Snell v. Harrison

32 S.W. 37, 131 Mo. 495, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 37 (Snell v. Harrison) 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
Snell v. Harrison, 32 S.W. 37, 131 Mo. 495, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 96 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Bbace, C. J.

This is an action in partition by the devisees and heirs at law of John Snell, deceased, against Brunetta Harrison and Q-eorge W. Harrison, her husband, and the administrator of Harvey Harrison, deceased, in which the plaintiffs obtained judgment and order of sale, and the defendants appeal.

[498]*498The land sought to be divided is one hundred and sixty acres situate in section 13, township 45, range 24, in said county, particularly described in the petition, in which it is alleged that the plaintiff, John R. Snell, acquired the legal -title to the shares therein claimed by him and his coplaintiffs, as executor of the estate of the said John Snell, deceased, and that he holds the same as tenant in common with the said Brunetta, in trust, for the benefit of said estate, and of the devisees of said testator.

I. This land has been in litigation for nearly twenty years, in the course of which time two of the suits have reached this court and are reported, the first in 83 Mo. 651, and the other in 104 Mo. .158, where a full statement and history of the transactions of the parties may be found. This last suit was ejectment by John R. Snell against the Harrisons, in which the defendants set up their title and asked for equitable relief, and in which the respective rights and interests of the parties were finally adjudicated and settled, this court holding that the plaintiff Snell was entitled to recover the undivided seven tenths of the south eighty acres of said tract, and that Brunetta Harrison was entitled to the other undivided three tenths of said south eighty, and that said plaintiff Snell was entitled to the undivided seven thirtieths and the said Brunetta Harrison to the undivided twenty-three thirtieths of the north eighty of said tract, and remanding the cause to the circuit court with directions to enter judgment accordingly, after taking an account of the rents and profits.

Under this mandate, on the eighteenth of September, 1891, final judgment was rendered in the circuit court in favor of the said plaintiff John R. Snell for the recovery of his said interest in said real estate and for $1,650, the rents and profits thereof from June 1, [499]*4991880, “and that he have a writ of restitution for said real estate and execution for said sums of money found as rents and profits and for costs.” Afterward, to wit, on the sixth day of August, 1892, this suit was instituted in the circuit court of Johnson county in which the court found the respective rights and interests of the parties to be as declared by this court in its decision aforesaid, and further found that the said undivided three tenths of the said Brunetta Harrison in the south eighty was subject to a mortgage in favor of the estate of Harvey Harrison, amounting to the sum of $607.28 and interest; that the said Brunetta has to the exclusion of the plaintiffs received all rents and profits from all of said real estate amounting to the sum of $1,364; that plaintiffs are entitled to partition of the premises, and that the same is not susceptible of division in kind without great prejudice to the interest of the parties, and decreed that said real estate be sold and the proceeds be distributed as follows:

‘First. To the payment of costs and expenses of this proceeding. Second. That seven tenths (7-10) ot the proceeds arising from the sale of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter and seven thirtieths (7-30) of the proceeds arising from the sale of the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter, all in said section 13, aforesaid, be paid to plaintiffs to be divided among them according to their interests as set forth in the petition. Third. That out of three tenths (3-10) of the proceeds arising from the sale of the said southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of said section 13, there be paid to J. W. Harrison, administrator of the estate of Harvey Harrison, said mortgage debt, to wit, the sum of $607.28 with interest thereon at ten per cent from the fifth day of April, [500]*5001893, if three tenths (3-10) of the proceeds arising from the sale of the two last described forties be sufficient to pay the same. Fourth. That out of the remaining proceeds of the sale of Brunetta Harrison’s interest in all said lands be paid the plaintiffs the sum of $1,364, the rents aforesaid, which is hereby declared to be a lien and charge upon the interest of said Brunetta Harrison. That the balance of the proceeds of such sale, after paying and satisfying the disbursements and distributive shares of plaintiffs, hereinbefore set out, be paid to Brunetta Harrison.”

The defendant Brunetta Harrison, in her answer, denied plaintiff’s ownership and tenancy in common with her of the premises sought to be divided, and pleaded adverse possession for more than ten years, and now insists that her plea ought to have been sustained, and the refusal of the circuit court to do so presents the controlling question in the case.

The undisputed facts are that the said Brunetta Harrison and her husband' have been in the actual and exclusive possession of the premises ever since the plaintiff trustee acquired title in 1878, claiming title thereto under the several fraudulent conveyances described in, and set aside and annulled in, the foregoing suits in pursuance of the judgment of this court, and the plaintiff John R. Snell has been continually striving through the courts to have these conveyances set aside and the true state of the title disclosed, and to obtain for the estate of his father whatever interest therein he might be entitled to. These efforts culminated in the final judgment of September 18, 1891, rendered in pursuance of the mandate of this court, by which for the first time, the respective rights and interests of the parties were finally and definitely ascertained and settled, and the right of the said plain[501]*501tiff to be put in possession of bis undivided share in the premises established.

It seems that the writ of restitution awarded in that judgment was notin fact issued or executed, but instead this proceeding in partition was instituted as hereinbefore stated within less than a year from the date of that judgment, to have said plaintiff’s share thus ascertained set off to them. The suit in which the judgment in ejectment was rendered was commenced on the twenty-secoud day of May, 1885, and prosecuted uninterruptedly to judgment, and the only ground upon which it can be held that the defendant’s possession was not interrupted thereby, so as to prevent the running of the statute of limitations in their favor is the technical one, that under and by virtue of that judgment the plaintiff was not put in actual possession of the premises before beginning the' present action in partition, and counsel insist that we must so hold, on the authority of Mabary v. Dollarhide, 98 Mo. 198.

The point ruled in that case was “that the mere fact that the defendants in an ejectment suit dismissed their appeal after judgment against them, does not amount to an abandonment of all adverse claims to the land;” in reaching which conclusion the learned judge who wrote the opinion deemed it necessary to inquire “whether a judgment in ejectment, not followed up by a writ, or by taking possession under it, will break the adverse possession of those against whom it is rendered” — cited two cases from which an affirmative answer might be drawn, viz. :

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 37, 131 Mo. 495, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snell-v-harrison-mo-1895.