118 Mo. App. 445 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
The intervenor, Samuel Winnegar, in 1868 became the owner of certain land in Linn county, Missouri, upon which he and his wife soon thereafter moved and occupied as their homestead. After a short time, intervenor left his home in the possession of his wife and went to St. Clair county, where he remained. The wife remained on the land until her death. In the meantime, the taxes on the property were not paid and it was sold to satisfy the same and one, E. D. Harvey, became the purchaser, in 1886. In 1887, said Harvey conveyed his title to Susan Winnegar by quit claim deed. The deed contained the following clause: “This conveyance is made to Susan Winnegar for her sole and separate use and benefit during her natural life, and after her death Samuel Winnegar is to have complete title to the above described land after the just debts and funeral expenses of said Susan Winnegar are fully paid.”'
Susan Winnegar died in 1902, and M. G. Coates was appointed administrator and duly qualified as such. In the course of his administration, it became necessary to sell the land to pay the debts of Mrs. Winnegar. It was sold at the price of $1600.
On August 9, 1904, the administrator filed his final settlement, which showed he had made a sale of the land, the receipt of the purchase price, and that after the payment of the debts of deceased and the costs of administration there was about the sum of $1100 left in his
The intervenor contends that he was entitled to said fund and that the probate court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. This contention, the administrator denies. The land was conveyed, as stated, to Susan Winnegar for life with remainder over to intervenor subject to the payment of the wife’s debts.
It is a well-settled law that a party to whom land is conveyed, subject to a deed of trust, becomes thereby substituted to the place and rights of the grantor, and as such is entitled to¡ receive the surplus funds remaining after the sale of the lands under the deed of trust, 43 Mo. 306. And a similar principle was announced in Strawbridge v. Clark, 52 Mo. 21. It must be conceded that under the deed from Harvey to Mrs. Winnegar that the land was subject to the payment of her debts and that the intervenor’s title was charged with their payment. The land having been sold to enable the administrator to discharge them, the latter’s deed as such administrator conveyed intervenor’s title to the purchaser. The surplus after discharging the encumbrance, it seems to us, belonged to the intervenor. We do not see how it could be otherwise, as it was the proceeds of his estate.
But the real question in the case is one of jurisdiction in the probate court over the subject-matter.
It is insisted by the administrator that this is not a contest between himself and the heirs and distributees, but between the latter , and the intervenor, over which the