Casey v. Steinmeyer
Casey v. Steinmeyer
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is ejectment for part of lots 1 and 2 in city block 948, St. Louis. The property is the rear half of a piece of land of 50 by 150 feet on the corner of Eighteenth and Carr Streets, fronting on Carr and running north to an alley.
It appears that one Dunn, in 1868, leased the lot in dispute to defendant for a term of three years and a half, with the privilege of renewal for two periods of five years each,
It is not necessary to set out all the instructions. Those bearing on the question of notice are as follows : —
“1. The jury are instructed that possession of the premises in question by the defendant, under the unrecorded
“2. Unless the plaintiff or his agent had the information or knowledge brought home to him that defendant was in possession of the premises in dispute, claiming title, the plaintiff should recover.”
These were given at the instance of plaintiff. For the defendant, the court instructed as follows : —
“3. As a matter of law, it was not necessary that the lease here offered in evidence by defendant should have been acknowledged and recorded, if you believe and find under the instructions that plaintiff or his agent had notice of the existence of said lease when the deed of trust under which plaintiff claims was recorded by plaintiff, or his agent for him.
“ 4. If you believe from the evidence that defendant, prior to the execution and delivery of the deed of trust under which plaintiff claims, received from Dunn the lease offered in evidence, and that defendant immediately took possession of the ground described in said lease, and built houses, and a shop in the rear, and separated said ground from the remaining part of the two lots described in said deed of trust, and that said lease was thereafter renewed by the payment of rents after the dates of renewal specified in said lease, and that Steinmeyer thereafter, and at the date and after the making of said deed of trust, continued in the open and notorious possession of said premises under said
This last instruction is, we think, defective. One link is wanting to the concatenation of evidence from which a jury would be warranted to infer notice; and that link is, evidence, not only that the possession was open and notorious, but that plaintiff had knowledge of it.
As plaintiff had not constructive notice (that is, implied notice under the registration acts) of the existence of the lease, it has no validity as to him unless he had actual notice. He had no actual notice, unless through his agent, Clancy. As to Clancy, O’Reilly says in his testimony : “I sent him word,, and he came, and I gave him the property; and he went out and looked at the property, and I presume he came back and accepted the loan.” O’Reilly himself did not go to look at the property, so that he cannot say of his own knowledge that Clancy went out to the property. He is not reexamined as to this portion of his testimony. But the statement is evidently not the statement of a fact within his knowledge. Clancy himself was not a witness in the case.
From the mere fact of defendant’s open and notorious possession the jury are not authorized to infer notice to plaintiff of that fact. To warrant such an inference, some evidence must exist tending to show that Casey, or his agent Clancy, had actual knowledge of defendant’s possession, or there is no proof of notice. Even if Clancy went out to look at the property, he may not have gone to the rear of the lot at all. He may have been satisfied, from the location of the property and the external appearance of the double brick residence on Carr Street, that it was good security for the proposed loan. One lending money on real estate is not bound to visit the premises at all. It is unnecessary, on this question of notice, to repeat what has so recently been said by this court, after a careful examina
The second instruction for defendant is calculated to mislead the jury. It is inconsistent with the instructions given for plaintiff. The case is not that of a defective instruction supplemented by others, so that., taken together, the body of instructions fairly presents the law of the case. The instructions present radically different theories ; and if, as seems probable, the jury followed the erroneous declaration of law, they must have been wholly indifferent as to any insufficiency of proof from which actual knowledge on the part of plaintiff of the possession of defendant at the date of the execution of the deed of trust might fairly be inferred.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.