149 Mo. 451 | Mo. | 1899
Action of ejectment for the following, lands in Carroll county, Missouri: “sixty-five acres, commencing twenty rods west of the southeast comer of the northeast quarter of section seventeen, township fifty-five, range twenty-one, thence mnning north one hundred and twenty rods, thence east twenty rods, thence north twenty-two rods, thence west ninety rods, thence south one hundred and forty-two rods, thence east seventy rods, to the place of beginning, all in the northeast quarter of section seventeen. Also a tract of land commencing at the southeast comer of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section seventeen, township fifty-five of range twenty-one, thence north one hundred and twenty rods, thence west twenty rods, thence south one hundred and twenty rods, thence west twenty rods to the place of beginning.”
Ouster laid as of August 25, 1895. Damages and rents and profits averred and prayed for.
Bowlware is tenant of his codefendants and his answer is a general denial and that the other defendants are his landlords. The answer of the other defendants is a general denial and an offer of judgment to plaintiff for one undivided one-ninth of the lands sued for.
It was admitted Bowlware was in possession at the commencement of the suit as tenant of the other defendants. It-was further admitted that A. J. Shannon was the common source of title under deeds dated March 14, 1893, and April 14, 1893, from A. H. Outler et al. and P. P. Brightmare,. duly executed, acknowledged and recorded. Plaintiff then read in evidence a sheriff’s deed from George E. Stanley, sheriff of Carroll county conveying to plaintiff the right, title and interest of A. J. Shannon in and to the land in controversy, which deed is dated July 27, 1895, made pursuant, to a sale under execution issued on a judgment rendered by the circuit court of the city of St. Louis in favor of plaintiff against A. J. Shannon, December 15, 1886. Proof of damages for detention and monthly rents and profits was made-by plaintiff and he then rested.
Defendants then offered and read in evidence a deed, dated April 15, 1893, from A. J. Shannon to James M. Shannon for the lands in controversy. Also a deed from James M. Shannon to the defendants S. R. Oharles, A. J. H. and W. E. Shannon, Mary Robinson, Virginia Bowlware, Rebecca Jeffries and A. J. Shannon.
The defendants then rested.
Plaintiff in rebuttal offered several witnesses whose evidence tended to prove that the deeds read in evidence by defendants were wholly without consideration,, and were made-by A. J. Shannon to defraud his creditors, and that all parties to said deeds participated in said fraud, and that no title passed thereby. Plaintiff offered evidence tending to-prove, that after the execution of the deed from A. J. Shannon to J. M. Shannon and before the execution of the deed from J. M. Shannon to defendants, the said J. M. Shannon executed and delivered to A. J. Shannon a deed reconveyingall of said land to him and that A. J. Shannon fraudulently-
Defendants then offered evidence tending to show that A. J. Shannon originally purchased said lands as the agent of his mother and with her money but took the deed in his own name; that after her death he conveyed to J. M. Shannon and the latter conveyed said lands to the heirs of the mother of A. J. Shannon pursuant to her direction in her lifetime.
This was (all the evidence.
The defendants asked two instructions, as follows:
“1. If the court, sitting as a jury, finds from the evidence that the Shannon heirs as testified to in this cause claimed that the land in controversy was purchased by A. J. Shannon for his mother and with her money and means, and that after her death they claimed that they were each entitled to their interest in said land as heirs of their mother, and that the deed read in evidence from James M. Shannon to them was made in pursuance of said claim, then the deed to them was not fraudulent and can not be attacked by plaintiff in this form of action as a deed made in fraud of creditors, although the court may further find that A. J. Shannon when he executed the deed to James M. Shannon made the same for the purpose of defrauding his creditors, including this plaintiff.
“2. If the court, sitting as a jury, finds from the evidence that the Shannon heirs claimed that they were entitled to their interest in said land as heirs of their mother and that the deeds should have been made to their mother instead of to A. J. Shannon, and that after the mother’s death they claimed and received from James M-. Shannon the deed read in evidence, prior to any sale of the land under plaintiff’s ■execution, then said deed is not fraudulent and can not be set aside or attacked by plaintiff in this form of action as made in fraud of creditors, although the court may further find that when A. J. Shannon made the deed to James M.*456 Shannon he intended thereby to hinder, delay and defraud 'his creditors. If James M. Shannon had reconveyed said land to the Shannon heirs by the deed read in evidence before-the sale of the land, under execution, although A'. J. Shannon may have received a deed from James M. Shannon for the land in controversy and destroyed the same prior to the-deed read in evidence from James M. Shannon, yet if said deed was destroyed and the second deed by James M. Shannon before plaintiff acquired any title to said land by virtue-of his execution sale, plaintiff can not in this cause set up or claim any title to said real estate by virtue of said deed so destroyed.”
The foregoing were the only instructions asked and they were refused by the court. >
The trial court gave judgment for the plaintiff for the land sued for and for rents and profits.
Two grounds for reversal are urged, first, that the sheriff’s deed under which plaintiff claims does not describe part of the land claimed in the petition, to wit, the fifteen acre tract. This assignment is predicated upon the fact that in describing said tract by metes and bounds the description closes with these words “thence west twenty rods to- the place of beginning,” whereas it should have read “thence east twenty rods to place of beginning.” Second, the refusal of defendant’s two instructions.
I. It is a fixed principle in the construction of deeds that monuments when called for in the description of land will control calls for courses and distances. [West v. Bretelle, 115 Mo. 653; Rutherford v. Tracy, 48 Mo. 325; Burnham v. Hitt, 143 Mo. 414.]
Where a part of a description in a deed is repugnant to or inconsistent with the other parts, if sufficient remain from which the intention of the parties can be ascertained and identified, that part which is repugnant may be rejected altogether.
The word “west” in the foregoing description is obviously the mistake of the scrivener. It can and must be rejected and there is still sufficient remaining to call for a closing of the survey by running to the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 17, a fixed monument.
No error'occurred in disregarding the erroneous call for the course west.
II. As to the instructions.
This was and is an action at law. The weight of the evidence will not be reviewed in this court if the declarations of law were correct.
Moreover the evidence has not been preserved. The recital is only that certain evidence tending to prove certain facts was offered by the respective parties. It will be observed that the first declaration only prayed the court to declare the law to be that if the Shannon heirs claimed that the lands were purchased with the money of their mother by A. J. Shannon and that the deed from A. J. Shannon to J. M. Shannon was made in pursuance of that claim then the deed was not fraudulent even though A. J. Shannon made it to defraud his creditors.
Conceding that if the land was bought with the mother’s money it would avail under the pleadings in this form of action, it is plain that a mere claim would constitute no defense. It falls far short of an equitable defense. The court correctly refused to so declare the law.
This vice runs through the second declaration of law asked by defendant, also, and the court properly refused it.
The court evidently found for plaintiff on one of two grounds, either that the deeds were made by A. J. Shannon to defeat and defraud his creditors with the knowledge and