Wheelock v. Overshiner

19 S.W. 640, 110 Mo. 100, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 23, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 640 (Wheelock v. Overshiner) 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
Wheelock v. Overshiner, 19 S.W. 640, 110 Mo. 100, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 51 (Mo. 1892).

Opinion

Brace, J.

On the seventeenth of September, 1881, Merideth Richards and wife, by general warranty deed,, conveyed one hundred and forty-six acres of land in Hickory county, Missouri (described in the petition), to’ the plaintiff, who thereupon entered into and remained, in possession thereof, until evicted therefrom under a. judgment of the circuit court of said county against, him rendered on the twenty-first day of November,. 1888, in an action of ejectment in favor of EleanorBrittain. In the meantime the said Merideth Richards, died possessed of an estate largely in excess of the-value of the land conveyed, which by his last will he devised to his wife, Mary Richards, and to the • defendants, John Overshiner, Reuben Richards and Eliza Pitts.

Prior to the twenty-first of November, 1888, the’ estate of the said Merideth was finally settled, and the said devisees came into possession of their estate under said will, and thereafter the said Mary Richards died testate, and by her last will devised all the estate received from her said husband to the said defendants, Eliza Pitts and John Overshiner; and the said defendants, John Overshiner andW. D. Pitts, are the executors of the last will and testament of the said Mary Richards, whose estate is now in course of administration by said executors.

This suit was brought by the plaintiff on the-thirtieth day of November, 1888, to recover damages, for breach of the covenants of warranty in the said deed so executed by the said Merideth Richards to’ plaintiff, and to charge the same against the defendants^ his devisees.

[107]*107The answer denied any breach of the covenants of the deed; any knowledge that a judgment was rendered against plaintiff in respect of said lands, as charged in the petition, and averred that, if any such judgment was rendered, it was obtained by fraud and collusion between the plaintiff and the said Eleanor Brittain.

The reply put in issue the new matter set up in the answer, and averred that the defendants Overshiner and Pitts were notified of the pendency of the suit against plaintiff, and were present at the trial when judgment of ouster therein was rendered against plaintiff. The case was tried without a jury, and no declarations of law were given. The court found the issues-for the plaintiff, assessed his damages at $1,847, apportioned the same among the devisees according to the respective amounts received by them under the will of said Richards, and rendered a separate judgment against each devisee for the amount so apportioned, to-be levied of the estate received by each from said testator. From this judgment the defendants appeal,.

I. On the trial the judgment in the ejectment suit- ' of Eleanor Brittain against the plaintiff was admitted in evidence over the objections of the defendants, and this is assigned for error. . The defendants were not parties to that suit, and the only notice that any of them had of it, as appears from the evidence of the plaintiff j was that after the suit was instituted, and before he entered his appearance, he had a talk with defendants Overshiner and Pitts about the case, in which he asked them to assist him in employing counsel to defend / .the case, and they declined. No notice whatever was shown as to the other defendants.

In order to conclude a warranty by a judgment of eviction ‘ ‘ the notice must be distinct and unequivocal, and expressly require the party bound by the covenant to appear and defend the adverse suit.;; Rawle on [108]*108Covenants for Title [5 Ed.] sec. 125. And it cannot be said that any of the defendants were so notified in this case. Nevertheless, it was not indispensable to the recovery on the covenant that notice of the adverse suit should have been in any way given, and while the .judgment without such notice is not evidence of eviction by paramount title, yet it is evidence of an eviction, and as such was admissible. Fields v. Hunter, 8 Mo. 128; Walker v. Deaver, 79 Mo. 664; 2 Black on Judgments, sec. 571. After its admission, it still remained for the plaintiff to show that the title under which he was ousted was paramount to that of his grantor. This the plaintiff did not undertake to do, and if the case had been submitted on the plaintiff’s evidence the judgment must have been for the defendants; instead, however, the defendants relieved the •situation by introducing evidence showing the title of each party to the ejectment suit, and presenting for the determination of the court the question whether on all the evidence the plaintiff had been ousted by paramount title.

II. It appears from the evidence that Young M. ’ Pitts is the common source of title; that he died in May, 1871, seized and in possession of the land in question with other real estate not contiguous thereto; that, at the time of his death he was living with his family on the land in controversy, occupying it .as his homestead; that it was then worth less than $1,500; that he left surviving him his widow, the said Eleanor and ten children, four of whom were adults, and six minors. It appears that the widow continued to reside with her infant children upon the homestead after the death of her husband until July, 1877; that by some sort of arrangement between her and the adult heirs, in the years 1872, 1873 and 1874, she retained the use ■of only part of it as for her dower — at first eighty acres, [109]*109and afterwards forty, and the rest was rented for the-benefit of the heirs by the husband of one of the adults, who seemed to be acting as administrator of her husband’s estate.

In August, 1873, the widow intermarried with oneBrittain, who continued to live with her on the homestead for about a year, and then left her, and ever since has remained absent from her. In 1874, an ex parteproceeding was instituted by the adult children, and by one of them as guardian and curator of the minor-children of the said Young M. Pitts, for partition among them of all the real estate of which the said Pitts died seized, including the homestead tract in controversy. To this proceeding, neither the widow nor her husband was a party. It culminated in an order of sale, and at the sale, on the eleventh of May, 1875, the said Merideth Richards, plaintiff’s warrantor, became the purchaser of the homestead tract, and thereafter received a sheriff’s deed therefor. After-wards, on the seventh of July, 1877, Richards purchased from the widow her dower interest in the forty acres of the homestead which she retained as for her-dower, and over which she exercised exclusive control, and received a deed from her in which her then husband did not join, conveying to him her dower interest. therein. Under these deeds Richards seems to have gone into possession of the whole tract and remained in possession thereof until the sale and deed to plaintiff' in 1881. His possession and these deeds gave him the only title he had when he executed the covenant of' warranty in his deed to plaintiff, and the only title that, plaintiff acquired thereby.

III. By the homestead law in force at the date of' the death of Young M. Pitts, his widow became seized of the premises conveyed by Richards to the plaintiff in fee simple. Case v. Mitzenburg, 109 Mo. 311;, [110]*110Rogers v. Marsh, 73 M . 64; Skouten v. Wood, 57 Mo. 380. And, even if a part of the premises had been regularly assigned to her as dower, she would not have been estopped from setting up and claiming her right .to the land in fee. Case v. Mitzenbwrg, supra, and authorities cited.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 640, 110 Mo. 100, 1892 Mo. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheelock-v-overshiner-mo-1892.