Stevenson v. Stearns

29 S.W.2d 116, 325 Mo. 646, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 616
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 116 (Stevenson v. Stearns) 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
Stevenson v. Stearns, 29 S.W.2d 116, 325 Mo. 646, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 616 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*650 WALKER, J.-

This is a suit to quiet title to certain land in Linn County, described as follows:

‘ ‘ The south half of the southwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the north half of the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter, all in Section 8, Township 57, Range 21.”

This land was owned in his lifetime by Marion A. Stearns, who is the common source of title, and who died testate, January 1, 1910. This suit was brought in Linn County and was taken on a change of venue to Macon County, where it was tried, resulting in a decree in favor of the plaintiff, from which the individual defendants have appealed.

The plaintiff claims to be owner in fee simple of the land described. Other than the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, the Phoenix Trust Company and Arthur D. Campbell, the defendants are the widow of Marion A. Stearns, deceased, his children and their spouses and his grandchildren. Certain of these defendants claim that the plaintiff’s title is limited to a life estate; and that they are the fee simple owners' of the land. The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company is the owner of a note, secured by a deed of trust on the land, executed by persons through whom the plaintiff claims title before he acquired the same. The Phoenix Trust Company was the owner of a note secured by a deed of trust subject to the deed held by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Arthur D. Campbell is the trustee in the deed of trust securing the note.

The decree rendered by the trial court established the plaintiff’s title, subject to the note secured by the deed of trust of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company; that the note held by the Phoenix Trust Company had been paid and that Arthur D. Campbell had no interest in the proceeding, and that the defendants, other than as stated, had no right, title or interest in the land or a lien thereon or a demand thereto. A construction of the will of Marion A. Stearns is necessary to a determination of the issues in this case. The portions of said will necessary to said construction are as follows:

Clause Three: “I give and devise to my daughter Julia, wife of D. L. Hinton, the South half of the Southwest quarter of Section 8, Township 57, Range 21, in Linn County, Missouri.

*651 “To have and to hold the same as her sole and separate property, freed from all debts and obligations of her present husband, or any future husband.”

Clause Five: “I give and devise to my daughter, Agnes Stearns, who is now single, the Southwest quarter of the Southeast quarter, and the North half of the Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter of Section 8, Township 57, Range 21, in Linn County, Missouri, subject to the following conditions:

“That my wife, Anna B. Stearns, shall have control of said land during her life and shall give to Agnes a' home so long as she remains single.”

Clause Six: “In the event of the death of my said daughters or any of them, leaving child or children of any lawful marriage or descendants of such child or children living at the time of the death of the daughter, then in that event the lands and estate herein given to them respectively, so dying, shall pass to and vest in fee in such child or children, or the descendants of such child or children then living; but should any of my daughters die, leaving no child or children or descendants of a child or children then living, the estate herein given to them respectively shall pass to and vest in my surviving children or their descendants then living, share and share alike. My intention is that in the meaning and construction of this will the question of vested and contingent remainders shall never arise or in any manner be considered.”

The widow and all of the children survived the testator. Agnes I. Hoover, the devisee named in the Fifth clause of the will, after the death of the testator, intermarried with -one W. C. Hoover. On March 11, 1915, Julia A. Hinton, devisee under the Third clause of the will, and her husband, D. L. Hinton, made and executed a warranty deed to Agnes I. Hoover and W. C. Hoover, conveying to them the ' South half of the Southwest quarter of Sec. 8, Township 57, Range 21, Linn County, the same being the land devised to said Julia under the Third clause of the will.

On the same day Anna B. Stearns, the widow of the testator, to whom had been devised a life estate in the Southwest quarter of the Southeast quarter and the North half of the Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter, Sec. 8, Township 57, Range 21, Linn County, with remainder over to Agnes I. Hoover, nee Stearns, conveyed by quitclaim deed the above described land to Agnes I. Hoover and her husband, W. C. Hoover. Upon the execution of these deeds Agnes I. and her husband, W. C. Hoover, took possession of the lands described and continued therein until the sale of the same under the deed of trust hereinafter set out.

On February 28, 1921, Agnes I. and W. C. Hoover made and executed to Arthur D. Campbell, trustee for’ the Phoenix Trust Company, a deed of trust on said land to secure the payment of a note for $8,000, executed by them to said Trust Company.

*652 On March 20, 1921, the said Trust Company assigned the note for $8,000 to the defendant, the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, which now holds the same.

Subsequently, on the 10th of February, 1922, Agnes I. Hoover and W. C. Hoover, her husband, to secure the payment of a note made by them for $2250, made and executed a deed of trust to one Fruin, trustee for A. E. Young, upon the south half of the southwest quarter and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the north half of the southeast quai-ter of the southeast quarter of Section 8, Township 57, Range 21, Linn County, the same being the land devised in Clauses Three and Five of the testator’s will. Thereafter, default having been made in the payment of the note for $2250, the trustee, under the terms of the deed of trust, proceeded to and did sell the same. At that sale the plaintiff, F. E. Stevenson became the purchaser and a trustee’s deed was made conveying said land to him. He thereupon took- possession' of said land and has since been in the sole possession of it claiming the same as the owner.

The six assignments of error made by the appellants may be epitomized as challenging the effect the Sixth clause of the will has upon the Third and Fifth clauses of the same.

I. It is true that the hallmark of judicial interpretation in ascertaining the meaning of a will is the intention of the testator, expressed in clear and unequivocal terms. [Sec. 555, R. S. 1919; Hannibal Tr. Co. v. Elzea, 315 Mo. l. c. 486; Schee v. Boone, 295 Mo. l. c. 221.] Equally elementary and of like force in construing a will is the rule that the entire instrument must be considered as a whole. [Sorenson v. Booram, 317 Mo. 516, 297 S. W. 70] Snow v. Ferril, 8 S. W. (2d) 1008.]

Standing alone, there is nothing in either clause Three or Five to indicate that the purpose of the testator was to limit the tenures of Julia and Agnes to life estates in the lands devised.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W.2d 116, 325 Mo. 646, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-stearns-mo-1930.