127 Mo. App. 570 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908

JOHNSON, J.

This is an action in ejectment, the real object of which is to terminate the enjoyment by defendant, a corporation engaged in the business of supplying natural gas to its patrons, of an easement over land owned by plaintiffs for the maintenance of a pipe line used as a conduit for gas. It is admitted that plaintiffs, husband and wife, own a fee simple title to the lands as tenants by the entirety under a warranty deed executed and delivered to them in 1886 and that in April, 1906, defendant laid a pipe line across the land. Defendant does not claim an easement under grant by deed or other instrument in writing, but alleges in its answer “that plaintiffs herein gave their consent and permission and granted a license to lay a pipe line for the conveyance of natural gas underneath the surface of plaintiffs’ land or across the same or such part of the sanie as is described in plaintiffs’ amended petition for the purpose of supplying with natural gas the various mining plants and engines and boilers in the district in and about Webb City; that the laying *574of such pipes was attended with great cost and expense and the removal of said pipes now would be attended with great loss and pecuniary loss to defendant and its patrons from interrupting the flow of gas and plaintiffs should, now be estopped from regaining possession of said land or causing said pipe to be removed.”

This defense was put in issue by an appropriate reply, a jury was waived and evidence introduced by the respective parties from which it appears that before defendant entered the land to lay the pipe, it obtained oral permission from the husband plaintiff. His wife was not consulted, nor is it shown that she had knowledge of the fact that he had given the permission until after the line was laid. On these facts, the court found against Mr. Hough, but in favor of Mrs. Hough and adjudged that she “be restored to the possession of said lands and tenements.” In other words, the judgment provides for the eviction of defendant from the land at the suit of the wife but not of the husband. From this judgment defendant appealed. Mr. Hough did not appeal.

Defendant then filed a motion to transfer the cause to the Supreme Court on the ground that the title to real estate is involved and will be directly affected by the judgment of the appellate court, but we overruled the motion under the view advocated by plaintiff that, since the parties concede that the title to the land is vested in plaintiffs, the cause of action deals only with the issue of the right to possession and, therefore, does not affect the title in a sense to divest this court of jurisdiction over the appeal. [Price v. Blankenship, 144 Mo. 203; Fisher v. Johnson, 139 Mo. 433; Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. Hazel, 138 Mo. 238; Bruner Granitoid Co. v. Klein, 170 Mo. 225; Klingelhoefer v. Smith, 171 Mo. 460; Balz v. Nelson, 171 Mo. l. c. 688; Porter v. Railroad, 175 Mo. 96.]

To maintain an action in ejectment, a plaintiff *575must prove that at the commencement of the suit he had the legal title to the land and was entitled to its possession. [144 Mo. 203; 2 Greenleaf on Evidence (16 Ed.), sec. 304.] With the fact conceded that plaintiffs had the legal title to the land in controversy, the main issue in the circuit court was over the question of the right of possession. That issue as far as it relates to the husband’s claim, was settled adversely to him by the judgment rendered from which he failed to prosecute an appeal, and our present concern therefore, is restricted to the question of whether or not Mrs. Hough has a right of possession of which she is being deprived by the acts of defendant performed entirely without her consent. A proper treatment of the question requires consideration of the rules and principles of the common law applicable to the status and rights of a married woman during coverture, as a tenant by the entirety, and then of the statutory law relating to that subject in force at the time the estate was created which, as stated, was in 1886. The respective rights and interests then acquired by the husband and wife under the deed conveying the land to them became fixed and vested on the delivery of the deed and were not enlarged, abridged, or otherwise affected by subsequent legislation. [Graham v. Ketchum, 192 Mo. 15; Vanata v. Johnson, 170 Mo. 269; Arnold v. Willis, 128 Mo. 149; Leete v. Bank, 115 Mo. 184; Bains v. Bullock, 129 Mo. l. c. 119.]

In speaking of the peculiar characteristics of a tenancy by the entirety, the Supreme Court, in Garner v. Jones, 52 Mo. 68, said: “At common law, a conveyance in fee to husband and wife, of real estate, created a tenancy by the entirety. Being but one person in law, they took the estate as one person. Each being' the owner of the entire estate; neither of whom had any separate or joint interest but a unity or entirety of the whole. So if either died, the estate continued in the *576survivor, as it had existed before; an undivided unity or entirety. There was no survivorship' as in joint tenancies, but a continuance of the estate in the survivor as it originally stood. ' The only change by death was in the person, not in the estate. Before death they both constituted one person holding the entire estate, and after the death of either the survivor remained as the only holder of the estate. This principle was introduced into this State as a part of the common law and it has not been altered by our statute of conveyances. [See Gibson v. Zimmerman, 12 Mo. 385.]”

Following the theory that husband and wife were a unit in person, the husband by virtue of marital right stood as the legal personification of the unit and, as such, enjoyed the right to the absolute possession and control of the entire estate during the joint lives of the tenants. He, alone, could maintain ejectment and in an action of that nature, the wife was not a proper party. [Hall v. Stephens, 65 Mo. 678; Garner v. Jones, supra; Russell v. Russell, 122 Mo. 235; Bains v. Bullock, supra.] “This right of the husband,” the Supreme Court said in Vanata v. Johnson, 170 Mo. 269, “arose from the marital relation, and was not in any sense a right of curtesy, initiate or otherwise, and did not depend upon the birth of a child.” Under these principles of the common law, it is very clear that Mrs. Hough, as a tenant by the entirety, had no right to the possession of the estate-, could not maintain ejectment in her own name, and could not be joined with her husband as party plaintiff in an action of that character.

The question of the effect of the statutory law in force in 1886 to emancipate a married woman from the application of these common law principles has been before the Supreme Court on a number of occasions and each time decided against the contention that prior to the revision of the statutes in 1889 a married woman might sue in ejectment for the possession of her own’ *577land. [Arnold v. Willis, supra; Peck v. Lockridge, 97 Mo. 558; Gray v. Dryden, 79 Mo. 106; Cooper v. Ord, 60 Mo. 420; Vanata v. Johnson, supra; Graham v. Ketchum, supra; Bains v. Bullock, supra.] In the last case cited, it was said: “These rights he had at common law, though the legal estate was vested in the wife. So it has been uniformly held by this court, before the revision of 1889, that the husband is the only proper and necessary party to maintain an action' to recover possession of the land of the wife when she holds legal, as distinguished from a separate or equitable, estate therein.”

If this is the rule that should obtain were we dealing with the separate estate of the wife acquired prior to the revision of 1889, a fortiori should it be applied in a case where her interest is that of tenant by the entirety since, in estates of the latter class, the wife, at common law, had no separate nor separable interest and her very identity was lost in that of her husband during his lifetime.

These considerations compel the conclusion that Mrs. Hough, cannot maintain a cause of action in ejectment, and, accordingly, the judgment is reversed.

All concur.
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