46 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This is an injunction suit brought by plaintiff Brown to enjoin defendant Miller from entering upon, plowing up the grasses and cutting and destroying the timber of a certain three hundred acres of land, the title of which is vested by ordinary conveyance in plaintiff’s wife. The circuit court heard the case on petition, answer and reply, with evidence tending to sustain the claims of plaintiff and defendant respectively, and gave judgment for the plaintiff, awarding the relief prayed for. Defendant appealed.
The circumstances giving rise to this litigation may be substantially stated as follows: On October 10, 1888, plaintiff was married to Mary Catron, who then owned as general property the three-hundred-acre farm. Miss Catron’s interest in this farm had been theretofore looked after by one John D. Cox ; and as her agent, and without knowledge of her marriage, Cox, on October 11, 1888, entered into a written contract of lease of the farm to-defendant Miller, the term to begin March 1, 1889, and ending March 1, 1890. Said lease was signed by John D. Cox, agent for Miss Mary Catron. The land was then occupied by Smith, whose tenancy closed with the last day of February, 1889. During the first
I. The law and the facts of this controversy are, in our opinion, all with the plaintiff. By virtue of the marriage of Miss Catron to Brown, October 10, 1888, the plaintiff became, at that date, entitled to the possession and use of the land in question. So then the alleged lease the next day (October 11), entered into by Cox (claiming to act as the agent of Miss Catron), was a nullity. This pretended lease was void even for another reason ; admitting the former agency of Cox, the marriage of Miss Catron (his principal) had the effect to revoke such agency, and, therefore, when the lease was made on October 11, Cox had no authority whatever to represent the then Mrs. Brown. Ewell’s Evans on Agency, side page 99.
II. The Cox lease then, of its own force at least, conferring no right on defendant, we come now to the next point made by his counsel. It is contended, that, admitting the invalidity of the alleged lease as made by the agent Cox, yét that plaintiff is estopped from disputing its efficacy. It is claimed that, after his marriage to Miss Catron, he, the plaintiff, received the written
The Kanage case, reported in 76 Mo., page 208, which is cited and relied on by defendant’s counsel, is expressly overruled in Mueller v. Kaessmann, supra, and is no longer authority for the position here contended for. So then we conclude that as the year’s tenancy of Mrs. Brown’s farm was never carved out and conveyed to defendant as prescribed by the statute — by an instrument of writing jointly executed by the husband and wife — defendant had no right as tenant, or otherwise, to enter upon, cultivate, use or abuse the farm in question.
Upon reading the evidence adduced at the trial, we discover no reason to question the court’s finding that there was imminent danger of the commission of waste by defendant at the institution of the suit. The judgment of the lower court was for the right party and is affirmed.