the suit the defendants, Jeremiah Bear and Susan Bear, were made parties defendant at their own request.

The defendants by their answers deny the allegations of the petition, except that the possession of defendant Pirner is admitted; while defendants Bear and wife charge that their co-defendant is rightfully in the-possession of the premises as their tenant. Both parties claim to derive title to the premises in controversy through and from George Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear. The plaintiff claims by virtue of a deed from George W. Shewalter and Josiah Bear and his wife to Joseph Shewalter, dated Feb. 10th, 1863; and by deed from Joseph Shewalter to Joseph ~W. Shewalter (the plaintiff), dated October the 4th 1870.

The defendants claim by virtue of a sheriff’s deed, by which the title and interest of George Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear is attempted to be conveyed to the Farmers Bank of Missouri: the land having been sold by the sheriff by virtue of two judgments rendered in the Lafayette Circuit Court, one in favor of the Merchants Bank of St. Louis and against George Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear et al., dated May 24th 1S62, for $382; the other in favor of Lee H. Warriner, and against George W. Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear, dated Nov. 27th, 1862, for $672; and executions thereon,which were in due time issued and levied on the land in controversy by the description of “a house and lot, situate on a strip of ground between the first addition and Anderson’s addition to Lexington and fronting Pine street, and north of the Turners’ Hall in 'the city of Lexington; lying and being situate in Lafayette county, Missouriand by a deed from the Far[225]*225mers Bank of Missouri to Jeremiah Bear, as trustee for Susan Bear, dated February 23rd, 1866. A trial was had before the court, a jury being waived by the parties. After the plaintiff had closed his evidence in the cause, the defendants read in evidence a deed from the Farmers Bank of Missouri to Jeremiah Bear, as trustee, for the land in controversy, dated Feb. 23rd, 1866. The defendants then offered in evidence a judgment and execution thereon, and the levy and return of the sheriff thereon, in a cause of the Merchants Bank of St. Louis against George W. Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear, elal rendered in the Lafayette Circuit Court on the 21th day of May, 1862, for $382.93.

The plaintiff objected to these records being read in evidence, because the execution was not levied on the premises in controversy. This objection being overruled he excepted»

The defendant then offered in evidence the transcript of a judgment and execution, &c., rendered in the Lafayette Circuit Court in favor of one Warriner against George Shewalter and Jeremiah Bear, rendered on the 27th Nov. 1862, for $672-This was also objected to for the same reason that is given above, and the objections overruled and exceptions saved» The defendants next offered in evidence the sheriff’s deed conveying the interest of said Bear and Shewalter in the premises in controversy, by the description in the levy aforesaid, to The Farmers Bank of Missouri by virtue of the said executions and judgments. To the introduction of this deed the plaintiff -objected, on the ground that it did not convey the land in controversy, and second, that the sale did not take place at the proper term of the court. These objections were overruled, and the deeds admitted in evidence.

The defendant then introduced several witnesses,who testified that the premises in controversy are well known, in the community and neighborhood where they lie, by the description in the levy made by the sheriff and in the sheriff’s deed, that is to say “lying and being situate in the county of Lafayette, in the State of Missouri, to-wit: also a house and lot, situated on a strip of groand between the first addition and An[226]*226derson’s addition to Lexington fronting Pine Street, and north of Turners Hall in said city of Lexington,” as it was by the description- in the petition in the cause; that the “strip” was well known by that name, being an irregular strip of ground lying between the two additions named; that said strip is crossed by streets and alleys; that the house and lot in question is on said strip, and is between Cedar Street and Pine street; that the part of said strip lying between these two streets is laid out intofourlots, that the lots are divided by an alley runniug parallel with said streets and is at an equal distance from each, leaving two lots on each side of said alley; the two lots lying east of the alley fronting on Cedar street, and those on the west fronting on Pine street; that Turners Hall is situate on the south lot that fronts on Cedar street; that the lot in controversy lies immediately north of the Turners Hall lot, and is the only lot on said strip north of Turners Hall; that the house on said lot is the only house north of Turners Hall on said strip ; that the Turners Hall lot, at the time of the sale, ■ was fenced with a tight plank fence the north fence, being the south line of the lot in controversy; that the lot in controversy at the time of the sale was fenced, the fence adjoining the north fence of the Turners Hall lot, but that the north fence of the lot in controversy included a strip, that did not belong to it, but constituted an alley on the north which was included by the fence; that no part of the lot fronted on Pine street, but the rear end of the lot was at least one hundred and fifty feet from Pine street; that Turners Hall is a public hall and well known'in the whole neighborhood ; that the lot could easily be found and designated by the description in the deed.

Witnesses on the part of the plaintiff testified, that the lot could not well be ascertained by the description in the deed, but the difficulty stated seemed to grow out of the fact, that the size of the lot was not given in the description, and that it was falsely and mistakenly stated to front on Pine street. It was also shown, that the lots on the strip referred to had always in conveyances been described by metes and bounds, [227]

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Bluebook (online)
55 Mo. 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shewalter-v-pirner-mo-1874.