157 Mo. 342 | Mo. | 1900
Ejectment for an undivided three-fourths of 315.72 acres of land in Pike county, Missouri. Petition in ordinary form. Ouster was laid as of 1897. Tbe answer was general denial save and except defendant Elizabeth Whitaker admitted that she and her tenants were in possession of the .land claiming the exclusive title thereto and that she has held such possession for more than twenty years. Tn a second paragraph she pleads the ten year statute of limitation. Eeply denied the adverse possession of defendant for ten years. Judgment for defendant and plaintiffs appeal.
Benoni Whitaker is the common source of title. Benoni Whitaker died, testate, in Pike county, Missouri, December 18, 1839, owning the lands in suit. The second subdivision of his will is in these words: “Second. My will and desire and I do devise to my beloved wife, Karen Whitaker, all of my real and personal estate to have and to hold during her widowhood. Provided my beloved wife, Karen, should hereafter marry, then it is my wish and I do desire and give her the power of selecting three of her disinterested neighbors to allot to her the one-third of all of my estate both personal and real, which she shall be in possession of at the time of her marriage and the remainder they are to divide equally among all of my children.”
ITe named his wife as his executrix and guardian of his ■minor children. He left surviving him, Karen H. Whitaker, his widow, and the following named children: Mary F. Whitaker, Benjamin K. Whitaker, Benoni S. Whitaker, Margaret D. Whitaker, William E. Whitaker, Amelia A. Whitaker, Eobert H. Whitaker and Malvina Elizabeth Whitaker.
Said testator’s widow, Karen H. Whitaker, never mar
Of the children, Benoni S. Whitaker died September 11, 1867; William E. Whitaker died November, 1869; Amelia A. Whitaker died August 28, 1862; and Malvina E. Whitaker died June 18, 1854. None of these children ever married. They died intestate and without issue or descendants.
Mary E. Whitaker married O. 0. Todd. He died in the year 1856, and she in the year 1860. They’left surviving them the following named children and only heirs at law: William E. Todd, Benjamin L. Todd and John W. Todd, who are co-plaintiffs herein, and each claim an undivided one-twelfth interest in said lands.
Margaret D. Whitaker married E. A. McRaven. He died June 4, 1884, and she is now single and is a co-plaintiff herein, and claims an undivided one-fourth interest in said land.
Robert H. Whitaker, another co-plaintiff, claims an undivided one-fourth interest in said land.
Benjamin K. Whitaker, married Elizabeth Todd. He died September 11, 1859. His widow married Washington Watts. He died, and his widow Elizabeth Watts, died June 21,1886. The defendant, Elizabeth Whitaker, is the daughter and only heir at law of said Benjamin K. Whitaker.
Karen H. Whitaker, after she moved to Mississippi in 1848, held possession of said lands, through her tenants, until March, 1859. About October, 1858, Benjamin K. Whitaker claimed to Abram Haff, who was then the tenant-of Karen H. Whitaker, that he had bought the land, and he purchased of said Haff the unexpired term of that rental year, and immediately took possession of the property and remained in possession until his death in September the following year.
After the institution of that suit, and on the 17th day of April, 1856, said Karen H. Whitaker, for the consideration of “love and affection,” conveyed by quitclaim deed all her interest in said lands to Mary E. Todd, Benjamin E. Whitaker, Margaret D. Whitaker, Benoni S. Whitaker, William E. Whitaker, Mereal A. Whitaker and Eobert H. Whitaker, they being all of her children that were then living. By said conveyance she attempted to dispose of all the property she owned in Missouri.
On the same day that Karen H. Whitaker conveyed her interest in said land to her children a suit was instituted in the Pike Circuit Court for the sale of said land in partition, in which’ said Benoni S. Whitaker is plaintiff and the other children above named and one Abram Half are defendants. At that time two of the defendants, Mereal A. Whitaker and Eobert IT. Whitaker were minors. An order of sale was decreed at the September term, 1856. The land was sold by the sheriff April 15, 1857, and deed was
During all the proceedings in said partition suit, the suit of Alexander S. Jackson against Karen H. Whitaker, above mentioned, was still pending. On the 25th day of March, 1857, twenty days prior to the sale of said lands in the partition suit, an attachment issued in said cause, was levied on said lands, and Abram Haff, a tenant in possession thereof, was duly notified by the sheriff of said levy.
