Stubblefield v. Husband

106 S.W.2d 419, 341 Mo. 38, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 21, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 419 (Stubblefield v. Husband) 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
Stubblefield v. Husband, 106 S.W.2d 419, 341 Mo. 38, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 570 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

*41 TIPTON, J.

This cause was instituted in the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County, Missouri, was sent to the Circuit Court of Dunk *42 lin County, Missouri, on change of venue, and that court entered a judgment decreeing the title in the respondent. Edna Y. Husband, to the following described real estate situated in Pemiscot County, Missouri, to-wit: The South half (S J4) of the Northwest quarter (JNW %) and the Southwest quarter (SW %) of section thirty-one (31), township nineteen (19) North, range eleven (11) East.

This cause was originally filed on January 11, 1932, in the Circuit ■Court of Pemiscot County, wherein the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, a corporation, was plaintiff, and Henry S. Rolwing, Charles ~W. Shields, Corn-Cotton Land Company, a corporation, Edmund P. Melson, J. Dewitt Mills, and Edward G. Rolwing, Jr., administrator of the estate of Edward G. Rolwing, deceased, trustees of Dunk-Scot Land Company, a corporation dissolved by operation of law, and Edward G. Rolwing, Jr., administrator of the estate of Edward G. Rolwing, deceased, were defendants.

The petition was in two counts, one to cancel the deeds, and the other to determine title. At the time of filing the petition, the plaintiff filed a lis pendens in the office of recorder of deeds of Pemiscot County.

On November 4, 1931, the collector of Pemiscot County filed a petition. entitled “The State of Missouri ex rel. Charles G. Ross, Collector, v. Henry S. Rolwing, E. P. Melson, St. Francis Levee District of Missouri, and the Little River Drainage District of Missouri, ’ ’ to enforce the collection of State and county taxes for the years 1928 and 1929 on the above-described real estate. On April 18, 1932, the circuit court of that county entered a judgment in that suit in the sum of $864.98, this sum being the amount of delinquent taxes for the years 1928 and 1929. A special execution was issued in that tax suit, and on December 29, 1932, the sheriff sold the above-described land to Edna Y. Husband for the sum of $3000. Thereafter,, the sheriff of that county filed a bill of interpleader, naming the original defendants in the tax suit as parties. The cause was sent to the Circuit Court of Butler County on change of venue, wherein that court found that the surplus above the judgment and costs in the tax suit belonged to the defendant, Rolwing. The Springfield Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the circuit court in the bill of interpleader.

It is to be noticed that the original petition in this cause of action was filed subsequent to the filing of the petition in the tax suit, but prior to the entry of the judgment in that suit. After the date of the execution of the tax deed to the respondent, Edna Y. Husband, the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, as plaintiff, filed an amended petition in which the respondent was made a party defendant and in which it sought to set aside the tax deed to her for irregularities in the tax proceedings. The record shows that a third *43 amended petition was filed, however, it was not found in the files of this case. The cause was tried on what the appellant designated as the third amended petition, and in this petition it is stated that she had acquired by assignment all the right, title, and interest of the Missouri State Life Insurance Company to the land described in the original petition, and that she had also acquired all the interest of the General American Life Insurance Company in this cause of action. The petition further alleged that the appellant had acquired by proper deed of conveyance all the right, title, and interest of whatever kind and character in and to said land owned or held by each and all of the original defendants named in said cause, and that none of the original defendants in this cause claimed any interest in the land, and that no one now claims any interest in this land adverse to the appellant, except the respondent, Edna Y. Husband. The petition further alleged that the tax proceedings under which the respondent, Edna Y. Husband, claimed title was void. The prayer of the petition ask® that the tax judgment rendered against the land in the tax suit, the sale thereunder by the sheriff, and the tax deed made to the respondent in pursuance of the sale, be canceled, set aside, and for naught held; that the court enter a decree declaring the plaintiff to be the fee simple owner of this land; and that the respondent be required to give an accounting for rents received for the land for the years 1933 and 1934.

During the trial of this cause, the appellant was given leave to amend her petition as follows: “Then we offer to amend our petition by inserting a paragraph specifically alleging that the three trustees’s deeds made on February 23, 1927, and heretofore introduced in evidence, being the trustee’s deeds of Shields to the Dunk-Scot Land Company to the land in controversy, were erroneously made by the trustee to the Dunk-Scot Land Company and should have been made to the International Life Insurance Company.” However, such amendment was not actually inserted in the petition.

The answer on which this cause was tried contained a denial of the appellant’s interest in the land, and an admission that the respondent claimed title to the real estate. She further pleaded that the appellant be estopped from claiming title under the deed from Rolwing on the theory that Rolwing, her grantor, had received the excess from the tax sale.

To the answer of the respondent, the appellant filed a reply, denying all of the new matter set up in the respondent’s answer.

Evidence presented at the trial showed that James F. Halley was the common source of title and that he executed three deeds of trust conveying the above-described land to Charles W. Shields as trustee for the Dunk-Scot Land Company, dated October 18, 1924, securing three notes aggregating $16,800. These notes, with other notes and *44 deeds of trust, were given to the International Life Insurance Company to secure a note in the sum of $35,000, which note was signed by the Dunk-Scot Land Company and Edmund P. Melson and Edward G. Rolwing. Melson and Rolwing owned the entire stock of the Dunk-Scot Land Company. On February 23, 1927, the above-described land was foreclosed by the trustee, Shields, and a deed executed to the Dunk-Scot Land Company. The International Life Insurance Company turned over to Melson notes secured by the deeds of trust on the above-described land, and he caused the land to 'be foreclosed. The trustee’s deed, executed by Shields, named the Dunk-Scot Land Company as grantee. On December 31, 1927; Melson, as president of the Dunk-Scot Land Company, executed a deed to the land in question to the Corn-Cotton Land Company.

On August 25, 1928, by decree of the Federal Court at St. Louis, the affairs and assets of the International Life Insurance Company were taken over and later conveyed to the Missouri State Life Insurance Company. On March 9, 1929, the Missouri State Life Insurance Company foreclosed on the property secured by the $35,000 note, and on the .same date entered into a contract and agreement with the Corn-Cotton Land Company, the Alluvial Realty Company, E. P. Melson, and E. G.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 419, 341 Mo. 38, 1937 Mo. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stubblefield-v-husband-mo-1937.