E. J. CLAPPER, RETTA CLAPPER, LOLA CLAPPER WILSON, LILLIE BEAVERS and SARAH ELLEN COLLINS v. LYMAN LAKIN, NENA LITTON, and BELLE LAKIN, Widow, ARCHIE LAKIN, RAYMOND LAKIN, PHOEBE SHELTON, Children and Heirs-At-Law of C. E. LAKIN, and MYRTLE HANES, MARY LAKIN, ANNIE LAKIN, FREDDIE LAKIN, JOHNNY LAKIN, HENRY LAKIN, ALMA ENDICOTT, THORNTON BUTLER, FREEMAN BUTLER, MRS. IDA FOSTER, W. OSBORN CLAPPER, T. CHESTER CLAPPER, OTHAL CLAPPER, OPAL CLAPPER, JERRY CLAPPER, JR., ETHEL CLAPPER HOLLOWELL, and all the unknown Consorts, Heirs, Devisees, Donees, Alienees, and the Immediate Mesne or Remote, Voluntary or Involuntary Grantees of the Following Named Deceased Person, Namely To-Wit: MERIT CLAPPER, PHOEBE CLAPPER LAKIN, HULDA CLAPPER LAKIN, MARY CLAPPER BUTLER, HENRY CLAPPER, JR., FRANCES CLAPPER MANNING, FREEMAN CLAPPER, CALVIN CLAPPER and JERRY CLAPPER, SR., Defendants, LYMAN LAKIN, NENA LITTON, C. E. LAKIN and MYRTLE HANES, Appellants.
Division One
December 20, 1938.
123 S. W. (2d) 27
Appellants first assignment is that plaintiffs did not make out a submissible case and that the trial court erred in refusing their request for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of all the evidence. This contention necessitates a statement of the facts in evidence most favorable to plaintiff‘s case. First, however, certain introductory or preliminary facts. Defendants put in evidence a duly certified copy of a certificate of marriage showing the marriage of Henry Clapper and Nancy McNutt at Seneca County, Ohio, July 22, 1850, and that Henry Clapper was at that time twenty-five years of age and Nancy McNutt twenty-one years of age. There was evidence on the part of defendants tending to show that defendants’ mother, Phoebe Lakin, was born to Nancy McNutt April 4, 1849, and that Phoebe was more than one year of age at the time of the
To sustain and establish their claim of title to and interest of the parties hereto in the lands of which Merit Clapper died seized plaintiffs adduced evidence purporting to show that Merit Clapper was the son of Henry and Nancy Clapper and a full brother of the children of Henry and Nancy Clapper. The evidence on the part of the plaintiffs was to the effect that Merit was born in the Henry and Nancy Clapper household and was reared and grew up as a son of Henry and Nancy Clapper and as a brother to the Clapper children; that Henry and Nancy Clapper referred to him as a son and treated him as such; that he called Henry Clapper “Pap” and Nancy Clapper “Mother;” that he called and referred to the Clapper children as brothers and sisters and they spoke of him as brother; that close neighbors and kin regarded him as the child of Henry
For the present we leave the evidence on the part of the plaintiffs in order to refer to some of the evidence offered by defendants; after which we will set out further evidence on the part of the plaintiffs tending both to rebut defendants’ evidence and to sustain plaintiffs’ claim that Merit Clapper was the child of Henry and Nancy Clapper. Following their marriage in 1874 Phoebe and Josiah Lakin lived in Kansas, Illinois, Nebraska and Iowa. During which time the four defendants were born. The family came from Iowa to McDonald County in 1891 and visited for about two weeks at that time at the home of Henry Clapper. It will be remembered that Nancy Clapper had died in December, 1881, and the family then at the Henry Clapper home consisted only of Henry Clapper, Freeman and Merit. Merit was then twenty-six years of age. After this visit Phoebe Lakin‘s family went to Columbus, Kansas, but in 1892 returned to McDonald County and lived on a farm which Merit owned and permitted them to cultivate. The house on this farm was a short distance from the Henry Clapper home. Phoebe and her oldest daughter Nena who was then about fifteen years of age did most of the house work at the Henry Clapper home. Nena (Lakin) Litton, who is a defendant, testified that in 1891, when she was about fourteen years of age, her mother, told her that she (Phoebe) was the mother of Merit Clapper and that Henry Clapper was his father; that Henry Clapper was the stepfather of Phoebe and that when she (Phoebe) was about fifteen years of age Henry Clapper forced her to have sexual intercourse with him and that Merit Clapper was born of that relationship; and that Merit was born on April 2, 1865. Mrs. Litton who at the time of the trial was fifty-seven years of age further testified that, when the Lakin family took up residence in McDonald County near the Henry Clapper home and she and her moth-
Returning now to the evidence on the part of the plaintiffs. Both Mrs. Collings (Sarah Ellen Clapper) and Mrs. Beavers (Lillie Clapper), the only surviving children of Henry and Nancy Clapper and plaintiffs herein, testified that they never heard any intimation within the family or any rumor that Merit was not the child of Henry and Nancy Clapper but was a bastard and that the first they ever heard of such a claim was after Merit‘s death when it was asserted by the Phoebe Lakin children. Plaintiff also had testimony of elderly men and women, who had known the Clapper family from the time they first came to McDonald County and had resided in the same community, that they had never heard it charged or said that Merit was an illegitimate child and had heard no rumor in the neighborhood to that effect and that they had never heard such claim made until after Merit‘s death when it was asserted by the Lakin children. It will be recalled that Phoebe Lakin died in August, 1912. At the time of her death she had title to a small tract of land. As will be noted this was twenty years after the time, according to defendants’ evidence, Merit and the Lakin children had been informed that Merit was the son of Phoebe nevertheless in October, 1913, the four Lakin children, the answering defendants herein, sold and conveyed the tract of land, which their mother owned at her death, by warranty deed, reciting therein that they were all of the children and heirs-at-law
It is in evidence that no family record of the Henry Clapper family showing the name and date of birth of the Clapper children, is in existence. It further appears that no direct proof of the maternity of Merit Clapper is available. Therefore the best evidence available was adduced, that is, family history and repute, the conduct and attitude of the immediate family—the putative parents and brothers and sisters, and other evidence of a circumstantial nature. The evidence as a whole, together with the natural and logical inferences which, in the light of common experience, may reasonably be drawn therefrom, considered from the view point most favorable
Appellants assign as error plaintiffs’ given Instruction numbered 2, relating to the burden of proof which reads: “The jury are instructed that if Merit Clapper was raised in the home of Henry and Nancy Clapper along with the other children and regarded and treated by them and the other children as a son of Nancy and Henry Clapper, then the burden is upon the defendants to prove by clear
As the cause must be remanded the criticism which appellants level at certain other instructions as being a comment on the evidence can be, and likely will be, avoided on another trial.
Since the trial of this case, the defendant C. E. Lakin has died, and the cause has been revived as to him in the name of his heirs.
For the error noted the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Hyde and Bradley, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by FERGUSON, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
