delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced in the Dunklin Circuit Court, and taken by change of venue to the Cape Girardeau Circuit Court on the application of the defendant Clark. The plaintiff for the first time objects in this court that the application ought to have been made by all the defendants.
If the other defendants are satisfied, it does not lie with the plaintiff to make this objection. ’Whether the other defendants are satisfied'or not, or could raise such an objection at all, need not he inquired into now.
Another point made here is that the notice of this application was not properly served. But this point was not presented to the Circuit Court, and cannot be considered here.
The next point is that the court exercised its discretion unsoundly in sending the case to Cape Girardeau, and the ground taken is that it was inconvenient for the plaintiff’s attorney to attend that court. Courts are not hound to consult the conven
There seems to be some confusion in this record, which, however, does not vitiate the final action of the court. The plaintiff amended his petition several times, and the defendant Clark filed an answer which was struck out, and then this order striking out was rescinded and the answer was left standing to the petition.
The defendant also demurred to each petition, and the demurrers were sustained and leave given to amend till a third amended petition was filed, which was also demurred to and final judgment given on this demurrer in favor of the defendants.
If a demurrer be filed and not disposed of, and an answer is afterwards filed and the case is tried on the answer, that amounts to a waiver of the demurrer. And in like manner, where an answer is filed and afterwards the case goes off on demurrer without noticing the answer, the proceedings on the demurrer amount to a withdrawal of the answer.
The only material point in this record is whether the demurrer to the last amended petition was properly sustained.
There are two separate counts in the petition ; the first count alleges that Dunklin county is the owner in fee of several thousand acres of land, describing the land. The petition then charges that the defendant Clark, confederating with the other defendants in order to cheat and defraud the plaintiff out of said lands, procured one Absalom Earris to execute to the defendant Clark a deed of conveyance of these lands as president of- the Dunklin and Pemiscot Plank Road Company, by which a cloud was cast over the plaintiff’s title to these lands so as to render them less valuable and less salable, etc. There is nothing in the petition to show that the Dunklin and Pemiscot Plank Road Company had any color of title whatever to these lands, nor are they made parties to this suit. The prayer of the first count is that this cloud be removed and the title adjudged to plaintiff, etc.
The petition does not state to whom such deeds of trust and mortgages were made, but prays judgment that the cloud be removed and the title decreed to plaintiff, and for damages.
The demurrer sets forth several grounds, but I shall only notice tWo. The first is that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and the second alleges that there is a defect of parties defendant.
The first cause of demurrer applies with peculiar force to the first count of the petition. To constitute a cloud upon the title of lands, there must be some color of title shown in the defendant. The conveyance of .land by the grantor who sets up no title whatever does not cast any cloud over the title of the true owner. There is no pretense in this case, that the Dunklin and Pemiscot Plank Road Company had any color of title to the land in dispute— at least nothing of the kind is alleged in the petition. The demurrer to the first count was properly sustained on this ground.
The second count is manifestly defective for want of parties against whom a decree is asked.
The court is asked to set aside mortgages and deeds of trust without bringing the parties to these mortgages and deeds of trust before the court.
Let the judgment be affirmed.