Yates v. Johnson

87 Mo. 213 | Mo. | 1885

Black, J.

This is an action of ejectment for the undivided five-thirteenths of certain lands in Gentry county. The parties all claim through Solomon Yates, who died intestate leaving the plaintiff, as his widow, and thirteen children. The plaintiff acquired the interest in dispute by purchase from five of the children. On the fourth of April, 1870, she conveyed the same and her dower estate in the whole of the lands to Henry and George Willis, who on the same day conveyed same *216to Lewis in trust to secure their note of that date for six hundred dollars payable to plaintiff. Default was made in the payment of the note and the trustee sold the property on September. 19, 1874, and plaintiff became the purchaser. This is her title.

Robert B. Murry and wife, in the right of the wife, acquired a one-thirteenth interest from one of the heirs, and began proceedings for the partition of the land .on January 19, 1872.' The defendants claim title through a sale made in March, 1873, by virtue of a judgment therein. The plaintiff contends that those proceedings have no binding force upon her as mortgagee and purchaser under the deed of trust. The partition suit, it will be seen, was commenced after Mary Yates, the plaintiff here,, conveyed the five-thirteenths and dower to Willis and Willis. Her position then, and at' the time the order of sale was made, was that of mortgagee. The trustee, Mary Yates as beneficiary, and Willis and Willis, were made defendants, and their interests, as before stated, were fully set forth in the petition for partition. She was notified by publication, and the other defendants were duly brought into court. In the judgment which was rendered in September, 1872, the interests of all these parties were found as detailed . in the petition, and because the premises were not susceptible of division in kind they were, including the dower, ordered to be sold. The proceeds of the sale going to Willis and Willis were ordered to be held by the sheriff subject to the payment of the note to Mary Yates and interest thereon. In 1875 Mary Yates appeared and filed ’ her motion to set aside the judgment and sale made thereunder, which was overruled; and on the same day. the sheriff made report upon which a final order of distribution was made. Subsequently, she prosecuted a petition for review, which was dismissed on full hearing. These judgments are in full force.

. Our statute is broad and comprehensive as to what *217©states may be partitioned. Every person having an interest in the premises, whether in possession or otherwise, shall be made a party. Adverse claims to the same share may be adjudicated. It.is made the • duty of the court to declare the rights,- titles and interests of the parties to such proceedings, petitioners as well as defendants, and determine such rights and give judgment that partition be made between such of them as shall have any right thereto. The petition should describe the interest of every person who upon any contingency may be or become entitled to any beneficial interest in the premises. Chap. 104, Wag, Stat., secs.-1 to 14.

It was held in Wotten v. Copeland, 7 Johns. Ch. 140, which was a bill for partition, that mortgagees and judgment creditors could not be compelled to join in partition. This principle was recognized, it is true, in Schneider v Staihr, 20 Mo. 270 and Hull v. Lyon, 27 Mo. 570. But .in the.first of these cases the .mortgagee was not a party to the partition suit, and in the other it was said if .the mortgagee is a party and sets up his mortgage and an issue is made as to it, the adjudication on that issue will bind him. Later, and in Reinhardt v. Wendeck, 40 Mo. 578, it was held that the trustee and beneficiary in a deed of trust to secure the payment of a •debt had a direct -interest in the premises under these provisions of the law with respect to partition, and that it was not a misjoinder to make them parties. And so it is held in the state of Illinois, under a statute similar, if hot identical, with that of this state. Loomis v. Riley, 24 Ill. 307. But without pursuing this inquiry any further it is enough to say that the court had jurisdiction of the parties, and jurisdiction of the entire subject-matter. The judgment did determine the plaintiff’s rights as mortgagee and the order of sale was so framed as to give the purchaser a title, free from the incumbrance. No •objections by answer, or otherwise, were made to that disposition of the mortgage. The mortgagee could have *218appealed or prosecuted a writ of error after the final order of distribution, if not satisfied with the dispositions of the cause. This has not been done. The judgment cannot be questioned in this collateral proceeding. It is binding and effectual upon all of the parties to that proceeding, and persons claiming under them. Forder v. Davis, 38 Mo. 108; Pentz v. Kuester, 41 Mo, 447; Gray v. Bowles, 74 Mo. 419. The defendants’ second instruction should have been given.

The judgment is reversed, and as plaintiff is concluded by the partition proceedings, the cause will not be remanded.

The other judges concur.
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