Virgin v. Kennedy

32 S.W.2d 91, 326 Mo. 400, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 684
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 13, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 32 S.W.2d 91 (Virgin v. Kennedy) 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
Virgin v. Kennedy, 32 S.W.2d 91, 326 Mo. 400, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 684 (Mo. 1930).

Opinions

Action to determine title to and for partition of forty acres of land. The judgment below, in the Circuit Court of Cass County, was for defendants John W. Taylor and James F. Taylor, adjudging them to be the owners in fee of the land. Plaintiff Sallie Virgin and defendant Medora Kennedy are both named as appellants here. The record certified to this court shows that while they both joined in the bill of exceptions the appeal was taken by plaintiff only, which fact, however, in the view we take of the case, makes no difference in the disposition of the appeal. As counsel on both sides refer to plaintiff and defendant Medora Kennedy as appellants, we shall for convenience so refer to them herein.

This case involves primarily the effect of a partition suit tried about 1873. The land in controversy is forty acres, the west half of the southwest fourth of the southwest quarter of Section Twelve, and the south half of the southeast fourth of the southeast quarter of Section Eleven, all in Township Forty-five, Range Thirty-one, in Cass County, and constituted part of two hundred acres of land owned by Owen D. Moffit at his death. Moffit is the common source of title. He died intestate about 1862, seized in fee simple of the *Page 405 two hundred acres, leaving a widow, Martha, and seven children. Three of the children, Elizabeth, William and James, as we understand the record, were by a former marriage. Martha thereafter married one William B. Taylor and of that marriage were born two children, John W. Taylor, defendant herein, and Nancy, now deceased. Defendant James F. Taylor is a son of William B. by a later marriage.

After the marriage of Martha Moffit and William B. Taylor, two of the older children of Owen D. Moffit, Elizabeth and William, conveyed to Martha Moffit Taylor their respective one-seventh interests in the two hundred acres, thus giving her an undivided two-sevenths in fee, and James conveyed his undivided one-seventh to William B. and Martha Taylor.

Martha Taylor died intestate about 1871, and in 1872 William B. Taylor, as plaintiff, instituted a suit in the Circuit Court of Cass County to partition the aforesaid two hundred acres of land. In that partition suit, which is herein referred to as Case No. 4701, all of the heirs of Owen D. Moffit, as well as all heirs of Martha Moffit Taylor, were made parties defendant and all were duly served with process. The parties plaintiff and defendant in Case 4701 owned the whole title to the two hundred acres, their respective interests all being undivided interests therein.

Appellant Sallie Virgin and defendant Medora Kennedy are children of Owen and Martha Moffit. At the time of the partition suit they were single and were minors, as were their brother and sister, Joseph and Ann Moffit, and their half-brother and half-sister, John W. and Nancy Taylor. The four Moffit minors answered and were represented in the partition suit by their general guardian and curator, and the Taylor minors by a duly appointed guardian ad litem. No point is made in the present suit that the court, in Case 4701, did not have jurisdiction of all parties, nor, as we understand it, is the court's jurisdiction to adjudge partition of the land in Case 4701 now questioned.

It will be seen that by the conveyance from James Moffit, William B. Taylor became the owner in fee of an undivided one-seventh of the two hundred acres as surviving tenant by the entirety upon the death of his wife Martha. But in his amended petition in Case 4701 he seems to have treated that deed as making him and Martha tenants in common of that share. He alleged his interest as being an undivided one-fourteenth of the two hundred acres in fee and curtesy in the undivided five-fourteenths which he alleged had been owned in fee by Martha. The four Moffit minors are therein alleged to have owned each an undivided one-seventh in fee as heirs of Owen Moffit, and a further interest as heirs of Martha of an undivided five-eighty-fourths of the whole tract, the latter interest being subject to the curtesy of William B. Taylor. The Taylor minors *Page 406 are alleged to have owned each an undivided five-eighty-fourths subject to their father's curtesy. The court found the interests of the parties as alleged in the amended petition, adjudged that partition be made among said owners according to their respective rights and interests as found by the court, and appointed commissioners to make partition accordingly.

In due time the commissioners in Case 4701 filed their report. It states that the commissioners proceeded "to make division and partition of the real estate set forth and described in said (the court's) order to-wit: (Here is described the whole two hundred acres). "To William B. Taylor they assign and set apart to be held by him during his natural life [here follows description of fifty acres, forty of which is the land in controversy in this suit]."

"Also they assign and set apart to said William B. Taylor to be held by him in fee simple." (Here follows description of the two twenty-acre tracts constituting the forty acres now in controversy.)

The various paragraphs or provisions of the report are not numbered, but we shall for convenience of reference refer herein to the foregoing provisions as paragraphs one and two respectively of the report.

It proceeds:

"To Nancy E. Taylor and John W. Taylor they assign and set apart to be held by them in fee simple" (eighteen acres, described); "also ten acres off of the west side of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 13, the last numbered tract being subject to the life estate of the said William B. Taylor." The last described ten acres, together with the forty acres assigned in fee to William B. Taylor in paragraph 2, comprise all of the fifty acres described and assigned for life to Taylor in paragraph 1.

"To Medora Moffit" (defendant Medora Kennedy herein) "they assign and set apart to be held by her in fee simple" (thirty acres, described).

"To Sallie Moffit" (Sallie Virgin, appellant herein) "they assign and set apart to be held by her in fee simple" (thirty-two acres, described).

Similarly there were assigned and set apart to Joseph Moffit and Ann Moffit, the other two minor Moffit children, thirty-five acres each, accurately described, to be held by them respectively in fee simple. The allotments thus made by the commissioners disposed of the whole two hundred acres and all interests therein.

The Moffit minors, including appellants herein, filed exceptions to the commissioners' report, alleging among other things that it "does not properly declare the interest of William B. Taylor, the plaintiff." The court after a hearing overruled the exceptions and duly approved and confirmed the report, which was thereafter duly *Page 407 recorded. There was no appeal from the judgment in the partition suit, which therefore, as is conceded, became final.

William B. Taylor, after the partition suit, entered into possession of the forty acres in controversy and from that time till his death in 1925 resided upon and claimed to own it. He erected a new dwelling and outbuildings thereon at considerable expense, with the knowledge of appellants, believing himself the owner, and gave several deeds of trust thereon conveying the full title. Appellants retained the lands allotted to them respectively after they became of age, and Sallie, after reaching her majority, sold the land allotted to her. It does not appear whether Medora sold or still owns her allotment.

By his will, which was duly admitted to probate, Williams B. Taylor devised the lands in dispute to defendants John W. and James F. Taylor, his sons. This suit was brought a year or so after his death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.2d 91, 326 Mo. 400, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virgin-v-kennedy-mo-1930.