May 17, 1858, Alexander S. Jackson obtained judgment against Karen H. Whitaker in said suit for the sum of $120 and costs. The attachment lien remained in force up to the rendition of the judgment and merged therein. Execution was issued Eebruary 18, 1860, was levied on the lands in dispute February 14, 1860, and the land was sold by the sheriff March 8, 1860, to Erancis C. Todd the father-in-law of Dr. Benjamin Whitaker for the sum of $132.
Francis C. Todd, having purchased the interest of Karen H. Whitaker in said land, under the Jackson judgment, on January 29, 1866, by quitclaim deed conveyed it to the defendant, Elizabeth Whitaker, and her mother, Elizabeth A. Whitaker. They accepted said deed and had it recorded, and continued to retain exclusive possession of the land until the death of Karen H. Whitaker, which event occurred March 15, 1890.
There was much evidence tending to prove that Dr. Whitaker in his lifetime and up to his death held the exclusive possession of the property in dispute claiming the ownership thereof, and since his death his widow and her daughter have continued to so hold it.
Mrs. Watts died in 1886, and since that time tbe daughter Elizabeth and her tenants have continued tbe possession.
At tbe close of all tbe evidence tbe court gave tbe jury a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant and a verdict was accordingly rendered for defendant. All of plaintiffs’ instructions were refused, and after an unsuccessful motion for a new trial plaintiffs appealed to this court.
I. Tbe learned counsel have argued various propositions of law, but tbe several contentions may be grouped under a few beads.
Tbe defense is adverse possession,, and there was much evidence to sustain this view unless plaintiffs are right in their contention that tbe statute of limitation could not begin to run until tbe death of Mrs. Karen Wbitaker, tbe widow of Benoni Wbitaker, tbe common source of title, on March 15, 1890. As shown by-^e accompanying statement Mrs. Karen Wbitaker on tbe 7th day of April, 1856, conveyed her estate in these lands to her children, who were also tbe beirs at law of Benoni Wbitaker.
Her life estate by that deed vested in tbe beirs of Be-noni Wbitaker, to whom tbe reversion in fee. belonged, and from that time she ceased to have any right of possession and her said life estate no longer intervened to prevent a complete vesting both of title and possession in them unless plaintiffs are right in their assertion that her said deed was null and void because voluntary and fraudulent. Jackson, who brought tbe suit against Mrs. Wbitaker, did not assail that deed as
It must be held that the premise upon which plaintiffs found their argument that plaintiffs’ right to possession first accrued upon the death of Mrs. Benoni Whitaker is without foundation. By her deed to the children of her husband her life estate merged in the fee simple in reversion. It necessarily follows that this deed was relevant and competent evidence, by which the commencement of the running of the statute of limitations was to be ascertained. Had Mrs. Karen Whitaker not executed that deed it will be conceded that a life estate intervened between plaintiffs and their right of possession and they would not have been barred because no action had accrued to them, but when that deed was made that life estate became merged in their fee simple reversion without the Interposition of any intervening estate and their right to possession then accrued. [Bassett v. O’Brien, 149 Mo. 381.] But if any doubt existed that neither Jackson nor Frances 0. Todd took any steps to have Mrs. Karen Whitaker’s deed to her children avoided because fraudulent, it would be removed by the quitclaim deed of said F. C. Todd to Mrs. Benjamin Whitaker and her daughter the defendant Elizabeth Whitaker.
While a creditor of Mrs. Whitaker might have impeached her deed to her children for fraud within the time allowed by our statute, her children who received that deed and their heirs, the plaintiffs herein, are estopped from attacking it on that ground.
The court therefore committed no error in refusing the 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th instructions prayed by plaintiffs, based as each and all of them were, upon the proposition that Mrs. Karen Whitaker’s deed to plaintiffs and their ancestors was void because voluntary.
