94 Mo. 234 | Mo. | 1887
This ejectment involves the right to the possession of an unexpired■ portion of a.ten-year lease upon a part of the public wharf in-St. Louis. It appears the city made two leases upon the property, each for a period of ten years, the one ending and the other beginning on the first of January, 1879. During the first lease, the Union Steam Mill Company, a corporation then in possession of the property, made a deed of trust thereon to secure a debt by it owing to Wm. H. Maurice. The. property thereby conveyed- is described as the
The plaintiff ’ s title is as follows: The second lease, which was made by the city to the Union Steam Mills ■Company, a different corporation from either of those before named. A deed of trust was made by this company, in 18S2, to secure a debt to Mr. Maurice. It •convéys a parcel of land, also a leasehold interest from Walsh, and then the leasehold acquired from the city, and all the buildings and improvements located on the property conveyed, and contains the following recital: “ The property and interests hereby conveyed, being :subjeot to a deed of trust on a portion of the same .to Edwin Chaffins, trustee, a deed of trust on all the real •estate and leases herein described to Wm. H.' Maurice’s trustee, and a deed of trust on the leasehold interests herein described to George Gilman’s trustee, going to secure the payment of the indebtedness described in said deeds, each of said deeds of trust being duly recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds for the city of St. Louis.” There was a sale under this deed of trust, and through that and other mesne conveyances the Union Steam Flour Mills Company came to the
The court, the cause being tried without a jury, for the defendant, gave an instruction stating the facts which the parol evidence tended to prove, with the conclusion that if they were true the plaintiff could not recover. But, on the other hand, the court gave for the plaintiff an instruction that, under the pleadings and evidence, the finding must be for the plaintiff. These instructions are inconsistent, and cannot stand together. There was abundant evidence tending to prove the facts stated in the defendant’s instruction. By giving it, the court in effect ruled that there was evidence of the facts stated. The instruction for the plaintiff was a demurrer to the defendant’s evidence. In legal effect, it was an assertion that there was no evidence tending to show any defence whatever. These instructions are, therefore, inconsistent. It cannot be said the court found the facts against the defendant, for it never undertook to weigh the evidence as a trier' of the facts, but simply declared that there was no evidence tending to show a defence. The instruction for the plaintiff should have been refused.
The instruction given for'the defendant, but disregarded by the court, presented a good defence. It is
It is further contended by the appellant, the city of St. Louis, that the ten-year lease in question is void, because the city had and has no right or power to lease a part of the public wharf for a term of years for private purposes, and the case of Belcher Sugar Refining Co. v. St. Louis Grain Elevator Co., 82 Mo. 121, is cited as authority for the proposition. It seems the property in question in the case before us, when leased, was an unimproved portion of the wharf, and there is nothing in the case to show that the property is now used, required, or needed for a public landing or highway of any character. The principle upon which that case was decided can have no application to the present one, as the record now stands.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded..