131 Mo. 258 | Mo. | 1895
This suit is ejectment prosecuted by Charles A. Cochran, George Lester Cochran, A. L. Cummings and W. J. Turner as plaintiffs, the last two being the husbands respectively of Medora (Cochran) Turner and Anna (Cochran) Cummings in whose right they claim. Plaintiffs claim title as heirs at law of Harriet Cochran, deceased. Defendant Thomas is the tenant of his codefendants who claim title under a sheriff’s deed in a certain partition proceeding in which they claim to have acquired the title of plaintiffs. They also claim under a tax deed and the statutes of limitation.
The cause was tried to the court without a jury, “and at the request of defendants the court in its findings stated in writing the conclusions of fact found separate from its conclusions of law.”
' The substance of the finding of facts was that James Cochran was first married to Hannah Moore in 1819 by whom he had four children some of whom are still living. His first wife having died he married Harriet Ritchie, November 13, 1829. By this marriage Anna was born May, 1836, and married plaintiff, A. L. Cummings, October 11, 1858; plaintiff, Charles A., was born October 4, 1839; Medora was born November 19, 1842, and was married to plaintiff Turner, April 25, 1865, and plaintiff G-eorge L., was born March 7, 1855. Of this marriage was also born, August 27, 1846, Harriet, who died single and intestate, without issue, December, 1890; and Albert, born August, 1850, and who died single, intestate and without issue in September, 1866.
In February, 1831, the United States, by patent, conveyed to Gabriel Predom the southwest quarter of section 32, township 50, range 33, west. The lot sued for is part of this quarter section. The land claimed in this suit is a part of lot 184, in Kansas City.
On February 14, 1859, John Campbell, by sufficient deed, for the expressed consideration of $1,600, conveyed to the said Harriet Cochran* the mother of plaintiffs, the whole of said lot 184, which deed was duly recorded in May, 1861. This lot fronted sixty feet on Wyandotte street in Kansas City, and has been within the limits of the city since the date of the deed.
On March 14, 1867, a suit for the partition of said lot was commenced in the circuit court of Jackson county. The heirs of one Benjamin Y. Glimé, with the said Harriet Cochran and plaintiff George L. Cochran, were named as plaintiffs, and the said Anna (Cochran) Cummings, Charles A. Cochran, Medora (Cochran) Turner, and James Cochran, were named as defendants. Three of the plaintiffs sued by W. H. Phelps as their next friend. His name was written by himself in the caption as next friend, but the petition was not signed by him. The petition was signed by Douglass & Gage as attorneys for plaintiffs, and was sworn to by William Douglass as agent far plaintiffs.
The answer was filed on the same day, March 14, 1867; was' signed Charles A. Cochran, James Cochran, by Wm. Douglass, their attorney, and was as follows:
“Said Anna Cochran Cummings, by F. A. Mitchell, her next friend; Medora-Turner, by F. A. Mitchell, her next friend; Charles A. Cochran and James Cochran, answer and admit that all the allegations in the petition of plaintiffs are true, and they ask and consent that partition of the premises be made according to the prayer of the petition, and that a final decree herein be rendered at this present term, of this court, and for all such orders and judgments as may be necessary.”
The name, F. A. Mitchell, where it occurs in the answer, was written by himself, lie at the time being an attorney at law practicing at Kansas City.
The petition charged that Harriet Cochran and Benjamin Y. Glime purchased the lot of John Campbell with the intention of holding the same as tenants
On the same day, the court being in session, a decree of partition and sale was entered. The findings and recital of the court were that the parties all appeared.
Under this decree the lot was regularly sold by the sheriff to James Cochran, the surviving husband of Harriet Cochran, deceased, for $2,000. A deed was made to the purchaser, September 19, 1867, which, on the same day, was filed for record.
By mesne conveyances from James Cochran the title acquired by him was on June 17, 1868, vested in Howard M. Holden and Lyman Fullerton as tenants in common by deed from George Wilson, containing full covenants of warranty of title. On June 11, 1861, a tax deed was made by the city register, which purported to convey to Daniel Burns said lot 181. On July 3, 1868, Burns by quitclaim deed in consideration of $600 conveyed said lot to said Holden and Fullerton.
The court found that Holden and Fullerton purchased and paid for said lot, $3,125 to Wilson, and $600 to Burns, in good faith, believing that this deed would secure to them a good and perfect title to the lot. Defendants claim under a regular chain of title from Holden and Fullerton.
