143 Mo. 414 | Mo. | 1898
This is an action of ejectment for the. northwest quarter of the northeast quarter of section 30, township 53, range 13, Randolph county, Missouri, but as a matter of fact only a small strip of said forty acres and another small strip of the west side of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter, of said section, are involved in this suit.
The controversy originated in a recitation in a deed made by Joseph Davis in March, 1864. Joseph Davis, who at that time owned the whole quarter section, conveyed eighty acres more or less to his son, M. K. Davis, and described it as “the east half of the northeast quarter of section 30, township 53, range 13, the west line being a creek running between the premises now occupied by said J. Davis and the land herein mentioned by this deed.” At that time the strip now in
There was evidence tending to prove that after defendant’s purchase he cleared and fenced to the creek at the south end, across the government line at that point, but only fenced to the creek at the north end. There was evidence also that he knew the creek was the dividing line between the two eighty acre tracts; that on one occasion he obtained permission from the heirs of Joseph Davis to build across a crook in the creek on the north end in order to get stock water into his pasture, and on several occasions stated the creek was the line. After the execution of the deed by Joseph Davis to his son, he and his heirs paid taxes on the “west half,” and his grantees, on the “east half, NE. qr. of section 30.” In the year 1892
Firmly anchored in the law of procedure in this State is the common law doctrine that in an action of ejectment the plaintiff seeking to recover the possession of land occupied by another must recover upon the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of the defendant’s title. It was entirely competent for Joseph Davis in his deed to his son M. K. Davis to limit the land sold to his son by the natural boundary of “Davis Creek,” and notwithstanding he had described the land by designating it as a fractional part of a recognized government survey, which, contained eighty acres more or less, the creek was the boundary on the west under that grant. It is a fixed principle that monuments when called for in the description of land in a deed will control’ calls for courses and distances, and natural monuments are higher in value than artificial ones. West v. Bretelle, 115 Mo. 653; Rutherford v. Tracy, 48 Mo. 325; Shewalter v. Pirner, 55 Mo. 218. It follows then that Joseph Davis and his heirs retained the title to all the land in the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 30, ■which lies west of Davis creek. From this fact plain
The sale of land not included in the decree by the sheriff is without authority of law and his deed conveys no title thereto. Much stress is laid upon an estoppel of the Davis heirs on account of certain inquiries put to the sheriff as to the lines of this forty running to the