130 Mo. App. 535 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiffs, who are 'husband and wife, allege in their petition that they are the owners in fee of a quarter section of land in Pettis county, and that on September 17, 1904, defendant railroad company entered upon and appropriated a strip of ground fifty feet wide across said tract “for its right of way ‘from the main line of defendant’s railroad in Pettis county, Missouri, to the Missouri State Fair grounds in said Pettis county and thereon constructed its railroad track and since has been and is now operating its engines and cars over the said land of plaintiffs.” The value of the strip appropriated, which contains two and four-tenths acres is placed at $240 and damages to the remainder of the tract are laid at $1,500. The prayer is for judgment in the sum of $1,740. The answer of defendant interposes defenses the nature of which will appear in the discussion of Hie questions of law presented for our determination in the briefs and arguments of counsel. The cause was tried to a jury but at the conclusion of the introduction of plaintiff’s evidence, the court gave the jury an instruction peremptorily directing a verdict for defendant and plaintiffs appealed from the judgment rendered oq the verdict returned in obedience to said instruction.
The evidence discloses that in 1885, Andrew Haggard conveyed the quarter section of land described in the petition to his daughter, Finettie C. Haggard “and her bodily heirs.” In the habendum clause of the deed which was executed by Haggard and his wife, Mary A. it was provided “if the said Finettie C. Haggard should not raise any child or children, at her death the within described land is to revert back to the said Andrew Haggard and Mary A. Haggard’s estate and be divided equally as the other estate among her sisters and brother.” Sometime after the execution and recording of this deed, the grantee intermarried with Elijah O. Hansbrough. She died September 17, 1904, childless. In
It is conceded that under the deed from her father, Mrs. Hansbrough, became a life tenant of the land conveyed therein and, dying childless, the fee passed to her brother and sisters as remaindermen. This is true, and being true, defendant acquired no greater title to the land it claims by grant from her than she possessed. Not
But it will be observed that the present action is not prosecuted by the heirs of Andrew Haggard, but by their vendees who purchased the land at partition sale and to whom the cause of action, which had accrued in favor of the heirs on account of the continued use of the right of
Accordingly the judgment is affirmed.