The court further found that in the year 1868 the said Holden and Fullerton took the actual possession of the lot, and the same has been held by them and their grantees openly, notoriously, exclusively, and adversely since that date.
The court concluded its finding as follows: “As matter and conclusion of law on the foregoing special findings and conclusions of facts the court finds for defendants.”
Plaintiffs offered evidence tending to prove that they did not authorize their appearance in the partition proceedings, and did not receive the proceeds of the sheriff's sale. Plaintiffs asked, and the court refused to give, declarations of law to the effect that if the appearance of the parties to the partition suit was not authorized the judgment would be void as to such parties.
The judgment upon the facts found was for defendants.
The grounds assigned for a new trial on motion therefor were the omission of the court to find, among others, the following material facts: Whether George L. Cochran, Charles A. Cochran, Medora Turner, or Anna C. Cummings, or any of them, authorized their appearance in the partition proceedings or received the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale; whether certain ordinances of the City of Kansas were in force at the time of the assessment and sale of the lot for taxes, and whether the lot was assessed in the name of J. Cochran for the tax of 1861. The refusal of the court to give the declarations of law was also assigned as a ground for new trial. The motion was overruled and plaintiffs appealed.
We are of the opinion that under this provision the court is required to find and state in writing, not only every constitutive fact in issue to which his attention is directed, but also separately the conclusions of law thereon in order that exceptions may be taken thereto. Prior to this act the court, when trying a case in which the parties were entitled to a jury, was required, when requested, to state in writing the conclusions of law. This was done in the form of declarations of law asked by the parties. The conclusions of law were shown by giving or refusing these declarations.
We doubt whether, by this act, the legislature intended to change the practice in this respect. The only substantial change made is in respect to a finding of facts. Whether the conclusions of law were required to be stated in a form or manner different from what was required under the rules of practice then in force does not appear.
We are well satisfied, however, that if either party desire the court to declare the law specially upon any conclusion of facts found it is his duty to make a specific request that it do so. Failing to make such request a general finding for one party is equivalent to a declaration of law that upon all the facts found such party is entitled to recover, and is sufficient to support the judgment.
The general finding for • defendants in this case was equivalent to saying that upon the facts, as found, no other conclusion of law could be reached than that defendants had a right to the possession of the property in suit, which plaintiffs could not disturb. If that legal conclusion necessarily follows from the eonclu
The view we take of the case makes it necessary to consider only the validity of the proceedings in the partition suit which resulted in the sheriff’s sale and deed.
The court undoubtedly hád jurisdiction of the subject-matter of that suit. Plaintiffs were all named as parties to the proceeding. If they were in fact parties according to the rules of law in force at the time then the deed from the sheriff operated as a bar against them to any claim or title they held. No objection is made to the regularity of the proceedings in other respects.
Plaintiffs Anna Cummings and Medora Turner insist that the court never acquired jurisdiction over them in the partition proceedings and as to them the judgment is absolutely void upon the face of the record. It appears from the record that these two plaintiffs were married women at the time the judgment was rendered and that their husbands were not joined with them as parties defendant. This omission, it is claimed, rendered the judgment void as to them.
The partition act, and general practice acts in force at the time this judgment was rendered, are found in the Q-eneral Statutes of 1865. Chapter 152 treats of partition. By an examination of this chapter, which undertakes to treat of the entire subject and to regulate the proceedings, no distinction is made between an interested married woman and any other party in interest. It speaks of all alike as parties in interest. Married women are included in this description. Davenport v. Hannibal, 120 Mo. 150. They may be joined as plaintiffs or made defendants. If omitted entirely they may appear and be made parties on application for that purpose. Section 9. They may appear and confess judgment. Section 12.
The act does not require that husbands of interested married women shall be made parties. It treats fully of the subject of parties and the omission could not have been inadvertently made. By the very clearest implication the partition act does authorize a married woman to sue and be sued alone in partition cases and in respect to her own interest in the premises sought to be divided. The husband is only a necessary party in respect to his marital rights in his wife’s property, or rights he may have independently of those of his wife.
The object of partition is not to defeat the rights of any of the common owners but merely to separate
The partition act is independent of the practice act in all matters of practice for which provision is made, and under it this court has held that the rights of infants are regulated, and though the practice act requires suits by and against infants to be prosecuted by guardian or next friend, a judgment in partition to which an infant appeared by' next friend was held erroneous on appeal for the reason that the partition act requires such suits to be prosecuted by guardian. Colvin v. Hauenstein, 110 Mo. 581.
