Stewart v. Miles

65 S.W. 754, 166 Mo. 174, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 321
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 754 (Stewart v. Miles) 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
Stewart v. Miles, 65 S.W. 754, 166 Mo. 174, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 321 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

SHERWOOD, P. J.

Forcible entry and detainer brought by Van R. Stewart against Ben. Miles, before a justice of the peace, and taken by appeal by defendant to the circuit court, and from thence by him by appeal to the Court of Appeals, from which latter tribunal it has been transferred to this court.

George Magruder had bought the bcus in quo, a farm, and received a conveyance therefor, subject, however, to a deed of trust. After such purchase, he rented to Van R. Stewart, plaintiff, the premises; this was in August, 1896, and the terms of the parol lease were such that it was to continue until March, 1898. It seems to have been the ordinary farm lease, where the rent is paid in Idnd. As soon as rented, Van R. Stewart moved on to the rented premises, occupying, at first, a small house, and later on, in about six weeks, he moved into a larger house on the premises, then recently vacated by Magruder, his landlord. In the fall of 1896, a sale occurred under the deed of trust, at which one Dewey bought, and supposably received a deed at the time of purchase. As the deed of trust antedated Magruder’s acquisition of the land, of course, when the sale under that deed occurred it swept away all subsequently-acquired rights and titles whatsoever. [Lindenbower v. Bentley, 86 Mo. 515; Huff v. Morton, 94 Mo. loc. cit. 410; Meier v. Meier, 105 Mo. 411.] And Dewey then became entitled to the possession of the premises, and could have obtained such possession if there had been rent in [177]*177arrear, by proceeding under sections 6397, 6398, 6399, Revised Statutes 1889, now sections 4136, 4137, 4138, Revised Statutes 1899. And he could have proceeded under section 4138 for possession alone, waiving the question of rent. [Blackman v. Welsh, 44 Mo. 41.] And under section 6373, Revised Statutes 1889, now section 4112, Revised Statutes 1899, the effect of such sale in invitum, divests and transfers the lessor’s estate to the purchaser, • as effectively as would such lessor’s deed; and if this is the case, then such purchaser would have a right to maintain a suit under the law of forcible entry and detainer. This is the clear, and, it seems to us, the correct, intimation given in Gunn v. Sinclair, 52 Mo. 327.

This point was afterwards thus ruled in May v. Luckett, 54 Mo. 437. "Upon these authorities it would seem no difficulty would have obstructed Dewey’s pathway, in calling upon Yan R. Stewart and demanding that the latter attorn to him, or, failing in this, that Dewey could proceed against him for unlawful detainer.

Neither of these methods of procedure, were, however, adopted, nor does it appear that Dewey ever exhibited his deed resulting from the sale of the land under the deed of trust, or formally demanded possession of Yan R. Stewart, or that the latter should attorn to him.

After Dewey made his purchase, as aforesaid, Yan R. Stewart’s wife died, to-wit, on December 28, 1896, and then Yan R. Stewart asked his brother, Will Stewart, to move up to the place and keep house for him, take care of his children, and see to things. In consideration of these services, and the further consideration that Will Stewart would help tend the crop, he was to have, after the rent was paid, one-half of the balance of the crop. Plaintiff is positive that he did not rent the premises, nor any part of them to his brother and he was the only witness to this contract, as Will Stewart did not testify at the trial; and Magruder fully supports the testimony [178]*178of Van R. Stewart that the contract of renting was made between them alone, and that he rented to Van R. Stewart, and to no one else.

There was some attempt made on cross-examination of Van R. Stewart to make out that Will Stewart was a partner of his in regard to the crop, but it was hardly to be expected that an ignorant man such as Van R. Stewart, evidently is, could tell off-hand in what a partnership consisted, or what were its prominent characteristics, when some of our highest courts have sometimes contrived to get up some very acute blunders on that very point.

And, indeed, it has been determined by this court, that such an agreement, as the one above stated, does not constitute a partnership. [Donnell v. Harshe, 67 Mo. 170.]

Well, plaintiff’s brother, Will, moved on to the rented premises two days after plaintiff’s wife died, that is, on the thirtieth of December, 1896. To use plaintiff’s own language: “I reckon you call it move; he come up the next morning, the thirtieth of December, and that’s about all he moved.” Which statement calls to mind the proverbial story about a removal which only consists in whistling for the dogs and putting out the fire. After Will Stewart had thus moved, he occupied the house his brother was then in, using his brother’s furniture, cooking stove, etc., his brother and one child living with him; Will Stewart’s family consisting of himself, wife and several children. After Will Stewart had thus become a co-occupant with his brother of the large house on the place, he bought a horse and made an arrangement with his brother, whereby the latter was to let him have sufficient of his com then on the place to feed on, “and he could pay it back in the fall, that is, if we raised a crop, understand.”

Things continued in that way until sometime in January or February, 1897, when plaintiff hired to Magruder, for one month, in order to pay his debts, as he was, as he stated to his counsel, “a very poor man.” The compensation he was to [179]*179receive was sixty cents a day, with board and lodging for himself and one child which he took with him over to Magruder’s, and feed for his horse.

Plaintiff, at the time'he went over to Magruder’s to work for him, took with him for his own convenience, a bed, a center table and heating stove, leaving behind him with his brother, a table, a cook stove, a safe, some dishes, some chairs and several small articles, and his brother continued in the use and occupation of these articles and of the house, which plaintiff, as he says, considered his home, and that it was his home, as.it was the only home he had.

Plaintiff also left in the pasture on the place three hogs, one of which belonged to him individually; the other two belonged to Magruder, and he was feeding them on the shares, and these Will Stewart was to attend to, and did so, during his brother’s absence.

Plaintiff also left, behind on the place a lot of com and corn-fodder, a two-horse plow, a disk which plaintiff “had done spoke for,” and perhaps a wagon. On Sunday, the last day of February, 1897, plaintiff, whose month it seems had expired or nearly so, went down to the premises where his brother Will was living (though temporarily absent); saw Dewey, and told him he would not give up possession. Dewey denies this statement. One of plaintiff’s children was on the place at the time.

On Tuesday next after the Sunday mentioned, Miles, in the absence of Van R. Stewart and without his consent, obtained possession of Will Stewart, the brother, just as Dewey had previously told Miles, Will Stewart would do; and for this obliging conduct, Dewey paid Will Stewart $2, ostensibly to enable Will Stewart to get a team to move away with; but what Will Stewart had brought to the place has already been stated.

On the question of abandonment of the possession by plaintiff, there was, as previously stated, some conflict, but on [180]*180this point of abandonment tbe court fairly instructed tbe jury.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 754, 166 Mo. 174, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-miles-mo-1901.