191 Mo. 698 | Mo. | 1905
This cause is in this court upon an appeal by defendants from a judgment rendered against them by the Washington County Circuit Court. This action was brought under section 650, Revised Statutes 1899; to try, ascertain and define the title of the parties plaintiff and defendant, in and to the land described in the petition. As the sufficiency of the petition is not challenged, we see no necessity for reproducing it here. After the institution of the suit by respondent, Henry C. Bell was made a party and he entered his appearance, and together with his co-defendant Cantwell, they filed a joint answer, alleging Cantwell to be the owner of the land, and followed with a general denial of the allegations of the petition.
Plaintiff offered in evidence the deposition of Anna D. Gage, one of the plaintiffs, who testified that she was the widow of E. L. Gage, and resided in Cincinnati, Ohio, and lived in Cincinnati about nine years, but resided in Texas before that time. That she was the wife of E. L. Gage and for over twenty years they
The cause was submitted to the court and a finding was had for the plaintiffs, and the following judg
Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were filed and by the court overruled, and from the judgment rendered the defendants prosecuted their appeal to this court, and the record is now before us for consideration.
OPINION.
The errors complained of by appellants, as disclosed by the record before us and suggested in the brief of counsel, may thus be briefly stated:
2. That the testimony as to the title to this land on the part of the plaintiffs was insufficient to authorize and warrant the decree rendered.
3. That under the facts of this case there was no common source of title, and hence it was incumbent upon the plaintiffs to establish their title by proper legal conveyances from its original source.
We are unable to agree with learned counsel for appellant upon any of the contentions urged in this case. Upon the first proposition, we have carefully read in detail the deposition of one of the plaintiffs, Anna D. Gage, and it is clear that her testimony sufficiently identifies the grantee in the Gobberly deed. Her testimony refers to E. L. Gage, her husband; that he resided at one time in Alpine, Texas; and the Cobberly deed recites, “E. L. Gage of Alpine, Texas,” and the identification is emphasized by the additional statement that he owned and claimed the land in suit, and that she had heard some months before that it had been sold for taxes. In the absence of any testimony to the contrary, as to the identification of E. L. Gage, the conclusion is inevitable that the court was fully warranted in finding that E. L. Gage, the husband of Anna D. Gage and the father of Harriet A. Gage, was the grantee in the Cobberly deed.
Upon the second proposition, that the testimony as to the title of the plaintiffs was insufficient to warrant the finding and decree of the court, it is sufficient to say, that from a careful analysis and consideration of the facts developed in this cause, it is apparent that the testimony furnishes ample proof to support the finding and judgment by the court. Taking a practical view of this controversy, it is narrowed down to a very small compass. So far as the testimony discloses,
This case must be held as decisive of the contention of the defendants, that in order to warrant the decree of title in this case it was necessary to establish a chain of title from its original source. This judgment and decree does not affect anyone except the parties
Finding no reversible error disclosed by the record, this judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.