The independent rights of a married woman in matters of the partition of property held in common with others is illustrated in a recent case in which it was held that under certain circumstances a parol partition would bind her in equity. Sutton v. Porter, 119 Mo. 103.
Our conclusion is that the judgment was not void by reason of the omission to join the husbands of the married women as parties to the proceedings. Married women are clearly' authorized under the partition act to sue and be sued alone, that is, without joining their husbands with them, and the provision of said act that “all pleadings and proceedings under this chapter, except as may be herein otherwise provided, shall be as in ordinary civil actions,” has no application to the joinder of husband in suits for the partition of the land of the wife.
It has been said that, when the recitals of the judgment “show any facts, jurisdictional in their
The principle is well settled under the decisions of this state that when the judgment recites generally the service of process, and the record shows the manner of service, the recital will be construed as referring to the service shown. If that service is insufficient to give the court jurisdiction the recital will be impeached. This principle is recognized in both the majority and minority opinions in Bell v. Brinkmann, 123 Mo. 270.
So if the judgment recites an appearance and the mode of the appearance is shown by the record the recital will be presumed to refer to such mode.
The partition judgment recites that Mrs. Cummings and Mrs. Turner appeared to the action and agreed to the judgment, but the answer which was filed in the cause, and was a part of the record, shows that their appearance was by their next friends. Upon the record, then, the presumption is that their appearance was by next friend and not otherwise. If such an appearance was unauthorized by law, then no jurisdiction was acquired over them, and the judgment upon the face of the record was void as to them.
The conclusion was reached in the preceding paragraph that in partition suits a married woman could sue and defend without her husband being joined with her. The question now is whether in such case she is authorized to sue or defend by next friend.
Suits for the partition of land were originally of equitable cognizance. While now statutory they partake of the nature of equitable proceedings. This equity jurisdiction is not curtailed or ousted by the statute. Courts of law ánd courts of equity have a concurrent jurisdiction in these suits. Saving Inst. v. Collonious, 63 Mo. 290.
Looking to the general practice act of 1865 (G. S. 1865, p. 651, sec. 8) we find this provision relating to suits by and against married women:
“When a married woman is a party, her husband must be joined with her, except that: First, when the action concerns her separate property, she may sue and be sued alone; second, when an action is between herself and her husband, .she may sue and be sued alone. But when her husband can not be joined with her, as herein provided, she shall prosecute or defend by her next friend.”
This statute is remedial. Its manifest purpose was to enlarge the rights of a married woman in respect to the control of her husband in suits wherein her individual property was involved and in which the husband had no marital interest, and in suits in which the interest of husband and wife are, or might be, antagonistic. In all such cases it is manifest either that no necessity existed for joining the husband or there was impropriety in doing so. To such suits we think the statute was intended to apply. The intention in such cases was to adopt the rule in equity practice. The statute being remedial such liberal construction should be given it as will advance the remedy. Campbell v. Railroad, 121 Mo. 346; Claflin v. Van Wagoner, 32 Mo. 252.
We do not think the words “separate property,” as used in the statute should be given the technical meaning that is applied to the words “separate estate,” when used to distinguish the equitable from the legal
The record in the partition suit shows that Harriet Cochran, the ancestor of plaintiffs, on her death left her husband surviving her. Upon her death he took an estate for his own life in the entire property. The heirs took an estate in remainder. The life estate was outstanding at the date of the judgment. The wife had no possession or right of possession while the life estate continued and the husband could have none through her. There was, moreover, no such seizure in fact in the wife as created an initiate estate by the curtesy in the husband. Carpenter v. Garrett, 75 Va. 129.
The husbands of plaintiffs, therefore, had no manner or degree of legal interest in the estate of their wives in this land. The estate in remainder was the separate property of the wives so long as the life estate continued.
It follows that under the terms of the statute these married women properly defended by next friend.
Y. It is nest insisted that plaintiff George L. Cochran who was also a plaintiff in the partition suit was at the time a minor and appeared by attorney instead of by guardian as required by the partition act.
Section 1 of that act provided that suits for the partition of land might be commenced by any one or more of the parties interested therein whether adults or minors. Said plaintiff was, therefore, authorized to join as a plaintiff and submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court.
But the act also provides that an infant shall be represented in such suits by his general guardian or by one appointed by the court. Sections 48 and 49. The appointment of a guardian ad litem by the court may, under the partition act, be made before or after any proceeding has been commenced. The proceedings in respect to infants are governed by the partition act and not by the general practice act. Colvin Case, 110 Mo. 583.
