173 Mo. 616 | Mo. | 1903
This is an action of ejectment for the possession of twenty-one acres of land in Madison county. The petition is in the usual form. Ouster laid November 24, 1892.
Defendants by their answer deny all of the allegations in the petition, and, then allege that they are the owners of said real estate, and that it was conveyed to them by one Benjamin B. Cahoon, Sr., by general warranty deed on November 24,1892, and that said deed was duly recorded in the recorder’s office of said county. “That plaintiff has pending in the circuit court of said county an action against said Cahoon, wherein he approves and whereby he has approved of said conveyance and sale by said Cahoon of said land to said Parks and wife, and wherein he, the said Nalle, seeks to recover from said Cahoon the said Nalle’s alleged share of the purchase money so paid by said Parks and wife to said Cahoon for real estate, by which
Appellant’s replication, omitting caption, is as follows: “Plaintiff, replying to defendant’s answer, states that it is not true that William Parks and wife are the owners of said real estate; they (are) the co-tenants, or tenants in common, with plaintiff through and by the conveyance to them by said Cahoon, then and for a long time prior to said conveyance a tenant in common with plaintiff. Plaintiff, further replying, states that it is not true that in his said action against Cahoon, he,, plaintiff, approves or has ever approved said conveyance by said Cahoon, other than to the extent that he, the said Cahoon, conveyed to said William Parks, and wife the moiety of said lands then and theretofore-owned by the said Cahoon, and plaintiff denies that he, in said action, seeks to recover from said Cahoon the purchase money, as alleged by defendants. Plaintiff further states that said defendants ’ plea of estoppel does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense ; that the facts stated do not constitute a defense; that the plea is indefinite, vague and uncertain; that it only states conclusions, not supported by facts contained in it, and is argumentative, impertinent and frivolous, all of which plaintiff denies, and each and every statement of fact and allegation therein set forth.
“Plaintiff further replying avers that defendant ought to have known, had means of knowing, and did know, that plaintiff and said Cahoon were cotenants, and that as such tenants they derived their title from a common source, to-wit, Robert Cray, deceased, and his representatives. And so having full notice, defendants wholly failed to inquire of or from plaintiff for any fact touching, affecting or appertaining to his title, possession or right of possession, and, without
“Plaintiff for further reply avers the truth and the facts to be that said Cahoon, under whose conveyance the defendants claim title to and possession of the whole of said real estate, came into possession of said land and his moiety thereof, through and by 'means of a conveyance of Mary J. Gray, to him and plaintiff by deed dated July 16, 1891, duly recorded same day; the election of said Mary J. Gray, widow of Robert Gray, deceased, dated August 21, 1890, duly filed in the probate court, and duly recorded in the recorder’s office; by deed from R. A. Anthony, trustee for William A. Hudson, and Robert Gray, dated December 29, 1891, and duly recorded, which said last deed or conveyance was, by said Cahoon, obtained for the sole purpose of protecting his own moiety therein, and was the only and sole consideration he ever paid for his interest in said land, the plaintiff paying the full consideration for the whole of said real estate subject to said incumbrance on the farm of said Gray. Wherefore plaintiff again prays 'judgment for his moiety of said real" estate and for said damages and costs of suit.”
The facts are about as follows:
Robert B. Gray died intestate and childless, in, Madison county, Missouri, in August, 1890, leaving Mary J., his widow, and the real estate involved in this suit, which was all incumbered by a deed of trust made by him to Robert A. Anthony, trustee, in said Gray’s lifetime to secure a note to one Hudson, which note represented a part of the purchase money Gray had agreed to pay Hudson for the land therein described, and in which deed of trust said Gray expressly declared that said note was given Hudson for said land. That deed of trust was subsequently foreclosed. In ■addition to said incumbrance, Gray owed general debts,
Plaintiff’s paper title to the land in question is based on a warranty deed executed and recorded July 16, 1891, wherein said widow,'Mary J. Gray, conveyed to Nalle and said Cahoon, .subject, however, to said incumbrances, to-wit, the two deeds of trust of Gray and herself executed in his lifetime, and also a deed of trust to Hiram Berry, Jr., as trustee, executed August 21, 1891, to Nalle himself, as beneficiary, to secure the payment of a note for $250 six months after said date with ten per cent interest from the date of said note and deed of trust, which Nalle sold and assigned,to Ed. B. Goff, and which deed of trust is yet unsatisfied of record. Said warranty deed of July 16, 1891, conveyed all the interest the said Mary J. then had in all the real estate of said Robert B. Gray, deceased. Said deed of trust of said Mary J. to said Berry, trustee, was offered by defendants to show an outstanding title from Mary J. of date prior to her said deed to Nalle and Cahoon. That deed of trust has never been satisfied, and no evidence was offered by plaintiff to show it had ever been paid.
The case was tried by the court, a jury being waived. The trial resulted in a judgment for defendants. In due time plaintiff filed naotiqn for a new trial, which being overruled, he appeals.
Plaintiff claims that he and Cahoon were cotenants under the deed for the land to them by Mary J. Gray, executed on July 16, 1891, and that the court erred in holding that plaintiff was ousted of all ownership and title by Cahoon’s purchase of the land at the sale made by the trustee, Anthony, under deed of trust executed to him by Robert B. Gray in his lifetime to secure the payment of part of the purchase money for said land.
There is no doubt of the general principle that when land is conveyed to two or more persons by the same deed they are tenants in common, and that they occupy such relation to each other that one will not be permitted to buy up an outstanding title’to or incumbrance on the land for his exclusive benefit, but such purchase will inure to all such tenants as are willing to contribute their just proportion of the amount necessarily expended in the acquisition of the title or incumbrance. [Aubuchon v. Aubuchon, 133 Mo. 260, and authorities cited.]
In Mandeville v. Solomon, 39 Cal. 125, it is said: “Equity does not deny to a tenant in common the right to purchase in an outstanding or adverse claim to the common property; it, however, deals with the tenants after such a purchase is made. While it will not permit one of them to acquire such a title solely for his own benefit, gr to the absolute exclusion of the other, it at the same time exacts of that other the exercise of reasonable diligence in making his election to participate
Now the deed by which plaintiff and Cahoon became tenánts in common in the land was executed on July 16, 1891, while Cahoon acquired the fee to the land by purchase at different trustee sales on December 29, 1891, April 4, and November 5, 1892, paying in the aggregate quite a sum therefor and, while this suit was not begun until in 1898 or 1899, plaintiff never at any time, in so far as this record discloses, offered to pay to Cahoon his proportion of the consideration actually paid by him for the land, and after the lapse of so long a time will be presumed to have repudiated the transaction and abandoned its benefits. Not only this, but Cahoon by his purchose' under the deed of trust which was given by Gray and wife to Anthony, trustee, to secure in part the payment of the purchase money, acquired the legal title free from any dower or homestead right in Mrs. Gray to which defendants succeeded thereafter by the conveyance of the land to them by Cahoon, and this title was in them at the time of the institution of this suit. There was nevSr at any time the legal title to the land or any part of it in plaintiff, and at most, only an equitable one, and it is
The judgment is affirmed.