State ex rel. Bernero v. McQuillin

152 S.W. 347, 246 Mo. 517, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 202
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 347 (State ex rel. Bernero v. McQuillin) 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
State ex rel. Bernero v. McQuillin, 152 S.W. 347, 246 Mo. 517, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 202 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Prohibition. Original proceeding. To our preliminary rule citing Judge McQuillin to show cause, lie made return admitting some,'and raising an issue of fact on certain other, allegations of'the petition. Relator replied to that return, raising an issue of fact on certain allegations of that return. Thereupon by stipulation, to avoid a commissioner to take proof, there is filed here an exemplification of the record entries, evidence, motions and pleas in a certain suit brought by relator to quiet title, and a petition in a certain other suit brought by relator to contest a will, to which exemplification we are referred in order to determine the.controverted issues. The suit to quiet title will be hereinafter called “A,” that to contest the will will be called “B,” for brevity and convenience of reference.

Briefly, to get our bearings at the outset, we are asked by relator to prohibit the trial of a cross-action in A, until such time as B has been determined — both A and B being pending at the same time in Judge Mc-Quillin’s division of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis.

The issues here are of a kind seeking a summary of the pleadings and situation nisi in A, and the vital facts constituting the history of that suit at the time our preliminary rule was passed and served.

[Note: There are two Louis Bemeros mentioned in the record, we will call one Louis the elder, the other (the relator, an infant) Louis the younger. The wife of Louis the elder was named Theresa.* In this opinion she will be called by her given name alone. The land in dispute in A has a long description. It is a valuable lot in the city of St. Louis and for convenience of reference will be called “X.” There is another Bernero mentioned in the record named Manuello. [524]*524He is the nephew of the elder and father of the younger Lonis and will be called by his surname alone.]

A synopsis of the history of A is this:

The last of August, 1911, Louis the younger (through his mother as curatrix) instituted A. In January, 1912, an amended petition was filed, the object and general nature of which was to determine and adjudge title to X. The amended petition, as was the original, is founded on See. 2535, R. S. 1909, formerly section 650, amended in 1909 (Laws 1909, pp. 343-4). Thereby it was 'alleged, in substance, that Louis the younger is the only child and heir of Manuello; that Manuello died in 1910; that in the year 1880 Manuello was adopted by Louis the elder and Theresa as their son; was “educated, proclaimed,-published and maintained” as their son and was, in fact, their adopted son; that Louis the elder died in 1904 testate, owning X; that his will, duly probated in 1904, by its fifth clause disposed of X by giving and devising it to his wife, Theresa, and adopted son, Manuello, in the terms following (quoting) :

. . to have and enjoy for and during the term of her natural life, and at the time of her death the same to pass to our adopted son, Manuello Bernero, if he shall survive her, to have and enjoy during his natural life, and at his decease to pass to and vest in fee in his children, if any he have, or their descendants, but in default or failure of such direct heirs, children or grandchildren him surviving, then at the time of his death the title to said realty in fee shall pass to and vest in my right heirs; if, however, my said wife shall survive said Manuello, then she, said Theresa Bernero, is hereby empowered to devise said realty as she shall see fit, or if she shall fail to make such testamentary disposition of same, then said realty, upon her death, shall vest in my right heirs, if she shall survive said Manuello; I authorize and empower mv said wife during her lifetime, and if' said Manuello [525]*525shall survive her and enter upon the enjoyment of said realty, then said Manuello, during his lifetime, to lease said realty thus bequeathed to them for life as aforesaid, successively, on such terms as they severally deem proper, each exercising such right during her or his life-tenancy, for leasehold periods not exceeding twenty “-five years each. ’ ’

Suit A is against the St. Louis Union Trust Company and divers codefendants named Longinotti, and the amended petition goes on to allege that Theresa died in July, 1911: that by reason of the will of the elder Louis, the younger Louis became owner in fee simple of, and claims a fee simple title to, X; that defendants claim some title, estate or interest to and in X, which claim is adverse and prejudicial to that of plaintiff. The prayer is as follows:

“Wherefore, plaintiff prays the court to try, ascertain and determine the estates, title and interest of the plaintiff and defendants, .of, in and to the said land and real property hereinbefore described, and by its decree to adjudge, determine, settle, quiet and define the respective rights, titles, interests and estates of plaintiff and defendants to said land and real property ; and plaintiff further prays that if the court finds that he is, the sole owner of the land and real property hereinbefore described, then an order and decree be entered of record forever barring and precluding the defendants and each of them as well as all persons claiming by, through or under said defendants, from hereafter setting up any title or claim to said real property and for all other proper orders and relief in the premises.”

To that amended petition, defendant trust company answered making certain admissions, but denying that Manuello was the adopted son of Louis the elder and Theresa, and denying that Louis the younger had any title or interest in X under the will of the elder Louis.

[526]*526In a subsequent paragraph of its answer, it undertakes to put its own construction on the fifth clause of the elder Louis’s will — averring, among other things, that by that clause Theresa had testamentary power over X, in case she survived Manuello, that she had survived him and exercised such testamentary power, and that by the eleventh clause of her duly probated will she devised X to defendant trust company in trust for its codefendants, the Longinottis, who were children of Theresa’s sister, Clotilda Longinotti. The eleventh clause of Theresa’s will is very long; and for our purposes 'need not be reproduced ipsissimis verbis. The foregoing summary will do.

The trust company’s answer concludes thus:

“"Wherefore, this defendant asks for judgment against the plaintiff herein, and prays further that the right and title in and to the real estate set out and described in plaintiff’s petition be ascertained, determined and quieted, and that by appropriate decree the title to said real estate shall be declared to be well vested in the defendant herein under and pursuant to the terms of the eleventh clause of the said will of said Theresa Bernero, deceased-; and that the plaintiff, and all persons claiming by, through or under him, be forever barred from hereafter asserting or setting up and” (sic) “title or claim to said real estate.”

Some of the Longinottis were minors and answered by guárdicm ad litem. The adults answered in a group to themselves. The answers are the same in legal effect mutatis mutandis, and, barring the cross-action or counterclaim, neither differs materially from that of their codefendant trust company.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 347, 246 Mo. 517, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bernero-v-mcquillin-mo-1912.