Southwest Land & Orchard Co. v. Barnett

144 S.W. 780, 240 Mo. 370, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 29, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 780 (Southwest Land & Orchard Co. v. Barnett) 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
Southwest Land & Orchard Co. v. Barnett, 144 S.W. 780, 240 Mo. 370, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 137 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

GRAVES, P. J.

Plaintiff, a non-resident corporation doing business in this State, brought this action under our old section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, to have its title to the southwest quarter of section thirty-three,' in township twenty-six, north of range four east, in Butler county, Missouri, ascertained and determined.

The petition is in usual form. It averred that David M. Barnett and Dudley M. Keen, if living, claimed some interest in the land above described., and if dead, that their unknown heirs and devisees claimed some interest therein. Later the following stipulation was filed in said cause:

[372]*372“It is hereby stipulated and agreed that the following named persons may be made parties defendant in the above entitled cause, and that their answer to plaintiff’s petition herein filed may be made when this cause is set for trial, and that no judgment shall be rendered against them for failure to answer before trial of said cause. Said parties are as follows: Emma Boos, Agnes Applegate, Harvey Wallace Applegate, Dudley Applegate, Charles H. Applegate and John Applegate. . . .
“Clark & Yount,
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
“J. W. Chilton,
Attorney for Defendant. ’y

The above named parties filed their answer in which they (1) denied the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, and (2) set up their ownership in fee to said lands. Their answer then thus concludes:

“Wherefore defendants pray the court to try, ascertain and determine and by its judgment and decree to define, settle and adjudge the title of the parties, plaintiff and defendant respectively, in and to said real estate; and if the court shall adjudge that defendants are the owners of the said land, then that the plaintiff be forever barred and precluded from setting up or mailing claim of title thereto.”

The record discloses no reply, but the trial proceeded as if one had been filed, and for this reason the case stands here as if a reply of general denial had been filed.

By the judgment and decree nisi the plaintiff was found to have the title to'said lands as “the sole legal and equitable owner” thereof, and that defendants had no interest therein. From this decree defendants have appealed.

Doing to the evidence and things preserved in the bill of exceptions, it appears that it was first agreed that the common source of title was Dudley M. Keen.

[373]*373Plaintiff to sustain the issues upon its part offered a tax deed dated in 1883, executed by the sheriff of Butler county, from which it appears that the sheriff, under a judgment of a justice of the peace, levied upon and sold to J. B. White lands thus described in said deed: “N. E. 14 and N. % of S. E. % and N. W. VL of S. W. Vl of Sec. Eleven (11); Township Twenty-five (25), Range Four (4) East.”

Objections were made to the introduction of this d.eed. These objections were lodged against the right of a justice of the peace by its judgment to enforce the State’s lien for taxes, and the validity of the deed made under such a judgment. No objections were made to the effect that the deed did not describe the lands set out in the petition. The deed was admitted in evidence. It was then further admitted that the plaintiff had acquired whatever right, if any, that White had in and to the land in dispute. With this the plaintiff closed.

The following stipulation was then made in behalf of defendants:

“It was admitted by plaintiff that defendants answering in this cause, are the grantees of the heirs of Dudley M. Keen, and that said defendants have whatever title, if any, the said Dudley M. Keen died seized of, and that said defendants have the title to the land in controversy, unless same has been divested out of them by virtue of the sale of said land for taxes, as •evidenced by the sheriff’s deed hereinbefore introduced in evidence by the plaintiff. ’ ’

The defendants thereupon rested their case. For the plaintiff the court gave the following declaration of law:

“The court declares the law to be that the sheriff’s deed read in evidence on the part of the plaintiff, which deed was executed by the sheriff of Butler county, Missouri, on March 8th, 1883, and recorded in Book.S, page 46, of the Deed Records of Butler county, [374]*374was sufficient to pass the title to the land in controversy, to J. B. White, the grantee in said deed, whose title passed by mesne conveyances to the plaintiff, and the finding of the court should be for the plaintiff vesting in it the title to the land in controversy.”

For the defendants the court gave a declaration of law thus worded:

“The court declares the law to be that the title to the land in controversy is vested in the defendants, Emma Boos, Agnes Applegate, Harvey Wallace Applegate, Dudley Applegate, Charles H. Applegate and John Applegate, unless the title to said land passed to plaintiff by virtue of the sheriff’s deed introduced in evidence by the plaintiff.”

But the court refused to give for the defendants the following:

“The court declares the law to be that the judgment upon which the sheriff’s deed for taxes under which plaintiff claims title to the land in controversy, is void, for the reason that the justice of the peace rendering said judgment had no jurisdiction of. the subject-matter of the suit, that the deed made in pursuance of said judgment is void and confers n$ title on plaintiff.”

Judgment went as above set out. The motion for new trial omitting unnecessary parts thus challenges the action of the trial court:

“1st. The court erred in admitting in evidence the sheriff’s deed offered by plaintiff, upon which plaintiff’s title is founded.
“2nd. The court erred in giving plaintiff’s declaration of law No. 1.
“3rd. The court erred in refusing defendants’ declaration of law No. 2.
“4th. The findings of the court are against the evidence and the weight thereof.
“5th. The judgment of the court is against the law.”

[375]*375Such is the record in the case. The contentions, here are (1) that the sheriff’s deed did not describe the property mentioned in the petition, and (2) that even if it did so describe it the deed is void because based upon a judgment of a justice of the peace.

I. The land described in the petition is forty acres in section thirty-three, in township twenty-six,, of range four. The land described in the deed is in section eleven in township twenty-five, range four. The judgment describes the land as in the deed and not as in plaintiff’s petition. It must be noticed at a glance that the two descriptions do not refer to the same land. The two tracts are not only in different townships, but in different sections. This point was not made when the deed was offered in evidence, but the motion for new trial called the court’s attention to the fact that its findings were against the evidence, and that the court had erred in admitting the deed in evidence. The deed offered and admitted did not tend to support the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 780, 240 Mo. 370, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-land-orchard-co-v-barnett-mo-1912.