156 Mo. App. 247 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
Plaintiff commenced this suit in the circuit court of Harrison county in January, 1909, to recover as the heir of his brother, Leander F. Huff, the share of their father’s estate that would be due his said brother if he were alive.
The petition alleges that Leander died in May, 1906, leaving plaintiff and their mother as his sole heirs, and that the mother assigned her interest in his estate to plaintiff before this suit was brought. Defendant, who is the widow of the father of plaintiff and the administratrix of his estate, denies that plaintiff’s brother, Leander, is dead, and the principal issue in the case is whether or not Leander, before the institution of this action, had died without issue and without creditors. Defendant demurred to the petition on three grounds, viz.:
“1st. The petition shows on its face that this court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit.
“2d. The petition shows on its face that plaintiff has no legal capacity to maintain the suit.
“3d. The petition fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”
The demurrer was overruled and defendant answered admitting that she is the. administratrix of the estate of plaintiff’s father, appointed by the probate court of Wright county and that the estate in her hands is now ready for distribution, and alleging “that at the time of the final settlement of said estate., it was ordered and adjudged by the probate court of Wright county, Missouri, that the personal property should be distributed among the plaintiff, this defendant and said Leander F. Duff. That it was found and adjudged by
Defendant further answering, denies each and every other allegation in plaintiff’s first amended petition contained.
Defendant furthed answering states that at all times .since making final settlement as administratrix as aforesaid, she has been ready, willing and anxious to pay to said Leander F. Duff his said distributive share in the estate of the said James F. Duff, and that she now holds said fund subject to the orders of the probate court of Wright county, Missouri, in accordance with the law in such cases made and provided.”
There is no controversy over the facts of the case. Plaintiff and his brother Leander were the only children of James F. Duff and his wife, Mary, who lived at Princeton, Missouri, a city close to the Iowa line. Husband and wife separated, were divorced and in 1895, James F. Duff married his second wife. They lived together in Princeton until 1902 and Leander lived with them. They were 'divorced and in 1902, Mr. Duff married the defendant and removed to Wright county where he lived until his death in April, 1906. After being divorced the mother of plaintiff' and Leander married a Mr. Wasson and lived at Lineville, Iowa, a city sixteen miles north of Princeton. In September, 1899, Leander, then sixteen years old, disappeared from his home in Princeton and has not been heard from since. Sometimes he and his father quarreled and on such occasions he Avould talk to his stepmother about leaving home and enlisting in the army for service in the Philippine Islands. One night-after he and his father had quarreled and parted in anger, he retired to his room and during the night, secretly left home, never to return. He did not enlist in the army and there is no evidence that he
The court overruled the demurrer to the evidence offered by defendant and at the request of plaintiff instructed the jury:
“I. If the jury believe from the evidence that Leander F. Duff while residing in this state went therefrom and has not returned to this'state for seven successive years—and that during all that time and up to the time of this trial he has not been heard from by any member of his family, or any other person, then he is presumed at and after the expiration of said seven years absence to be dead—and the jury are at liberty to infer the fact of his death from such absence for seven successive years—and from the fact that he has not been heard from during that time.
“II. If the jury find from the evidence as defined in the preceding instruction, that Leander F. Duff is dead, and that he left surviving him no wife, issue or their descendants and no other heirs except the plaintiff Talbot S. Duff, his brother, and Mary A. Wasson, his mother, and that said Mary A. Wasson has assigned to
The court refused to give the following instruction offered by defendant: “The court instructs the jury that while seven years continued absence of a person without such person having been heard of or from by those with whom he would naturally be expected, to have communicated raises a presumption of the death of such absentee, still this presumption is not an absolute presumption where the circumstances of the absentee’s departure were such as would indicate an intention not to return or communicate with those with whom he might reasonably be expected to have communicated, and if you find and believe from the evidence in this case that Leander F. Duff left his home under such circumstances as would cause you to believe that he had no intention of returning or communicating with those with whom he would reasonably have been expected to communicate, then there is no presumption of his death in this case and your verdict must be for defendant.”
The jury returned a verdict for-plaintiff and defendant appealed from a judgment rendered on that verdict. What we shall say in the discussion of the demurrer to the evidence will dispose of the case.
The statute (sec. 6340, Rev. Stat. 1909) provides: “If any person- who shall have resided in this state go from and do not return to this state for seven successive years, he shall be presumed to be dead in any case wherein his death shall come in question, unless proof be made that he was alive within that time.”
