Union Railway & Transit Co. v. Skinner

9 Mo. App. 189, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 114
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Mo. App. 189 (Union Railway & Transit Co. v. Skinner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Railway & Transit Co. v. Skinner, 9 Mo. App. 189, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 114 (Mo. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is submitted by counsel for the opposing parties, Skinner and Buchanan, on the following statement, in which counsel on either side concur: —

This cause comes before the court on opposing appeals by the defendants, Buchanan and Skinner, from an order directing the distribution of a fund in court. This fund grew out of the condemnation of certain land by the Union Railway [191]*191and Transit Company, for depot purposes. The land having been, condemned, the sum of $604 was paid into court, subject to the conflicting claims of the defendants, each of whom claimed to be the owner of the land and entitled to the whole of the fund. Pending litigation, this sum was deposited in bank on interest, and with the interest amounted, on thé: day when the order of distribution was made, to $723.25. Both defendants filed motions or petitions for payment, and the case was submitted to the court on these pleadings and an agreed statement of facts.

The court found that Buchanan was the owner in fee of one-third of the land, and Skinner was the owner in fee of the other two-thirds, and directed the fund to be divided and paid out accordingly, except that Buchanan, having paid the taxes on the whole land for nearly twenty years, was allowed out of Skinner’s two-thirds, and in addition to his one-third share of the whole, two-thirds of what be had so paid, with interest.

On a further motion by Skinner, this order was modified so as to allow Buchanan only for the taxes he had paid within five years next previous to the decree of condemnation.

The land condemned is described as follows: —

A lot commencing on the northern line of Spruce Street, in said city of St. Louis, at a point distant three hundred, and thirty (330) feet west of the western line of Sixteenth (16th) Street; thence running westwardly on said northern line of Spruce Street twelve (12) feet; thence northwardly and parallel with the eastern line of Tayon Avenue one hundred and fifty (150) feet, more or less, to the southern line of an alley ; thence eastwardly along said southern line of said alley twenty-two (22) feet to a point distant three hundred and thirty (330) feet west of the west line of Sixteenth Street; thence southwardly and parallel with Sixteenth Street one hundred and fifty (150) feet to the place of beginning.

[192]*192The following plat represents the lot condemned, with its

The agreed statement of facts is as follows : —

For the purpose of enabling the court to ascertain the ownership of the fund heretofore paid into court by the Union Railway and Transit Company, as the purchase-money for a parcel of land in the petition in this case described, and in controversy between defendants, William C. Buchanan and John W. Skinner, it is agreed between the said defendants that the following are the facts : —

In the year 1832 the commissioners appointed to make partition of the estate of Auguste Chouteau sold to one [193]*193Thomas Ingram a lot known'as “Red Ink Lot 3,” being-part of the tract known as “Chouteau’s Mill Tract,” and conveyed the same by a deed which called for “ the middle of the creek in its natural channel when the pond is exhausted” as the western boundary of said lot, and Sarpy or Fourteenth Street as the eastern.

In the year 1836 said lot was owned in fee by John P. Reily and Alfred Skinner, who had purchased of Ingram, and held the same as tenants in common, Reily owning an undivided two-thirds and Skinner an undivided one-third. In that year Reily laid off and recorded a plat of an addition, designated “ Reily’s Addition to the city of St. Louis,”' a copy of which, with the description and dedication, are herewith filed, and made part of this statement. Alfred Skinner,, though not joining in this dedication, subsequently ratified and approved it, and became bound thereby.

In 1838, Reily by deed duly recorded, conveyed to Gamble, as trustee for Dillon, a part of this addition by the following description: “The undivided two-thirds of all the-lots in Reily’s Addition to the city of St. Louis which have-not been sold and conveyed by said Reily before-the- date-of this deed.” Among the lots which had not been' previously sold and conveyed were those designated on- said plat 60, 61, and 62.

These lots were subsequently sold and conveyed by said’trustee, the deed describing them as lots 60, 61, and 62’ of’ Reily’s Addition to the city of St. Louis, and conveying a two-thirds interest in them.

Defendant Buchanan has acquired the title so conveyed. by said trustee through a series of conveyances, all duly- recorded, and this is his only title to an undivided, two-thirds-of the land in controversy. At the date of the making-of’ the deed to Ingram and the plat of Reily’s Addition, and up to the year 1851, the western part of said lots 60-, 61, and 62, and all of the land in “ Redink Lot 3,” west of a line-drawn from north to south, and running parallel to. and, distant [194]*194westwardly 330 feet from Skinner or Sixteenth Street (called for convenience the 330-foot line) was covered with the waters of the Chouteau Mill Pond, otherwise known as Mill Creek, to a great depth, and the middle channel of the creek, as called for in the deed to Ingram, was never surveyed nor ascertained until the pond was drained in 1851.

The property in controversy remained unoccupied, and, owing to its natural situation, was unfit for use up to the time when the decree of condemnation was entered in this case without being filled.

At various times between the years 1860 and 1870, and long after the death of John P. Eeily, his heirs conveyed to defendant Skinner whatever title they may have had to ¿11 the land lying east of the middle channel of the creek and west of the 330 line. The land in controversy lies within these limits and between the southern line of lot 60 and the northern line of lot 62, as laid down on said plat, as they would be if projected to the middle channel of the creek.

It is agreed that if the western boundary of lots 60, 61, and 62 was the middle channel of the creek, as called for in the deed from the commissioners to Ingram, then defendant Buchanan has good title to the undivided two-thirds of the property, and is entitled to two-thirds of the fund in controversy ; and if the true western boundary of said lots was the 330-foof line, then defendant Skinner has good title to the undivided two-thirds, and is entitled to two-thirds of the fund in controversy, subject, however, to defendant Buchanan’s claim for taxes paid. The title to the remaining one-third involves an additional question.

In the year 1842, by deed duly recorded, Alfred Skinner conveyed to Tiffany and Shepley, trustees for- Eeily, his undivided one-third interest in said lots 60, 61, and 62. The deed called for the centre of the channel of the Mill Creek as the western boundary of the lots.

Defendant Buchanan claims title, through a chain of conveyances regular on their face and duly recorded, under this deed, to this undivided one-third interest, on the theory that [195]*195the call for the ehannel of the creek as the western boundary of the lots is conclusive against defendant Skinner, and also on the theory on which he claims the other two-thirds, that the channel was the true boundary under the Reily dedication.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mo. App. 189, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-railway-transit-co-v-skinner-moctapp-1880.