It appears, therefore, that a minor, as he may be brought into court as a defendant by service of process, so he may submit himself to the jurisdiction of the court as a plaintiff, after which in either case it becomes the duty of the court to appoint a guardian ad litem to represent him. In either case, however, the court acquires jurisdiction over him'and the judgment would
But the legislature, by an act which took effect March 13, 1867, the day before the rendition of this judgment, declared that no judgment after trial or submission shall be reversed, impaired or in any way affected by reason of “any party under twenty-one years of age having appeared by attorney, if the verdict or judgment be for him.” 2 Wag. Stat., sec. 19, p. 1036; Brandon v. Carter, 119 Mo. 583.
The judgment in this case was in exact conformity to the prayer of the petition of said infant plaintiff and can not be affected on the ground that he appeared by attorney instead of by guardian.
We do not think it necessary in this case to consider the effect of an appearance of a defendant by one of the counsel of plaintiffs in a suit for
The court found specially that the purchase of the land at the sale by the sheriff by James Cochran, one of the defendants, was made by agreement of the parties, with the understanding, that the title acquired should inure to the benefit of all the parties in interest. Such an executed agreement, standing unquestioned for twenty years, surely estops him, at this day, to deny the jurisdiction of the court over him. He clearly ratified the judgment by his acts in subsequent proceedings upon it.
That such judgments may be ratified by the acts of parties whose interests are thereby adjudicated is well settled by the decisions of this court. It is said in Pockman v. Meatt, 49 Mo. 349: “In proceedings in partition the sale is by the act of the parties themselves as well as by a judgment, and is not a sale in invitum like an ordinary sheriff’s sale under execution.” See, also, Pentz v. Kuester, 41 Mo. 447.
It was said by Sherwood, J., in discussing the effect a receipt of the proceeds of a sale in partition would have upon a party in interest: “If she knew from what source these proceeds came, and still receipted for them, * * * she certainly would not be allowed to repudiate the transaction now, even if the partition proceedings were, in fact, void. She certainly could not have both the money and the land.” McClanahan v. West, 100 Mo. 323. See, also, Fischer v. Siekmann, 125 Mo. 165.
The same rule of estoppel has been applied to judgments in cases other than partition. Austin v. Poring, 63 Mo. 23; Clyburn v. McLaughlin, 106 Mo. 524; Lanier v. McIntosh, 117 Mo. 519.
The special finding of fact that the purchase was made by James' Cochran, the father of the heirs of
The statute requires the court, when requested by either party, to “state in writing the conclusions of facts found separately from the conclusions of law.” Sec. 2135. Elliott, in his recent work on practice (sec. 975), gives this rule as one, in his opinion, founded upon right principle: “If a special finding is. silent on a material point it is deemed a finding against the party who has the burden of proof;” This rule-finds support in the decisions of the supreme court of. Indiana. Railroad v. Hart, 119 Ind. 280; Bank v. Bolen, 121 Ind. 304.
But in this case plaintiffs asked the court to state a conclusion of law to the effect that if their appearance-was not authorized the judgment was void. This, declaration of law was refused. Erom this we may infer that the court held the fact to be immaterial under the pleadings, and the facts that were found. We will so treat it.
The question then comes to this, could plaintiffs, in this suit, in order to avoid the force and effect of the-judgment, prove that their appearance by attorney and next friend was not authorized by them.
It is well settled law in this state that a foreign judgment, rendered on an unauthorized appearance, may be set aside by a direct proceeding for that purpose, or its effect overcome by a plea in equity to a suit on such judgment or to enforce rights secured
But the judgment, as has been seen, was valid upon the face of the proceedings and no direct attack is made upon it here. The attempt is to defeat its force by an indirect and collateral attack which we think can not be done. Whether the appearances were authorized or not was a question upon which the court had the power to pass and in fact necessarily did pass in finding that the parties appeared. The finding is invulnerable collaterally. Van Fleet, Coll. Attack, secs. 420 and 421, and cases cited.-
Counsel, we think, misapprehended the scope of the rulings in these cases, and the proper construction of the statute which requires every person having an interest in the premises to be made parties to the action. These cases go no further than to hold that in case it appears from the pleadings or evidence that persons have an interest in the property who are not made parties to the action, a judgment should not be rendered until such persons are made parties and brought under the jurisdiction of the court. It was not held, nor intimated, that a judgment of partition could be avoided by one of the parties to it upon the ground that others, who were not parties, had an interest in the premises partitioned. Such a judgment would conclude all per