75 Mo. 260 | Mo. | 1881
This is an action of ejectment to recover a
In this action, the plaintiff, after introducing evidence tending to show that John Brooks was the original claimant and owner of the New Madrid land in question, offered in evidence a deed for said land from said Brooks to said Charles Lucas, dated in 1807. He next offered a conveyance from said Lucas to James Tanner, bearing date 1st of January, 1817, and then proceeded to put in evidence what, upon its face, purported to be a formal, regular and unbroken chain of paper title, transferring and conveying to himself whatever title said Lucas, the common grantor, may have had to said lands at the date of his deed to said Tanner; the various conveyances thus offered all being of record in the proper office. The plaintiff then proceeded to show that he, and those under whom he claimed, had been in the actual adverse possession of the land, claiming the same under the chain. of title thus put in evidence, from 1841 or 1842 up to May, 1872 — the time at which the original suit of Miller v. Dunn, supra, was commenced, and under which, by due judgment and process of law, the -said Dunn was turned out and the said Miller put in the possession of said land at the termination thereof in April, 1876. It also appeared that no person had ever been in the actual possession of said land prior to 1841 or 1842, when Gay first took the possession. The plaintiff’ also put in evidence the act of Congress of June 80th, 1864, releasing and transferring the legal title to said land to the said John Brooks, or his legal representative. Here the plaintiff rested.
At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant Miller, by way of defense, first put in evidence a deed from the said Charles Lucas to Sarah Graham, bearing date the 8th day of December, 1808, and conveying the lands in controversy to the said Sarah Graham, in contemplation of a marriage between said parties thereto shortly thereafter to take place. This marriage settlement was; also duly recorded in the proper office on the 29th day of April, 1809. The defendant next offered evidence of the! subsequent marriage of said Lucas and Graham, as con-| templated by said deed, and also of the death of the said! husband, Lucas, sometime prior to 1820. The defendant then put in evidence the entire record of the prior suit of Miller v. Dunn, including all the proof and title papers relied on by both parties to said action, together with the final judgment rendered therein in favor of said Miller and against said Dunn, as well as the execution in said cause, by and under which the said Dunn was turned out and the said Miller was put in the possession of the premises sued for in April, 1876, and the further fact that he had so remained in possession of said land, claiming thereunder, ever since and up to tlm ■‘'ime of the institution of this suit in 1877. In the former suit, Miller, the plaintiff therein,, put in evidence a deed from Sarah Lucas to A. P. Gillespie, dated in March, 1821, and recorded in February, 1872, and then traced title thereunder to himself. In this suit said Miller did not offer said deed, or the title traced there
In rebuttal, the plaintiff gave evidence to show thau on the trial of the former suit of Miller v. Dunn no objection was made to the Sarah Lucas deed to Gillespie on the ground that it was a forgery, and then offered to prove that said deed-was a forgery, and that he did not know or have any reason to know that it was such, until after the case of Miller v. Dunn was decided by the circuit court, and had been appealed to the' Supreme Court; but the court excluded the testimony so offered.
"Whereupon the court, at the instance of the plaintiff, and against the objections of the defendant, made the following declarations of law, to-wit:
1. If the court finds from the evidence in the cause-that neither Sarah Lucas nor any one as tenant of hers had been-in possession of the land in controversy from June 30th, 1864, to the commencement of this suit, then no title in Sarah Lucas, or her legal, representatives, can be set up as -outstanding in bar of this suit.
2. The act of congress of June 30th, 1864, read in-evidence by plaintiff, vested in the legal representatives of' John Brooks, the legal title to the property described in the petition, if said property is included within the lines of United States survey 2,541, under certificate No. 164, and said property was at the said time of said survey open to location under said certificate No. 164. And if' the court finds that John Brooks, or his legal representatives, filed his claim for his head-right of 709 arpents before-the board of commissioners under the act of congress, and that said claim was confirmed by said board to John Brooks, or his legal representatives, and that John Brooks executed to Charles Lucas the deed read in evidence by plaintiff, and that Charles Lucas, claiming to be the owner of the New Madrid land, confirmed as aforesaid, caused proof to be made before the United' States Recorder of'
As the decision of this case, from the view we have-taken of it, depends upon the propriety of the rulings involved in the above instructions, or declarations of law, given for the plaintiff, we deem it unnecessary to set out or consider those given or refused on the part of the defendant, or to make any fuller statement of the case than as appears above, or may be suggested in the progress of this opinion.
In the present case, the possession of the plaintiff, and those under whom he claims, was based upon the paper title put in evidence by him, which, upon its face, purports to be, and prima fade was,- a perfect chain of title. Plaintiff so claimed and presented it, and rested his case upon it. His - possession, and that of those under whom he claims, is perfectly consistent with the title so shown by him. There was no occasion or necessity for the presumption in question. His title, apparently, was perfect without it, and negatived all thought or suspicion of the existence or loss of the deed presumed.' All the facts and circumstances of plaintiff’s possession, title and claim, as put in evidence by him, are perfectly consistent with the non-existence of the re-conveyance presumed by the court, and the rule in all such cases is that no such presumption can fairly arise. Thij3 is not a case where the evidence shows a long and uninterrupted possession of land, and where no title appears on either side or otherwise; or where there is an apparent and admitted defect in plaintiff’s chain of title, as presented and claimed by him. It is in such cases generally where the doctrine of presuming deeds and grants, applies and is allowable. Rut that is not this case. There was no charge or intimation, by plaintiff, that there was- any gap or break in his title, that
■ To have presumed that Sarah Graham re-conveyed to Charles Lucas before their marriage, is, under the circumstances, a most violent and improbable presumption ; without anything to support it, contrary to all the reasonable probabilities of the case and wholly unauthorized.
The force and effect of the marriage settlement shown
If it be true, as charged by the plaintiff', (the prooff of which was offered, but excluded by the court,) that the deed from Mrs. Lucas to Gillespie, put in evidence by the plaintiff' in the case of Miller v. Dunn, was in fact a forgery, it may not be amiss here to remark that whether the defendant in that suit would now be heard by appropriate proceedings for that purpose to set aside the judgment in' that case, on the ground of fraud, and have the possession thereby lost restored to him, and thus do away the force and'effect of that judgment, with its incidents, presump
For the reasons hereinbefore set out, the judgment of the trial court, as well as that of the St. Louis court of appeals' affirming the same, are hereby reversed and the cause remanded.
Motion for rehearing overruled.