Welch v. Finley

219 S.W. 897, 281 Mo. 684, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 1, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 897 (Welch v. Finley) 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
Welch v. Finley, 219 S.W. 897, 281 Mo. 684, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 48 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

This suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Lincoln County by the plaintiff as one of the collateral heirs of Fannie E. Finley, deceased, against the remaining heirs of said deceased and the collateral heirs of William Finley, deceased, for the partition of certain lands in said county. The defendant heirs of Fannie E. Finley filed no answer; the heirs of William Finley answered, denying that the plaintiff and their codefendants, heirs of Fannie E. Finley, had any right, title or interest in the lands sought to be partitioned, *Page 689 claiming that they as heirs of William Finley were the sole owners thereof in fee simple, and praying the court to so adjudge.

The facts are brief. William Finley and Fannie E. Finley were husband and wife on the 28th day of August, 1867, and continued so to be until the death of Fannie, which occurred about the year 1909; William died January, 1916. They left no descendants. Appellants are the collateral heirs of William, and respondent and the remaining defendants are the collateral heirs of Fannie. Fannie E. Finley was a daughter of James and Lucy Reid, who on the 28th day of August, 1867, executed the following deed:

"Know ye all persons whom a knowledge of this transaction may concern that we James Reid Sen. and Lucy, his wife, of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, do by these presents for and in consideration of the regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie E. Finley and of the payment of eight hundred dollars lawful money of the United States well and truly paid, by William Finley of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged hereby convey and sell to said Fannie William the following described tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres eighty-five acres described as the land we bought of the widow and heirs of James Downing deceased the remaining one hundred and sixty-five acres described as follows. Begin at a stone corner of D.H. Whitesides. Then with the northern line of said Whitesides south sixty-eight degrees west sixteen chains and twenty-five links to corner in the spring branch. Then north twenty-one and half degrees west with the northeast line of the Downing tract of land twenty-seven chains and sixty-five links to the northeast corner of said land on the line of S. Weeks. Then with said line north sixty-eight degrees east thirty-one chains and twenty-five links to corner of said Weeks. Then north twenty-one and a half degrees west one chain and eighty links to a stone corner of James Willson. Then north sixty-eight degrees east fifteen chains and thirty *Page 690 links and set a stone for corner from which a white oak twelve inches bears south forty-nine degrees east twenty-nine links distant. Then south twenty-one and a half degrees east forty-seven chains and set a stone for corner from which a white oak twenty inches bears north ten and a half degrees east twenty-two links distant. Then south eighty and a half degrees west ten chains and fifty-nine links to a corner of D.H. Whitesides with a buck-eye bearing tree. Then north seventy-nine degrees west twenty-three chains and sixty-eight links and set a stone from which a white oak eighteen inches bears south eighty degrees east thirty links. Then north twenty-one and a half degrees west two chains and fifty-five links to the place of beginning containing in all two hundred and fifty acres most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to Fannie reserving to ourselves the right of way through said tract of land where said way may be least prejudicial to the same to a tract of we own and joining to and east of it all of which land is in and part of Survey eighteen hundred and thirteen or as some number it eighteen hundred and nineteen a grant of four thousand arpens to Peter Jamin situate in Township No. fifty-one and range one east and one west to the said Fannie and William with all and singular the appurtenances to the same belonging free and clear of all legal incumbrances whatsoever. In Testimony of which we hereunto set our hands and affix our seals this twenty-eighth day of August eighteen hundred and sixty-seven.

"JAMES REID SR. (Seal) "LUCY REID (Seal)."

It is respondent's contention that the foregoing instrument conveyed severally to William Finley the most eastern fifty acres of the land therein described and to Fannie E. Finley the remaining two hundred acres. It is this two hundred acres that she seeks to have partitioned. If her contention is sound, it follows that upon the death of Fannie without descendants her husband, William, under the statute, became vested with the title to an undivided one-half interest in the land and the *Page 691 remaining one-half descended to her heirs, and later upon the death of William his one-half descended to his heirs. The appellants, on the contrary, insist that the deed to Fannie and William conveyed the whole tract of two hundred and fifty acres to the two of them, whereby they became vested with an estate by the entirety in the whole, and that the death of Fannie left her husband, William, the sole owner in fee.

The trial court first found for appellants and rendered judgment accordingly. Later, deeming its conclusion erroneous, it sustained a motion for a new trial. This appeal is from that order. It is apparent that the proper construction of the deed is the only matter for our determination.

Whether the deed conveys the entire tract of land to both grantees, or whether it conveys to each of them severally a separate portion thereof, must be ascertained from the four corners of the instrument itself. For the rule has long obtained in this State, that, in construing a deed, the intention of the parties, as gathered from the entire instrument, together with the surrounding circumstances, shall be ascertained and given effect, unless in conflict with some positive rule of law, or repugnant to the terms of the grant itself, and that in gathering such intention from the instrument the court will ignore technical distinctions between the various parts and seek the grantor's intention from them all, without undue preference to any, giving due effect to all, even to the extent of allowing thehabendum clause to qualify or control the granting clause where it is manifest that the former, in connection with the whole, more nearly expresses the grantor's intention. [Tennison v. Walker, 190 S.W. 9; Adams v. Highland Cemetery Co., 192 S.W. 944.]

Omitting the long descriptions of the land conveyed and of the right of way reserved, the deed under consideration is as follows:

"Know ye all persons whom a knowledge of this transaction may concern that we James Reid Sen. and Lucy, his wife, of the County of Lincoln and State of *Page 692 Missouri, do by these presents for and in consideration of the regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie E. Finley and of the payment of Eight Hundred Dollars lawful money of the United States well and truly paid, by William Finley of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged hereby convey and sell to said Fannie William the following described tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres . . . most eastern fifty acres is theland sold to William Finely the other two hundred acres we giveto Fannie reserving to ourselves the right of way through said tract of land. . . . to the said Fannie and William with all and singular the appurtenances to the same belonging free and clear of all legal incumbrances whatsoever.

"In Testimony Whereof etc. this 28th day of August, 1867."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 897, 281 Mo. 684, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-finley-mo-1920.