This statute was not intended to abrogate the common law presumption of death after an unexplained absence abroad of seven years. The statutory and common law rules are alike in many respects but each has a special field of its own. [Dickens v. Miller, 12 Mo. App. 408; Biegler v. Supreme Council, 57 Mo. App. 419; Winter v. Supreme Lodge, 96 Mo. App. 1.]
In the instructions asked by plaintiff and given by the court the statutory presumption only is invoked and since we find ground in the evidence on which that presumption may stand we shall not consider the peculiar features of the common law rule. To avail himself of the statutory presumption, plaintiff was required to show that Leander resided in this state, and that he left the state and did not return for seven successive years. Such proof, as we have said, would not raise a conclusive, but, at most, a prima facie presumption of death which could be overcome by countervailing evidence. In other words, such proof, unsupported and uncontradicted, would support an inference that death was the cause of the prolonged absence of Leander. We find the peculiar circumstances of the case, instead of destroying the presumption of death, tend to support it and, therefore, that the issue of whether the young man was dead or alive at the commencement of the suit was one of fact for the jury to solve.
Counsel for defendant argue that there is no evidence that Leander left the state. The St. Louis Court of Appeals hold in Bradley v. Modern Woodmen, 124 S. W. 69, 146 Mo. App. 428, that the statutory presumption of death from seven years absence from the state does not arise until it is conclusively shown that decedent left the state, but that does not mean that the fact must be established by direct and positive evidence.
The belief that the young man is alive and was in this state during a period of more than eight years while such a quest was being pursued seems unreasonable and necessarily must rest on the further belief—entirely unsupported by evidence—that the anger of the son towards his father was indestructible, malignant and unsoftened by the death of its object. We say this belief necessarily would have to be indulged since it is unbelievable that Leander could have remained in the state and have been in ignorance of the search, being made for him. But had he been so callous as to secretly regard his father’s manifest agony of mind with com
But it is argued by defendant that the presumption includes the further presumption that the death of the young man did not occur until the end of the seven years period and,-therefore, we. cannot assume that he remained unmarried and childless, during a period in his life when the desire to marry is strongest. Lawson, in his work on The Law of Presumptive Evidence, p. 248, states as a rule that “One who is proved to have been unmarried when last known to be alive will be presumed to have died childless but it is otherwise when he or she was married when last known to be alive.”
The Supreme Court in Johnson v. Johnson, 170 Mo. 34, do not recognize such rule but declare the opposite rule that “there is no presumption of law of fact that a man or woman is single, nor any presumption to the contrary.” Judge Sherwood says: “At best it can only be said that there is no presumption at all on the subject; although ordinarily a condition, whether it be one of insolvency, insanity of a chronic nature (State v. Lowe, 93 Mo. 547) or what not, once shown to exist, is presumed to have changed. But here was a young man last heard of at a time when he naturally would be unmarried, but approaching that period of life at which the greater number of men do marry, if at all, and no better reason is apparent for presuming a man unmar -
We perceive no. occasion for resorting to presumption. Defendant’s premise is unsound that Leander is presumed not to have died until seven years had elapsed from the date he left the state. There is no presumption that he died at any particular time within the seven years. [Chapman v. Kullman, 191 Mo. 1. c. 246; Winter v. Superior Lodge, 96 Mo. App. 1.] Whether or not the young man was married was a fact to be proved and the burden of showing a change of status is on the party relying on such change. Prom the fact that in the face of immediate, persistent and-intellig*ent efforts to find Leander, no trace of him even was discovered, the inference is very strong that he met an early death and a nameless grave even before he had an opportunity to enlist in the army. There are no facts or circumstances on which to rest a reasonable conclusion that he married and was survived by issue.
The point that plaintiff is without legal capacity to sue was waived by defendant’s failure to stand on her demurrer to thé petition in which that objection was presented. The rule is well settled that if a defendant pleads to the merits he waives everything in the petition but two points, viz., that no cause of action is stated, and that the court has no jurisdiction over the subject-matter. [Hudson v. Caboon, 193 Mo. 1. c. 556, et seq., and cases cited.]
The demurrer to the evidence was'properly overruled. The instructions fairly presented the case to the jury and there is no prejudicial error in the record.
The judgment is affirmed.