278 Mo. 19 | Mo. | 1919
Suit for an undivided one-half of a certain fifty-six and one-half acres of land in Jackson County, Missouri.
In 1849 one Archibald Rice conveyed by warranty deed to each of his two daughters, Manerva R. Rice and Mary Ann Franklin, an undivided one-half interest in'certain land in Jackson County, including the fifty-six and one-half acres in dispute. Manerva Rice later became the wife of Andrew J. Stone, who purchased the half interest of Mary Ann Franklin (afterwards Mary Ann Ish) , in all the land deeded to her by her father, so that in 1853 Manerva Stone and her husband Andrew J. Stone each owned, in their own right, an undivided one-half interest in the fifty-six and one-half acres in question.
On April 14, 1856, Andrew J. Stone and his wife, Manerva Stone, sold certain lands containing three hundred and forty-nine and one-half acres to William S. Stone, including an undivided one-half interest in the said fifty-six and one-half acres, describing the latter parcel to-wit:
“Also the undivided one-half of the south end of the east one-half of the northeast quarter of Section 2. Township 48, in Range 33, containing fifty-six acres and a half, the one-half of which hereby sold is 28% acres, and containing in the aggregate hereby sold and conveyed, 349% acres more or less, and being the same land deeded by Archibald Rice and wife to Mary Ann Kranklin (now Mary Ann Ish, the wife of John H. Ish) and Manerva R. Rice (now Manerva R. Stone, wife of the*23 said Andrew J. Stone and one of the grantees herein) on the 22 day of March, 1849; and the undivided half of said land was deeded by John H. Ish and wife aforesaid to said Andrew J. Stone on the 17 day of May, 1853, both of which deeds are now of record in the Eecorder ’s office of Jackson County and State of Missouri, reference to said deeds being hereby had.”
The controversy in this case grew out of the construction to be placed on the above deed, the plaintiffs on the one hand claiming it conveyed the half interest of Manerva Stone, while the defendants insist it conveyed the half interest of the husband, Andrew J. Stone.
Manerva Stone died in the year 1857, leaving four children, Juilet, Sallie, William and Jacob.- William Stone died in 1895, leaving as his only heir his widow, Jennie Stone, one of the defendants herein. Jacob Stone died in 1888. His estate was not administered'until 1905, when letters testamentary were granted and in the course of administration the administrator sold Jacob Stone’s alleged one-quarter interest in an undivided one-half of the fifty-six and one-half acres in dispute to defendant Bennett for $75, said Bennett acting as attorney for Frank H. Cattrell, the real purchaser.
The other two children of Manerva Stone, Juliet and Sallie, each quit-claimed their interests, if any, in the disputed tract to the plaintiff, the Park Plaza Eealty Company.
It also appears of record that on January 17, 1867, Andrew J. Stone and his second wife, Julia, conveyed to William S. Stone, an undivided “one-half of the following tracts or parcels of land,” among which was the disputed parcel of “56% acres off the,south end of the east half of the northeast quarter of Section 2, Township 48, Eange 33.” William S. Stone took possession of the land and he and his grantees have continued in actual possession thereof until this controversy arose.
In the first instance three suits were instituted; one by the Kansas Western Co-Operative Company
At the trial plaintiff introduced in evidence an affidavit of Andrew J. Stone, which was read, attached to and made a part of his deposition, a pertinent clause to the dispute in hand being as follows:
“That ... on which date (April 14, 1856) affiant and his wife sold an undivided one-half interest in said land to affiant’s brother, William S. Stone, (said one-half interest being the one-half interest belonging to said affiant’s wife at the time of her marriage).”
A decree was entered in favor of the substituted plaintiff, the Park Plaza Realty Company, in which the court found that is was the intention of both of the grantors by their deeds, to convey the undivided one-half interest in the fifty-six and one-half acres in controversy owned by Manerva R. Stone, individually, and not the intention of the grantors to ■ convey, or of the grantee to accept, the undivided half interest in said land owned by the grantor, Andrew J. Stone, individually. The court further found in favor of the Park Plaza Realty Company as substituted defendant in the partition suit wherein Jennie Stone was plaintiff, and dismissed her petition. The court also found that the Park Plaza Realty Company and its predecessors and those through whom it deraigned title had, from April 14, 1856, been in “open, notorious, visible, actual, continuous, adverse possession” of the land in controversy, and that said Park Plaza Realty Company “is the owner in fee simple, and is now in possession of said above described land,” and that none of the defendants, naming them, “have any interest in or right
From judgment entered in accordance with this decree, Jennie Stone and Ernest Bennett appealed.
The respondents endeavored to show this in two ways: first by the deposition of the husband, taken after the death of his wife and the death of their gran
In construing* this statute upon an issue presented by claimants to land under title emanating from the husband, against other parties claiming through the wife, on the theory that the husband, was the trustee of a resulting trust in her favor, Faris, J., said: “Is Lutes, under such circumstances, a competent witness by whom to show any fact which goes to dispute the validity of the title conveyed to his wife? We think not and we think the cases, as well as the statute, so hold, in cases like the present in no doubtful terms.’ [Herndon v. Yates, 194 S. W. l. c. 48.] To the same effect: Smith v. Smith, 201 Mo. l. c. 546; Patton v. Fox, 169 Mo. l. c. 107; Johnston v. Johnston, 173 Mo. 121; Lins v. Lenhardt, 127 Mo. l. c. 290; Miller v. Slupsky, 158 Mo. l. c. 646.
Our conclusion is that the testimony of the husband was not competent in the circumstances shown in this record, to prove that the deed executed by him and his wife was intended only to convey her and not his undivided half interest in the land in dispute. Defendants
II. This being an action to try title to the land in question between the heirs of the wife and those representing them, and defendants who claim under the grantee in the joint deed of the husband and wife, upon the theory that said deed carried only the wife’s undivided half interest in the fifty-six and one-half acres, and the record showing beyond dispute that the husband died in 1912, only a few years before the institution of this action, and was entitled to estate for life by the curtesy, in the land.in question, it is clear that; the parties who obtained that title from him were enitled to possession of the premises until his death, and that prior to that time no Statute of Limitations ran against the remaindermen. Cases exactly in point are: Coulson v. La Plant, 196 S. W. l. c. 1147, par. 4, 5, and 6, where Graves, J., speaking for Division One of this court, said, in referring to claims of remaindermen or reversioners: “They would have no right to possession until the death of the life tenant. The grantee of the widow could defeat any possessory action which they brought showing the life estate. That they had no possessory right of action during the life of the tenant has long since been determined,” citing and quoting the case law. To the same effect: Armor v. Frey, 253 Mo. l. c. 474; Hall v. French, 105 Mo. l. c. 442; Bradley v. Goff, 243 Mo. 95; Plauser v. Murray, 256. Mo. l. c. 87.
It follows that the judgment in this ease, quieting the title in the parties who claimed under deeds from the grantee in the joint deed of the husband and wife, was erroneous. It is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.