This is an action in ejectment to recover possession of the northeast quarter of northeast quarter of section 31, township 28, range 23, in Christian county, Missouri. The petition is ih common form. The answer of the defendant admits possession, and denies the other allegations of the petition, and sets up an equitable defense, on which issue was joined by reply. A change of venue was taken from the Christian to the Greene Circuit Court, where the case was' tried before the court without a jury. The finding and judgment was for the plaintiffs for the undivided nine-tenths of the premises, and the defendant appeals.
In February, 1899, John Goodin, late of the county of Christian, died intestate, seized in fee of the premises. The parties to this action are his widow, who elected to take a child’s share, and the heirs at law of said deceased. The defendant being his son, and the plaintiffs his widow, children and grandchildren, entitled to the undivided nine-tenths of the premises as found and adjudged by the circuit court, unless the defendant has made good his equitable defense and counter-claim. The substance of that defense and claim is that on the first day of January, 1892, the defendant entered into the possession of the premises under a verbal contract with his father, by which his father, in consideration of the work and labor which defendant theretofore had done for him after he had arrived at the age of maturity, agreed to give him the premises, and thereafter to make him a deed for the same; that in pursuance of such agreement he erected a dwelling house and made other valuable improvements thereon, and since has continued to occupy the same as his home.
The evidence tended to prove that the defendant became of age about the year 1884, and was married in 1890. That between those dates he worked for his
Dora Steigel testified that “she worked at John Goodin’s for about two years, and when she first went there, the deceased said he would go after John and have him come home and work there and help build that house, and that he would deed John that eighty acres of land; that was about fourteen or fifteen years ago; that John worked all the time and helped build the house.” She is a great niece of deceased.
Samuel H. Stewart testified that “he was no kin to these parties and that nine or ten years ago defendant hired him and paid him to build flues to the house he was building on the Christian county forty, and at that time deceased asked him what he thought of John’s farm and that he told him, he thought it a rock-and-brush patch but that good hard work would probably make a good farm out of it, and deceased said, ‘Well, John is the man to make it’; and that in the last three or four years deceased in a conversation said, ‘John was doing pretty well since he got on the farm. ’ I told him I thought John would do still better if he owned the place, to which deceased replied, ‘Well, he does own it, I gave it to him. I deeded it to him.’ ”
Henry Hays testified that he was “no kin to these parties, and that deceased talked to him lots, and that
Fred Balmour, whose children are cousins to defendant’s wife, swore that “he had a good many conversations with deceased, always told him that he gave that piece of land to John. The last conversation with him was two years ago this fall on the Square in Springfield, he told me that ‘he gave it to him, he had earned it; that he was the best child he had to work; that he stayed with him so long to work for him.’ This is the way he meant it, I think. He told me seven or eight years ago, that he was going to give John that land; that John built a house there.”
John Claiborn testified that “while he was city marshal, constable and deputy sheriff eight or nine years ago he officed with Squire Houts, and deceased came in and told old man Houts ‘he wanted him to write a deed,’ and Houts asked, ‘where the land was,’ and he said ‘in Christian county; it’s a forty down there. I want to make it to John.’ Houts told him he was only a justice of the peace and could not take this acknowledgment in Christian county.’ Deceased replied, ‘That don’t make any difference. You write the deed. My wife won’t sign it anyway; ’ and he wrote the deed and the old man put it in his pocket and went out. ’ ’
William Houts testified that “he was a justice of Republic township in 1894, and that deceased came into his office and asked him to write a deed; I asked him ‘who to?’ He told me, and gave me the numbers. I said ‘that land is in Christian county, and that I could not execute the deed — could not take the acknowledgment to it — being only a justice of the peace, it would not be good in the other county. ’ The numbers was the - northeast quarter of the northeast quarter, section 31, township 28, range 23. . He said he wanted me to write ,
John D. Kemmel testified “that in the spring of 1897 he spoke to the old gentleman one day about buying an acre of ground over in Christian county. He said, ‘That don’t belong to me, it belongs to John. You will have to see John about it. ’ So I went to see the defendant, and he said, ‘I don’t want to sell it; I won’t sell it at all; it will ruin the shape of my land. ’ I wanted to build a drugstore on it. ”
And to disprove his claim the plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to prove a positive oral agreement between the defendant and his father under which he entered into possession of the premises as a tenant of his father from year to year upon the same terms that he rented the other forty from him.
The defendant himself was permitted to testify in his own hehalf, and while he testified that his father some seven or eight years before he took possession •of the premises, promised to deed him eighty acres of land if he would come home and help him build a house, he in no way connected that promise with the land in question, and would not, at least did not testify to any agreement between him and his father as to this forty acres of land, although an opportunity to do so was afforded him. He admitted, h-owever, that he rented the adjoining forty from his father, and paid him the rent therefor; and that he cultivated the forty in question and used the stuff raised on it, but denied that he ever paid his father any rent for it.
