Ward v. Morton

242 S.W. 966, 294 Mo. 408, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 16, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 966 (Ward v. Morton) 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
Ward v. Morton, 242 S.W. 966, 294 Mo. 408, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 75 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

*412 ELDER, J.

This is an action to determine title to an undivided one-fourth interest in forty acres of land in Pemiscot County.

The Petition is in two counts. The first count alleges the ownership of plaintiff and that defendant is claiming adversely thereto; that on July 1, 1916, the Collector of Pemiscot County filed an action in the circuit court of said county against Thomas B. Ward, plaintiff herein, William A. Ward, Jr., Mattie M. Coppedge and Dorothy McLarty, to collect delinquent taxes on the forty-acre tract in question; that summons therein was not issued until July 6, 1916, the same being made returnable to the third Monday in July, 1916, to-wit, the 17th day of July 1916, or eleven days subsequent to the issuance of said summons; that said summons was served on July 7, 1916, on T. B. Ward, W. A. Ward, M. M. Coppedge and D. Ward; that none of the persons named *413 as defendants in said snit appeared either in person or by attorney, and at the July, 1916, term of said circuit court the canse was continued on account of insufficient service; that on December 14, 1916, at the November, 1916, term of said court a judgment was rendered by default in favor of plaintiff and against the defendants in said cause; that thereafter execution was issued on said judgment, and on August 1, 1917, the Sheriff of Pemiscot County sold the land in question to R. L. Ward for $800 and made a sheriff’s tax deed therefor; that said R. L. Ward at the time he bought said lands was the attorney for the defendants in said tax suit and did not have their authority or permission to buy said land; that on November 9,1917, said R. L. Ward sold said lands by deed to one Joe Griggs for $1000; that on February 3, 1919, said Griggs sold said lands by deed to one G. C. Stephens for $2000; that on December 3, 1919, said Stephens sold the same to defendant herein for $3000, and defendant now claims through and under such chain of title.

The first count of the petition further alleges that on December 30,1914, plaintiff was sentenced by the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County to serve a term of two years’ imprisonment in the Missouri penitentiary, for a felony, and on the same day was also sentenced by the same court, in a different case, to another two years’ term of imprisonment in the Missouri penitentiary, said latter sentence to be cumulative and to begin at the expiration of the first sentence; that no appeal was ever taken from said judgments and plaintiff served the term imposed, until he was released on November 18, 1918, and restored to citizenship; that the said Circuit Court of Pemiscot County did not appoint any guardian or trustee for plaintiff to appear for him and protect his interests in the tax suit aforesaid, and that by reason of the sentences aforesaid he was unable to appear for himself or procure anyone to appear for him. The petition then sets up the invalidity of the tax judgment, avers that defendant has not paid any taxes on the lands involved, and that *414 the persons from whom defendant bought the same have had the use and benefit of the profits therefrom, and states that plaintiff is ready and willing to pay whatever amount of.taxes with interest may be determined should be paid by him. The count' concludes with a prayer that title to the land be tried and ascertained. -

The second count of the petition is an action in ejectment, being conventional in form.

The answer as to both counts is a general denial. The answer also avers that defendant is the owner of the land in suit, having acquired by mesne conveyances from Joe Griggs; that in 1918 plaintiff made a deed to the said land conveying all his interest therein to his sister, Dorothy McLarty; that said Dorothy McLarty brought suit against 'the then owner of the land, Joe Griggs, and that at the March term, 1918, of the Circuit Court of Pemiscot County a judgment was rendered adjudging title to he in said Joe Griggs; that thereafter said Griggs conveyed said land, and it came down through warranty deed to plaintiff. The plea of res adjudicate/, is then set up. The answer further pleads an estoppel, alleging that plaintiff knew of the tax sale mentioned in the petition, that he knew of the judgment rendered in the suit brought by McLarty against Griggs, that he has paid no taxes on said land and made no claim thereto, and that by his acquiescence and silence he has caused plaintiff to purchase said land and make valuable improvements thereon.

The reply denies the allegations of the answer, and avers that plaintiff was not a party to the action of Mc-Larty against Griggs, and that neither McLarty nor Griggs obtained anything by the deed from plaintiff to McLarty, for the reason that at the time of making such deed plaintiff was under sentences for felony as pleaded in the petition.

The cause was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury.

Plaintiff introduced in evidence the petition, summons, and sheriff’s return in the tax suit brought by *415 Chas. ,R. Pierce, Collector of Pemiscot County, against plaintiff and others; also the record entry of the judgment rendered in said cause, showing a judgment- by default against defendants for $192.29, rendered December 14, 1916; also deed from S. E. Juden, Sheriff of Pemiscot County, to R. L. Ward, dated August 1, 1917, reciting a consideration of $800, and conveying the land in controversy.

Plaintiff next introduced in evidence general warranty deed, dated November 9, 1917, from R. L. Ward and wife to Joe Griggs, consideration $1000, conveying the land in suit; also general warranty deed, dated October 15, 1918, from Joe Griggs to G. C. Stephens, consideration $4000, conveying the land in question and other land; also general warranty deed, dated December 3, 1919, from G. C. Stephens and wife to Mrs. J. W. Morton, defendant herein, consideration $3000, conveying the land in controversy.

Plaintiff then offered in evidence a judgment of conviction, rendered December 30, 1914, sentencing plaintiff to imprisonment for a term of two years in the Missouri penitentiary; also another judgment of conviction, rendered the same day, sentencing plaintiff to imprisonment for a like term of two years in the penitentiary, such term to be cumulative and to -begin at the expiration of the first sentence imposed; also a pardon granted plaintiff by Frederick D. Gardner, Governor of Missouri, dated October 1, 1919, restoring plaintiff to all of his civil and political rights and the rights' of citizenship; also a stipulation to the effect that on December 30, 1914, when convicted and sentenced, plaintiff had been paroled for four years, that he was never incarcerated in the penitentiary, that he never served any time under either of the sentences pronounced, that he was not taken charge of by the sheriff at any time, but that he was allowed to remain at large and was finally discharged by the court.

It was admitted that William A. Ward, father of plaintiff, was the original owner of the land involved *416 herein; that he died March 25, 1912, leaving a widow and four children, to-wit, Thomas B. Ward, the plaintiff, Mattie M. Coppedge, William A.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 966, 294 Mo. 408, 1922 Mo. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-morton-mo-1922.