Lemmons v. McKinney

162 Mo. 525 | Mo. | 1901

VALLIANT, J.

This is a suit in ejectment for a strip of land containing about four acres; it arises out of a disputed boundary between the adjoining lands of plaintiffs and defendant Martha McKinney.

R. M. Lemmons, now deceased, was the common source of title. In 1881, he being the owner of a tract of 175 acres, made a deed conveying to his son, the plaintiff, A. K. Lemmons, a part of it, which he described in the deed as follows: *528“Twenty-three acres off the north end of the east half of the southwest quarter and twenty-three acres off the north end of the west half of the southeast quarter, also commencing fifty-five yards south of the northwest corner of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter running one hundred yards east, thence south thirty-five rods, thence west one hundred yards until it intersects the line of said east half of the southwest quarter and west half of the southeast quarter, containing fifty acres; all in section I,” etc.

Shortly after the execution of that deed, in September, 1881, A. K. Lemmons, the grantee therein, sold the land to H. H. Brown by deed with the same description. Directly after Brown’s purchase he and R. M. Lemmons, the father of the plaintiffs, and the then owner of the rest of the tract, went together and measured off the land they understood to be covered by the deed from R. M*. Lemmons to his son, and the deed from the son to Brown. Brown at that time was sixty years old and Lemmons as old or perhaps older. The two did the work themselves of measuring the land, using a surveyor’s chain, taking certain stones which they recognized as monuments, and running the lines and making measurements, established the boundary to their mutual' satisfaction, and agreed that in the spring following they would plant a hedge on the line so laid off, and this they did, Brown planting one-half and Lemmons the other half, and that hedge was standing at the date of the trial. Within two months from the date of his deed, that is in November, 1881, Brown took possession of the land so measured off to him by putting his son-in-law and daughter, the defendants herein, in occupancy of it, and they have occupied it continuously ever since, cultivating the land up to the hedge and treating the hedge as the boundary of their land. Tn 1892, after the death of Brown, the land contained in his purchase under the above named deeds was, in a deed *529of settlement- among bis beirs, conveyed to bis daughter, tbe defendant Martha McKinney.

After tbe transactions above mentioned, R. M. Lemmons made a deed conveying tbe remainder of bis original 175-acre tract to bis daughter, Charity M. Lemmons. She died in 1898; tbe plaintiffs are her brothers and sisters and beirs, and claim as such under tbe deed from their father to her. R. M. Lemmons died about 1890. In 1897 Charity Lemmons bad a survey of tbe land made by E. H. Boyd, tbe county surveyor, and according to tbe testimony of plaintiffs’ witnesses tbe survey showed that tbe true line, to mark off fifty acres as called for by tbe deed to Brown, runs sixty-six feet north of tbe hedge, ánd that strip of sixty-six feet is tbe subject of this suit.

On tbe part of defendants tbe testimony tended to show that they bad been in continuous, open, adverse possession for sixteen years or more, claiming tbe land up to tbe hedge, and tbe only testimony of tbe plaintiffs which is claimed to be to tbe contrary was that in rebuttal tending to show that Willis McKinney, tbe husband of Martha McKinney, just before tbe Boyd survey, bad spoken of having a survey made to ascertain tbe true line, and that upon tbe occasion of tbe Boyd survey bad said that bis deed called for fifty acres,, and if the survey left him fifty acres be would be satisfied; that tbe strip between tbe hedge and tbe line run by Boyd was not bis and be did not want it, and that it was not until after a neighbor bad suggested to him that they bad been in possession too long to permit any one to question their right, that be disputed tbe correctness of tbe survey.

A witness for plaintiff also testified that in a conversation with Mr. and Mrs. McKinney about tbe strip marked- off by tbe Boyd survey, tbe witness told them that their deed was for fifty acres and if they got this four acres they would have more *530than their deed called for, “they said they did not know whether .that was their land or not until they knew whether the survey was right or not.” As to the alleged survey contemplated by McKinney, the plaintiffs’ testimony left it in doubt whether he was talking about running the line in question, or a line between him and his neighbor on the east, about which there was some question. This rebuttal testimony was contradicted by testimony for defendants.

The cause was submitted to the jury under instructions which appear to have been lost out of the papers, and therefore are not in this record. The verdict was for the plaintiffs, and judgment followed, from which this appeal was duly taken.

As the instructions are not before us we do not know upon what theory the case was given to the jury. In this condition of the record, the judgment would be affirmed if there was evidence to sustain the verdict.

The respondents in their brief contend that the evidence was conflicting as to the character of the possession of defendants, that is, as to whether it was adverse to plaintiffs’ title. But we perceive no such conflict. . In the first place, the land does not belong to McKinney, but to his wife. He could not destroy her title even by his solemn deed, and much less could he impair it by his loose talk. And secondly, these alleged conversations occurred in 1897, long after the title of Mrs. McKinney had matured by adverse possession. Even if what he might have said before could have affected his wife’s title, it could not have the effect to divest a title already perfected. [Hedges v. Pollard, 149 Mo. 216.]

Respondents also present the proposition that, where proprietors of adjoining lands have a dividing fence which both suppose to be on the line, but neither claims more than to the true line, and occupies to the fence only subject to the future *531ascertainment of its proper location, possession under such condition is not adverse. That is a correct proposition and is supported by the decisions cited by the learned counsel. [Jacobs v. Mosely, 91 Mo. 457; Krider v. Milner, 99 Mo. 145; Pharis v. Jones, 122 Mo. 125; McWilliams v. Samuel, 123 Mo. 659.] But when the possession up to the fence, under an apparent claim of ownership, has been held for the period covered by the statute of limitations, the burden is on the plaintiff to show that the holding was subject to future ascertainment of the true line. [Hedges v. Pollard, supra.]

If the ease was given to the jury under instructions that authorized a verdict for the plaintiffs on the theory that the hedge was 'only to mark the boundary until the true line should be aseertainéd, there was nothing in the evidence to justify the submission of such a theory. When Mr. Brown purchased, he and the plaintiffs’ father went about laying off the land called for by the deed with deliberation. The deed itself gave no distances or metes and bounds except those of the four acres in the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section seven. As to forty-six of the fifty acres called for, the only description in the deed was “twenty-three acres off the north end of the east half of the southwest quarter and twenty-three acres off the north end of the west half of the southeast quarter.” This was a deed from a father to a son, and it seems no measuring off accompanied the execution of the deed, but when the son sold to Brown and the land was no longer in the family, then the ascertainment of the boundary line- appears from their conduct to have been deemed necessary by the two adjoining owners. Anri with that object in view they went together and with a surveyor’s chain measured the land and established the line to their own satisfaction and each thereafter, respectively, held *532and cultivated up to that line. There is nothing in the evidence to indicate that either contemplated that a more technical survey should be thereafter had, or that either of them desired anything more accurate. They were dealing with their own and had a right to agree upon the line and their agreement did not depend for its validity upon the line being technically true. Under such circumstances this court has said: “Then when the line is drawn and the possession is taken the deed is accomplished, and each owns up to the line as fully as if it were a natural boundary and their respective deeds called for it.” [Brummell v. Harris, 148 Mo. 430.] And in the same opinion it is said that possession and use up to such line is evidence of such an agreement.

If further evidence that they intended this to be the permanent line between them were needed it is furnished in the fact that when they laid it out they then and there agreed to plant and in the spring did plant each one-half a hedge upon it which has endured longer than the lives of both of them. No subsequent survey could change that boundary. There is nothing in the evidence upon which a verdict for the plaintiff could be sustained.

The judgment of the circuit court is therefore reversed.

All concur.