137 Mo. 179 | Mo. | 1897
The object of this suit is to partition the lands of which one Agnes Beckman died seized among the tenants in common entitled thereto.
The facts, as they appear from the pleadings, are, that Agnes Beckman died testate in October, 1892, seized of the land in question. By her will she devised the entire estate to Henry Nagel. A suit to contest the will was commenced by the other heirs of deceased, which was afterward compromised and settled. Under the compromise Henry Nagel, the contestee, and sole devisee under the will, conveyed to defendant Rebenack one undivided one half of the land to be held-in trust for the other heirs, subject to the repayment to him of certain costs and expenses of the suit.
The beneficiaries in said deed commenced this suit making the said Rebenack and the said Henry Nagel defendants.
The petition is in two counts. The first is for the purpose of having the trust under the deed declared. In this count plaintiffs wish to avoid refunding the advancements made by Rebenack in the suit contesting the will. '
The second count is for partition of the land.
Pending this suit in the circuit court Henry Nagel died testate, leaving his interest in this land to his .children, Katie A. and Henry R. Nagel, who were minors. Herman Nagel was made executor of the will
The said Nagel as executor and guardian, and the two minors, were brought in by scire facias, and the cause was revived in their ñames.
Herman Nagel filed a demurrer to the petition on the grounds, first, that he was not a.necessary party to the suit, and second, that several causes of action had been improperly united in the petition.
The two minors, by their said guardian, also demurred on the second ground.
These demurrers were overruled and defendants refused to plead further.
The cause was then heard, the trust declared, and partition and sale decreed.
Defendant Herman Nagel and his two wards appeal.
The only error assigned is to the action of the court in overruling the demurrers to the petition.
I. The cause was revived in the name of Herman Nagel as executor and as testamentary guardian of his minor wards. If he was not a proper party in his capacity as executor he certainly was such as guardian. R. S. 1889, sec. 7139. The demurrer does not make the distinction and was properly overruled for that reason.
But these minors received their estate in the land through Henry Nagel, who had just died. It may fairly be assumed that his estate had not been settled. The land devised to said minor defendants was subject to sale by the executors for the payment of the debts of deceased, if any there should be.
In such case the statute provides that until final settlement of the estate the interest of the parties in the lands, or, in the proceeds of the sale, where a sale has been ordered, shall be subject to claims against the
There is no doubt, in case the lands, or the proceeds o.f the sale, should be needed to pay the debts of the deceased that the executor on his own application could properly be made a party in order to protect the interest of creditors and the estate. No objection can be seen to making him a party for the same purpose in the first instance.
No title, of course, would pass through the executor or administrator, for none vested in them. This is all that is decided in the Throckmorton case, 121 Mo. 58. Judge Burgess says: “The administrator of her
father’s estate had no interest in the land of his intestate which would authorize him to prosecute a partition suit, or to make him a party thereto.” The court was only considering the title that passed under the partition proceedings prosecuted against an administrator alone.
II. Was the petition obnoxious to the rule of pleading' which prohibits multifariousness? Defendant Rebenack held the legal title to the land, but plaintiffs claimed the equitable right. Both, therefore, claimed an interest in the land. These interests, on the face of the petition, were hostile, and the other parties to the suit were, in no manner, concerned in the matter of their settlement. In suits purely equitable, at common law, the petition doubtless would be held multifarious. The parties interested in the causes of action stated in the respective counts are not identical. The code allows the joinder in the same petition of two or more causes of action, but requires them to be separately stated, and they must affect all the parties to the action.
This is merely a suit for partition of the land, and, incidentally, to settle the rights and interests of the claimants thereto. It was not necessary that the action should have been stated in two counts, but no injury can result from the course adopted. The formal division of the petition into separate counts can be disregarded. The object of making distinct issues oh the conflicting claims was accomplished. It would of course be unfair and improper to tax the cost of these •collateral issues generally, to be paid by all the parties in proportion to their respective interests in the land. Such costs should be adjudged equitably by the court.
Under the partition act we do not deem the petition multifarious.
III. Rebenack did not claim an absolute title to an interest in the land, but merely a lien thereon for reimbursement on account of advances made. It does not appear, therefore, from the proceedings, that plaintiffs had been disseized of the interest claimed by them, or that they did not have such possessory right to the land as is required in order to maintain partition. The judgment is affirmed.