243 Mo. 455 | Mo. | 1912
Plaintiff sues to quiet title to certain lands in Douglas county, Missouri, a part of which he claims to own by limitation and the remainder by record title. The defendants answered by a general denial. The cause was taken to Greene »county on change of venue, and submitted to the court on the 2d of April, 1908, when a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, for the reason that certain decrees or judgments had in several suits to quiet title, in all
The alleged abstract of appellant to which we have been relegated shows that certain suits to quiet title to the same lands were brought against appellant by
We have been wholly unable to find in the abstract anything substantiating the point made in oral argument, that the publication in any of those suits to quiet title was not made for the statutory period.
After the overruling of his motion for a new trial, plaintiff perfected his appeal to this court.
OPINION.
I. Prom what has been shown in the foregoing statement, it is clear that the only point presented for review is the one relating to the claim that the adjudications rendered in the collateral suits brought against appellant to quiet title to the lands in controversy in this case were not conclusive of a bar to the present action, because no jurisdiction was acquired by the court of the person of appellant in those actions by failure of the order of publication to contain, in express terms, a recital that the court in directing it had designated the newspaper most likely to inform the defendants. This point does not arise under the language of the objection made when those decrees were admitted in evidence, for, as has been shown, the ground of objection then made was not a failure on the part of the order of publication to recite that it had designated a newspaper most likely to give notice, etc., but that the court making the order had not in fact selected a newspaper most likely to give notice, etc. Hence, we might dismiss the contention made in oral
After a careful consideration of the alleged abstract, which consists of documentary matters and contains no oral evidence, we have been unable to discover any ground to convict the learned trial judge of error in his finding in this case. The judgment therefore will be affirmed.
PER CURIAM.- — The foregoing opinion of Bond, 0., is adopted as the opinion of the court.