Judge v. Lackland
Judge v. Lackland
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding to remove an alleged cloud upon the title to certain real estate in St. Charles County.
The petition states that on December 29, 1871, James Judge died, leaving his last will, which was probated in St. Charles County, by which he devised one undivided half of all his property to defendants Spalding and Lewis, as trustees, for the use and benefit of a religious denomination known as the New Church ; that it appears by the inventory filed by defendants Lackland and Johns, the executors of said will, that testator’s personalty is worth $5,000, and that he died seized in fee of more -than 4,000 acres of land in St. Charles County, describing it; that the said New Church is a religious denomination; that the real estate attempted to be devised exceeds five acres; that there is not, and never has been, a congregation or society of said
To this petition defendants demurred and the demurrer was overruled; and, defendants refusing further to plead, a decree was entered that so much of the will of James Judge, set out in the petition, as devises all the rest and residue of the estate of said Judge to the trustees named in the petition, for the purposes set out in the petition, and the devise thereby attempted to be made, is absolutely inoperative, null, and void. The real estate is set out in the decree as in the petition, and the devise of the rest and residue of the same declared void.
The cause was brought here by defendants by writ of error.
There is no question that, at the time of the execution and probate of this will, under sections 12 and 13, article 1, of the then Constitution of this State, any devise of lands to any religious sect, order, or denomination, or for the support or benefit thereof, or in trust therefor, was void if the quantity exceeded five acres in the country or one acre in the city.
It is, however, said that plaintiffs are not in possession of the land, and, therefore, cannot maintain this proceeding. We will not presume that plaintiffs are not in possession. The facts alleged in the petition, that the executors have filed an inventory describing this real estate, and are designing to account to the trustees for the rents and profits, is not an allegation that plaintiffs are not in possession. Where the contrary does not appear, the person having the exclusive legal title to real estate is presumed to be in possession.
It is true, as claimed by plaintiffs in error in the brief filed herein, that a court of equity cannot set aside the probate of the will. The statute provides the manner in ivhich that can be effected in Missouri. But the decree in this case does not set aside the proof of the will, but declares a certain bequest and devise in a will void, upon the statement of certain facts admitted to be true by demurrer. The devise was void, and it was a cloud upon the title of plaintiffs. We think they were entitled to the relief demanded, and see no error in the record for which the judgment should be reversed.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.