II. Instruction numbered 2 prayed by plaintiffs was properly refused, because it erroneously fixed the date of Mrs. Karen Whitaker’s death, as the time when the statute of limitations began to run. As already said, Mrs. Whitaker’s deed to her children merged her estate in their fee simple reversion and the statute began to run, if at all, when Dr. Benjamin K. Whitaker, the father of defendant, Elizabeth Whitaker, ousted his co-tenants, his brothers and sisters of their possession by taking actual possession of the land in his own right, and by “acts overt and notorious” imparted notice to his co-tenants that their rights in the land were invaded and that he claimed a possession and ownership inconsistent with the presumption that his possession was their possession also; in other words, when he actually ousted plaintiffs and their parents of any possession in the lands. [Peck v. Lockridge, 97 Mo. 549; Hutson v. Hutson, 139 Mo. 229; Dunlap v. Griffith, 146 Mo. 283.]
III. The point made that the court erred in admitting in evidence the pleadings in the former ejectment suit by plaintiffs against these same defendants in 1874 on the ground that one ejectment suit is no bar to a second, is not well taken. The object of this evidence was not to establish a former adjudication. Its purpose was to show that in 1874
IY. The corirt erred in permitting Bobert A. Campbell, Esq., to testify that he understood Dr. Benjamin K. Whitaker, the father of defendant, to say that he acquired the title of his brothers and sisters in this land, and that they were compensated by his interest in Mississippi but the details of the conversation he-could not remember. This statement was self-serving. It was entirely narrative, and made in the absence of the other heirs, and hearsay. While the tendency of modern decisions is to admit explanations of the possessor of property as to his manner of occupancy, to show whether his possession was adverse or not under the statute of limitations, we think this evidence was clearly incompetent. It was nothing but an attempt to prove an acquisition of his brothers’ and sisters’ title by his own ex parte declarations.
Y. At the conclusion of all the evidence the court gave a peremptory instruction in favor of defendant. This was error. •
The plaintiffs had shown they were the heirs at law of Benoni Whitaker, and as such entitled to the fee simple in reversion in these lands upon the expiration or extinguishment by merger of the life estate of their mother, Mrs. Karen Whitaker, and this with the admitted title of Benoni Whitaker at the time of his death, established their prima facie case.
The defendants relied upon the statute of limitations and the burden was on them to sustain that plea. That there was much evidence to establish the ouster of plaintiffs, and the adverse possession is conceded, but it was a question of fact, which should have been left to the jury under proper
As this judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded, it should be remarked further that the quitclaim deed by E. 0. Todd to two of the tenants in common, will be presumed to have been for the benefit of all the tenants in common. [Peck v. Lockridge, 97 Mo. 559]. But it did not have the effect of keeping alive the life estate of Karen Whitaker therein, but its effect was merely to remove an outstanding cloud upon the reversion, which by the deed of Mrs. Karen Whitaker had ripened into a fee simple absolute with right of' present possession.
As neither party relied upon the partition deed, we have been unable to see its relevancy to any issue in the case, upon the present state of the record. That deed conveyed the lands to Dr. Benjamin Whitaker, whose fourth plaintiffs are willing to concede; to Mrs. Todd, whose three children claim another fourth; to Mrs. McKaven, one of the plaintiffs, who claims another fourth; and Miss Amelia or Mereal Whitaker, who died in 1862 without having married. The deed was executed in 1858 and by its terms the four grantees therein took as tenants in common, each being entitled to an undivided one-fourth. It is asserted in behalf of plaintiffs, one of whom is a grantee in said deed, and three others are children of a grantee therein, that they never took possession under that deed or claimed any interest under said purchase. No objection was made to its introduction, and no error can be assigned in this court on its admission in the circuit court. Notwithstanding that deed by its terms created a tenancy in. common between Dr. Whitaker and his sisters, if he after-wards by open and overt acts took and asserted an exclusive possession of said lands, then his co-tenants were ousted and
"While it was incumbent to bring borne notice of such hostile possession to his co-tenants, it is sufficient if his acts were of such a nature as by their own import to impart information and gave notice to the co-tenants that an adverse and an actual exclusive ownership was intended to be asserted against them. [Warfield v. Lindell, 38 Mo. 561; Peck v. Lockridge, 97 Mo. 549; Hutson v. Hutson, 139 Mo. 229; Dunlap v. Griffith, 146 Mo. 283.]
For the errors noted the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.