Wendler v. Lambeth

63 S.W. 684, 163 Mo. 428, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 11, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 63 S.W. 684 (Wendler v. Lambeth) 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
Wendler v. Lambeth, 63 S.W. 684, 163 Mo. 428, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 373 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

This is a suit in ejectment for the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 21, township 29, of range 29, Jasper county, brought in the circuit court of Jasper county, November 16, 1891. There is no dispute as to the facts.

E. W. Wendler is the common source of title. E. W. Wendler died testate, in Jasper county, in July, 1891. That part of his will (dated June 21, 1881) affecting the title to the forty acres of land in controversy, is as follows:

“Unto my nephew, Herman Schütz, son of O. H. Schütz and wife, she being formerly Christina Wendler, I devise the inheritance of one hundred acres, more or less, that is to say, the south half of the southwest quarter of section number twenty-seven, of township number twenty-nine of range number twenty-nine; also, the west half of the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section number twenty-seven of township number twenty-nine of range number twenty-nine, all in the county of Jasper, and State of Missouri, with this exception: in case my sister Eredericka Wendler, who is now in Germany, comes to this country, it is intended by the testator that she shall have a dowry, in and to tire following real estate above named, that is to say, the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said section twenty-seven, but in case that she remains in Germany, then upon the death of the testator, the said Herman Schütz, his administrator or guardian, shall have immediate possession and control of the aforesaid [434]*434one hundred acres of land, as above described.”

The testator’s sister, as above named, Eredericka Wendler, is the plaintiff in this case, and came to this country from Germany before the testator’s death, and has continued to reside in the United States. The testator’s nephew, Herman Schütz, had his name changed by an order of the circuit court of Jasper county to Herman R. Wendler, and in the deeds, mortgages and court proceedings hereinafter recited is designated by the name of Herman R. Wendler.

On the sixth day of November, 1893, said Herman R. Wendler (formerly Schütz), conveyed by way of mortgage to the appellant, Thomas Lambeth, the whole of the one hundred acres of land (including the forty acres in controversy) devised to him by the will of his uncle, said mortgage deed being in the common form, with power of sale in the mortgagee, and containing the statutory covenants implied in the words “grant, bargain and sell,” and being effectual to pass all after-acquired title, which mortgage deed was duly filed for record in the recorder’s office of said Jasper county on the same day of its execution, and was given to secure a note for $800 and seven per cent interest thereon, due in one year, and which indebtedness has never been paid.

After the execution of the foregoing mortgage deed and before its foreclosure, the plaintiff and respondent herein, on August 12, 1896, conveyed the land in controversy by a quitclaim deed to said Herman R. Wendler (formerly Schütz). Subsequently the appellant, Thomas Lambeth, brought foreclosure proceedings in the circuit court of Jasper county against Herman R. Wendler and his wife, and obtained a judgment for the foreclosure .of his mortgage on the fifth of October, 1897, and at a foreclosure sale thereunder appellant Lambeth bought the whole one hundred acres, including the forty acres in controversy, for five hundred and thirty-five dollars, leav[435]*435ing the balance owing on his judgment still due him, and received a sheriff’s deed under said sale, dated November 11, 1897, and which sheriff’s deed was by appellant promptly recorded, and under which mortgage and sale thereunder, appellant Lambeth went into possession of the land and at the institution of this suit he was in possession of the land in controversy together with the balance of the one hundred acres, as aforesaid. The foregoing constitutes appellant’s claim to title and possession in this ease.

The respondent’s claim is based on the following additional facts, viz.: At the time she made said quitclaim deed for the land in controversy, to said Herman R. Wendler, to-wit, August 12, 1896, said Herman R. Wendler and wife conveyed by a deed of trust to A. L. Thomas as trustee, the one hundred acres of land previously mortgaged by Wendler to appellant, and which included the land in controversy, and also a tract of three acres and two other small tracts, to secure the payment of a note of that date payable to respondent, due in one year, for seventeen hundred and ninety dollars bearing seven per cent interest. Included therein, as shown by the evidence, was the sum of $641.50, which said Wendler had agreed to pay respondent for the execution of the quitclaim deed to the land in controversy, said deed of trust reciting that “the sum of $641.50 of the promissory note described below is for the purchase price of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 27, township 29, range 29, this day sold by the party of the third part to Herman R. Wendler, one of the parties of the first part, the balance of said promissory note being for money due and owing the said party of the third part from the said Herman R. Wendler.”

Afterwards, on the twenty-fifth day of September, 1897, said A. L. Thomas as trustee, sold the land conveyed in said deed of trust, in pursuance of the provisions of said deed, to [436]*436respondent, and delivered to her his trustee’s deed therefor under said sale.

The aj>pellant, at the trial, objected to the introduction in evidence of said deed of trust and trustee’s deed, for the reason that they did not tend to show title in respondent, and that the mortgage to appellant was prior and paramount thereto, and that respondent under said will took no title to the land, and that the trustee’s deed only conveyed to respondent the equity of redemption of Herman R. Wendler, the legal title under his mortgage being in appellant, which objections the court overruled, to which rulings the appellant excepted.

At the request of the respondent the court declared the law to be (1) that under the will of E. W. Wendler, the respondent took a life estate in all the land in controversy; (2) that under the trustee’s deed the respondent became re-possessed of such title as she had in the land in controversy previous to the execution of the quitclaim deed to Herman R. Wendler, and that the "title conveyed by said quitclaim deed did not vest in and enure to the benefit of the defendant as prior mortgagee.”

And the court refused declarations of law, asked by the appellant, to the effect (1) that under said will, respondent took no interest in said land, and in no event coitld her interest exceed the undivided one-third for her natural life; (2) that respondent’s quitclaim deed conveyed all her interest to Herman R. Wendler, which under his mortgage to appellant enured to appellant’s benefit, as prior mortgagee; (3) that respondent by accepting a deed of trust conveying more land to her trustee than was conveyed by her quitclaim deed and securing a greater indebtedness than the purchase price of the land in controversy, had waived all her right to set up any claim for such purchase price paramount to appellant, and had no ven[437]*437dor’s lien or other prior right, and not having shown a legal title, could not recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 S.W. 684, 163 Mo. 428, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wendler-v-lambeth-mo-1901.