State ex rel. Marrs v. Wessell

141 S.W. 883, 237 Mo. 593, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 29, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 883 (State ex rel. Marrs v. Wessell) 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. Marrs v. Wessell, 141 S.W. 883, 237 Mo. 593, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 281 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

BROWN, C.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Newton Circuit Court setting aside on motion of the defendant Pierce, the owner of the land in question, its judgment in the principal suit enforcing the lien of the State for taxes of 1902 and 1903 against forty acres of land in that county, being the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 11, township 26 of range 29, recalling a special execution issued thereon, and setting aside a sale made under said, execution and the sheriff’s deed made pursuant thereto.

The execution was issued by the clerk October 31, 1905; the sale was made during the same term on December 18, 1905, and the deed was executed and acknowledged during the same term and on December 21st. Mr. Horace Ruark, attorney for the tax collector, who instituted and had charge of the suit, was the purchaser at the execution sale for $95. On January 5, 1906, Mr. Ruark conveyed the land by warranty deed to the appellant Kenney for $350'. ' The execution was returnable at the April term, 1906, and was returned at that term with a report of sale. At the same term, and on June 4, 1906, this motion was filed by the defendant Pierce.

The petition, which was signed by Mr. Ruark, states that the defendants “R. J. Wessell and Samuel W. Pierce are nonresidents of the State of Missouri, [598]*598so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon them in this State,” and publication was made by order of the clerk in vacation. The fact is that both were residents of the State of Missouri and well known in the vicinity of the land. Mr. Pierce, who had lived in Monett, ten miles from the land, for seventeen years, wás the sole owner, and the deeds by which he acquired it, which were, at the time the suit was instituted, on record in Newton county, stated correctly his residence.

Mr. Ruark stated in his testimony as his reason for not ascertaining the residence of the tax debtor: “A lawyer couldn’t go and examine the records of this little tax suit where his fee will not average over $1.50 apiece.” His testimony also shows that he had the assistance of an abstracter in the performance of this duty.

The motion asks the court to set aside the tax judgment, to recall the execution issued thereon and quash the same, and to set aside the sale and sheriff’s deed to Ruark thereunder, and the deed from Ruark to Kenney, and states as grounds for such action the matters set forth above and many other things which we do not consider it necessary in deciding this case to mention. It also contains the following paragraph:

“Defendant further shows that part of the money paid by said Ruark for said land is yet in the hands of the sheriff, the balance having been paid on the costs of this case. That this defendant is willing and now offers to pay said Ruark or his grantee, Kenney, any costs or taxes or expenses paid out in this case, or-to refund to them or either of them, the amount bid and paid for said land, and asks this court to ascertain and determine what amount is justly due said parties, or either of them, and that defendant be allowed to pay the same to them, or into court for them, on this court setting aside the sale herein and the said sheriff’s deed to Ruark and his deed to Kenney.”

[599]*599It was called for trial on July 23, 1906, that being the 21st day of the April term, 1906, of said Newton Circuit Court, and the following entry was then made: “Now, on this day, the motion to set aside the judgment and sale of land and sheriff’s deed thereunder, heretofore filed in this case on the 4th day of June, 1906, coming on to be heard, and the plaintiff being present in person and by his attorney, Ruark,- who appears for himself also, and his grantee, E. S. Kenney, being present in person and by his attorney O. L. Cravens, and the defendant being present in person and by his attorney J. T. Sturgis, and the parties announce ready for trial but the court stenographer not being present, and the court not being able to hear and deter • mine said motion at this term of court, the same it by the court, with the consent of the parties, continued for further hearing at the October term of this court.”

At the October term, 1906-, Kenney filed his answer to the motion, and the matter proceeded to trial, evidence being introduced by the parties in which the facts we have here stated were practically admitted; and the court rendered its judgment granting to Pierce all the relief asked in his motion; that portion of the judgment involved in the determination of this appeal being as follows:

“The court further finds that of the purchase money received by the sheriff in the sale of said land there is yet in his hands, after paying all costs and taxes in the original suit herein, the sum of $32.31, which, with the consent of said sheriff, is ordered and is now paid into the hands of the clerk of this court for the use and benefit of said Ruark and Kenney, and the defendant is ordered to deposit with the clerk the sum of $62.69 for said parties, which is accordingly done. It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that said motion of defendant Pierce be in all things sustained, that the judgment rendered in this cause at the October term, 1905, be set aside and for [600]*600naught held. That the sale of the land mentioned to Horace Ruark undér execution under said judgment he set aside and annulled and the execution quashed and the deed to said Ruark as purchaser under said sale and judgment, and which is of record in book 26 at page 199 of Newton county land records, and the deed from said Ruark to E. S. Kenney, of record in book 68, at page 469', each purporting to convey said land, be and the same are hereby set aside and for naught held, and that the- defendant Pierce be adjudged to pay the costs accruing on this motion and that execution issue therefor.”

Mr. Ruark stated in his testimony at the trial of the motion that at the time of the sheriff’s sale there was a good crowd present, in which was one Horatio Sturgis; that some one spoke about the name of Mr. Wessell, and that Sturgis said that he lived or did live in Pierce City or Monett. The witness thought nothing was said about Pierce. He did not know at the time but what the title was in and had been in Pierce and Wessell jointly. After he had bought the land at the sale Mr. Marrs, the collector, came to him and said he would like to go in on it. The witness told him all right and then spoke to him about what Mr. Sturgis had said. Mr. Marrs did not go in on it.

I. It is a doctrine that has constantly received the sanction of this court that “ during the whole of the term in which any judicial act is done, the proceedings are considered to continue in fieri, and even after a judgment has been rendered the record remains in the breast of the judges of the court and is therefore subject to amendment or alteration as they may direct.” [Crawford v. Railroad, 171 Mo. l. c. 74, and cases cited.] It is one of the common law powers which, under our system of jurisprudence, inheres in the constitution of every court of record, and of which it can only be deprived by statutory enactment. [Anil [601]*601v. St. Louis Trust Company, 149 Mo. l. c.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 883, 237 Mo. 593, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-marrs-v-wessell-mo-1911.