Strother v. Barrow

151 S.W. 960, 246 Mo. 241, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 960 (Strother v. Barrow) 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
Strother v. Barrow, 151 S.W. 960, 246 Mo. 241, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 181 (Mo. 1912).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Ejectment. Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for an undivided two-sixths interest in a tract situate in the hamlet of Ashley, Pike county.

Ashley was not laid out true to the cardinal points of the compass. Its subdivisions run from the northeast to the southwest. Among them is a square acre once belonging to Boyd, the common source of title. Boyd deeded seventy feet in rectangular shape off the southwest end of his acre to the Old School Presbyterian Church, putting the title in named trustees. The residue he deeded to his daughter, Mrs. Dorsey, and she conveyed to defendant. The church seventy feet passed by mesne conveyances (so plaintiffs, claimed) to plaintiffs as trustees of the Ashley Church of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. It will he observed that plaintiffs, who sued for all, were awarded possession of an undivided two-sixths interest only, and abided the judgment. One phase of the dispute is over the boundary line between the church’s seventy feet- and Barrow’s residue; another [246]*246is adverse possession. The parcel in controversy is a strip eleven feet wide at one end, six feet ten inches at the other, and three and sixteen-hnndredths chains long.

A map, furnished by appellant is, so far as it goes, accurate enough to aid in grasping the situation, viz.:

The petition was conventional; the answer was a general denial, coupled with two affirmative pleas (one the ten-year and the other the thirty-year Statute of Limitations); the reply was conventional.

At the close of plaintiffs’ case and again at the close of the whole case, defendant interposed a demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence, which was overruled and he saved the point. No other instructions were, asked on either side. The trial Was to the court with[247]*247out the aid of a jury and, at defendant’s request, the court made a finding of facts.

Facts essential to the determination of questions raised will appear in connection with rulings thereon.

The assignments of error are:

“1. The court erred in refusing defendant’s instructions in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence offered at the close of plaintiffs’ testimony and at the close of all the testimony.
“2. The court erred in refusing to give effect to defendant’s adverse possession, which he affirmatively found to have continued from 1890 down to the date of the institution of the suit.
“3. The court erred in finding that the strip' of ground in controversy was not conveyed by the deed from Cary A. Boyd to Elizabeth Dorsey and by the deed from Elizabeth Dorsey to the defendant Barrow.
“4. The court erred in interpreting the deed from the alleged officers of the Old School Presbyterian Church to the Universalist General Convention, a New York corporation.
“5. The deed purporting to be from the Univer-salist General Convention, a corporation, to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, dated October 25, 1905, was ineffective to convey any title and the acknowledgment thereto was fatally defective. ”

Of these in their order.

1. Of the demurrers.

In effect, the demurrers search, under guise of a general form, errors specified in assignments 2, 3, 4, ■and 5. Hence a disposition of those specifications will be tantamount to an appellate ruling on the demurrers. Accordingly we pass by that assignment eo nomine, as filling no separate function on appeal.

[248]*248II. Of adverse possession.

The court found that defendant had been in possession under claim of title uninterruptedly and adversely since the year 1890 up to the date of the suit, 1908. To break the force of that finding, it also found that the Statute of Limitations could not be invoked as a bar to plaintiffs’ claim or to create title in defendant. Contra, that Sec. 1886, R. S. 1909, applied to the facts—that section reading :

“Nothing- contained in any Statute of Limitations shall extend to any lands, given, granted, sequestered or appropriated to any public, pious or charitable use, or to any lands belonging to this State.”

To break the force of that ruling, defendant contends that, assuming the original grant to the trustees of the Old School Presbyterian Church to be for a “pious and charitable use,” yet on the' facts here, that use was abandoned; whereat (on such abandonment) the statute began to run and continued to run, although a pious use of the property was subsequently resumed. In outline such is the controversy under this head.

We are of opinion the ruling, nisi, was correct. This because:

(a) For present purposes it will be assumed that the strip in dispute passed by the deeds in plaintiffs’ chain of title, and not by the deeds in defendant’s. Whether that assumption be correct will be looked into presently. On that assumption, out of abundant caution, we reserve the question whether a stranger to conveyances creating a pious or charitable use can, in aid of his claim of adverse possession by limitation, raise the point of its abandonment. Whether the grantor who conveyed to the use, or his descendants, under the notion of a reverter, may make the point, or whether some proper party suing in equity to regulate the use may assert rights under a nonuser or abandonment, we need in no wise consider. In this [249]*249discussion, we take the point as we find it and shall assume, without deciding, that defendant can make it.

(b) From ancient times a pious use has been considered a charitable use. The quoted statute speaks of both, but in a broad sense the one includes the other. The principles of law governing one govern the other. Under the old English act, known as the Statute of Charitable Uses (43 Elizabeth, ch. 4), money and lands granted for the repair of churches created a charitable use. That act is part of our common law, but it has been held that its enumeration of charities is not pre-clusive. There are other objects deemed charitable in a legal sense (Buchanan v. Kennard, 234 Mo. 117), and a grant for the building of a church has always been considered as raising a charitable use — religion being but part and parcel of charity for purposes of jurisprudence. Indeed defendant’s counsel concede, impliedly, that the original grant from Boyd was to a pious use within the meaning of section 1886, supra. The deed from the common source of title, Boyd, passed the title in 1870 to named trustees, elders of the Old School Presbyterian Church in the town of Ashley in consideration of one dollar and the further consideration of grantor’s “love, regard, reverence, attachment and affection for said Old School Presbyterian Church.” The grant ran to said elders and their legal successors in office. In ordinary warranty form, its habendum clause reads:

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 960, 246 Mo. 241, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strother-v-barrow-mo-1912.