Weissenfels v. Cable

106 S.W. 1028, 208 Mo. 515, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 259
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 24, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 1028 (Weissenfels v. Cable) 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
Weissenfels v. Cable, 106 S.W. 1028, 208 Mo. 515, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 259 (Mo. 1907).

Opinions

LAMM, J.

In September, 1904, plaintiff brought suit in the circuit court of Jackson county having for [518]*518its object to ascertain and determine the estate, title and interest of plaintiff and defendant, respectively, in certain parcels or tracts of land, all included in the general description of southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 28, township 48, range 33, in said county, and to define and adjudge such title, estate- and interest. Judgment went for plaintiff and defendant appeals.

The petition alleges that plaintiff is the owner and in possession of 32.71 acres, being all of the aforesaid forty-acre tract except six acres (hereinafter called tract A) in the southeast corner, described as follows: Beginning at the southeast corner of said quarter-quarter section, thence north along the east section line 38 poles, thence west 25.5 poles, thence south 38 poles to the south line of said quarter-quarter section, and thence east 25.5 poles to the beginning; and except 1.29 acres (hereinafter called tract B) on the west side of the said quarter-quarter section sold to a certain railroad company for a right of way.

The answer follows:

“Defendant for answer to plaintiff’s petition denies each and every allegation in said petition contained, except as hereinafter stated.

“For further answer the defendant says that he is the owner and is in possession of the following portion of the land described in plaintiff’s petition, that' is to say, the following described real estate in Jackson county, Missouri, to-wit:

“All that part of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 28, township 48, range 33,- which lies east and south of the Big Blue River; and that the plaintiff is not now and never has been in possession of this portion of said tract of land and that plaintiff has no right, title or interest therein.

“Further answering the defendant says that he does not claim any right, title and interest in the re[519]*519maining portion of the land described in plaintiff’s petition and has never asserted any claim thereto. Wherefore defendant having fully answered asks to be discharged with his costs.”

The reply denies the allegations of new matter in the answer.

By diagrams and descriptions in the testimony, it is possible to construct a crude map, serving a useful purpose, thus:

[520]*520Let BOMG represent the S. E. N. E. of 28-48-33. Let X Y represent the railroad track. Then the land included in the adjacent parallel lines will be the right of way, tract B. Let B F P D represent the six acres excepted, to-wit, tract A. Let O LK J H 1 represent the meandering channel of Big Blue River. Then the little tracts shown on the map, to-wit, 1, 2 and 3 (lettered C F L, K D J, and II A G, respectively), together with all of tract A lying east of the Blue, represent the land claimed by defendant; while the whole S. E. N. E., less tracts A and B, represents the land claimed by the plaintiff. The bone of contention is over the little irregular tracts, 1, 2 and 3, said to contain less than two acres.

It is agreed on all hands that Morgan Boone, Sr., is the common source of title; that he died in 1851; and that Morgan Boone, Jr., is his sole heir. That defendant is in possession and has fenced all of said southeast quarter of the northeast quarter lying east of the Big Blue, has cleared some or all of it, and put some of it ready for the plow. There has, however, been no such length of possession as would ripen it into a title by the Statute of Limitations.

The plaintiff, to show title in himself, introduced record evidence, as follows:

(1) A warranty deed from Morgan Boone, Jr., and wife, to R. B. Garnett; of date December 14, 1888, of record December 21, 1888, consideration $1962.60, and conveying part of said forty-acre tract, to-wit, “All that portion of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 28, township 48, range 33, lying on the west side of the Big Bine River, (excepting tract B) “which leaves the amount of land hereby conveyed, more or less, 32.71 acres.” This deed is recorded in Book B 330, at page-458.

(2) Also a warranty deed from said Garnett to one Bernard; dated September 21, 1888, recorded [521]*521the same day, and conveying the same property hy the same description.

(3) Also a warranty deed from said Bernard to plaintiff; of date August 28, 1901, duly of record, consideration $2,500, and conveying the same property by the same description.

(4) Also a quitclaim deed from said Bernard to plaintiff; of date January 30, 1904, of record February 5, 1904 (no consideration disclosed), and conveying “all of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 28, township 48, range 33, except six acres in the southeast corner thereof.” This conveyance has in it the following narration: “This deed is meant to correct the description in a warranty deed to the same parties conveying the same property.”

(5) And also a conveyance called a “special warranty deed” from Morgan Boone, Jr., to plaintiff; of date April 15, 1904, acknowledged September 21 and put of record September 22 of the same year, consideration $1, and conveying said quarter-quarter section, except tracts A and B. This conveyance contains the following narration: “Containing 32.71 acres, more or less. This deed is made to correct a description of a deed from the grantor herein, Morgan Boone, to R. B. Garnett, date September 14, 1888, in Book ‘B’ 330, at page'458, of the recorder’s office of said county, in which deed grantor intended to convey all said quarter-quarter section, except six acres thereof sold off at the southeast corner, and the 1.29 acres in the railroad right of way.”

(6) The plaintiff (possibly a misprint for defendant) offered in evidence the files and decree in a suit of Thomas Lea, Plaintiff, vs. Morgan Boone et al., Defendants. The abstract shows, this was a suit to compel the conveyance of real estate. Attached to the petition was the following receipt:

‘ Received March 28, 1851, of Thomas Lea, $45 [522]*522as a payment toward the land I sold to him on the east side of Big Blue, being a portion of township 48, range 33, and a part of the same land I purchased of John Maxwell as the agent and attorney of Lemuel Edwards, containing by estimation about six or seven acres which I sold to said Lea for $7 per acre.

“Witness my hand the date above.

“Morgan Boone.”

■ It seems that Morgan Boone, Sr., died before making a deed, and that the suit culminated in a decree (date not disclosed) investing Thomas Lea with title to tract A, except that the north boundary line is 26 % poles instead of 25% poles.

It was next admitted that the title of said Lea vested in the grantors of defendant.

The foregoing record proofs were supplemented by evidence from the assessor’s books of Jackson county, tending to show that from 1851 down to 1887 the quarter-quarter section in question was assessed in the following descriptions: '“Morgan Boone, 34 aeres, SE NE, ex. 6 a. SE cor. Sec. 28, T. 48, R. 33; and D. Taylor 6 a. SE cor. SE NE, Sec. 28, T. 48, R. 33.”

It was further supplemented by oral testimony, referred to further on.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 1028, 208 Mo. 515, 1907 Mo. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weissenfels-v-cable-mo-1907.