Bernecker v. Miller
Bernecker v. Miller
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for the possession of the west half of the east half of the northeast quarter of section seven, in township forty-five north, of range six east, of the St. Louis land district; and the parties agree that Morgan Lich, deceased, held the legal title: the plaintiff claiming the land according to the whole record— though he fails to show such title in making his ease as purchaser upon sale in partition — and defendant Wendelin Miller claiming the land through his wife Elizabeth, who is daughter of Morgan Lich. The title to the east half of the east half of the same quarter-section is mixed up with that of the west half in the record and in the partition suits shown in evidence, but defendants do not dispute the plaintiff’s right to that portion of the half-quarter. The plaintiff, in the outset, relies mainly upon a lease executed by him to defendant Wendelin Miller, April 26, 1862, for the whole eighty acres, including both the east half and the west half of the east half of the quarter-section. This lease has figured largely in this and the Circuit Court,' and has cost the defendant dear. Proceedings for unlawful detainer, and proceedings upon the appeal bond from a judgment for such detainer, have been brought here, and we have been compelled to sustain them because of this lease, although the defendant claimed, but did not so set forth and show as to be able to avail himself of it, that the lease was supposed by him to cover only the east half, he never intending to acknowledge the plaintiff’s title to the west half. (Bernecker v. Miller, 37 Mo. 498; same, 40 Mo. 473 ; and same decided at this term.)
But defendants are not now in possession under this lease. It appears from testimony offered by them that Martin Miller is in possession by permission of the heirs of Morgan Lich, and that
On the 20th of March, 1858, one Peterson and wife (a daughter of Lich) and one Ladue, the nature of whose title does not appear, presented to the St. Louis Land Court their petition for partition of the whole eighty acres, being the east half of the northeast quarter of section seven, etc., making one Frederick Clouse (who owned a large interest in said eighty acres, sometimes called half and sometimes less) and George Lich, William Lich, John Lich, Laura Lich, Catherine Lich, Catherine Engel (late Lich) and her husband, Susan Bernecker (late Lich) and her husband, the present plaintiff, and Elizabeth Miller (late Lich) and her husband, the present defendant Wendelin Miller, heirs of Morgan Lich, defendants.
Process was served upon all the defendants but William Lich, who was not found, and upon one George Clouse. On the 15th of January, 1860, John L. Bernecker, the present plaintiff, presented a motion to set aside a preliminary order, and make Frederick Clouse a party instead of George Clouse, upon whom process had been served; but neither the preliminary order nor the action of the court upon the motion is given, and allusion to the matter is made only to show that the present plaintiff was actually in court and active in the proceedings. No answers are filed, and it nowhere appears that any of the defendants appeared except the present plaintiff, although the judgment recites that the plaintiffs came by their attorneys, and the defendants, George Clouse, George Lich, etc., “answering by their attorneys, and John L. Bernecker comes by his attorneys,” etc. This judgment was entered in the Land Court in 1861, March 20, and finds that the plaintiffs and the defendant, John L. Bernecker, are the owners of the whole eighty acres, though how the interest of Clouse and the other heirs of Lich became divested nowhere appears in the
We have seen that in March, 1861, the court' assumed that all the defendants to the suit had in some way lost their interest in the premises. There was no amended petition showing that at the commencement of the suit they had no interest, or explaining how they had become divested of the interest alleged in the petition. There was, however, evidence submitted to the court on the subject, and consisted of a sheriff’s deed to Bernecker of the land in controversy, purporting to have been made in pursuance of an order of sale from the St. Louis Court of Common Pleas, upon a petition for partition presented to that court by the plaintiff, Bernecker, while the partition suit was pending in the Land Court. Also, the record of the proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas, in full or in part, was offered below, and is preserved in the bill of exceptions ; so that it appears that, upon order of sale in the Common Pleas, the plaintiff purchased the west half of the eighty acres at five dollars per acre.
The record shows that on the 31st of October, 1859, the said
The date of the birth of Elizabeth Miller (late Lich) was was proved, which makes her twenty-one years of age, November 6, 1859, six days after service upon her in the second suit. Defendants also proved that they are in possession of the land in controversy with the consent of the.heirs of Morgan or Magnus Lich. The plaintiff then offered in evidence a deed from Frederick Clouse to him of all his interest in the eighty acres, made January 21, 1861, after the partition decree in the Common Pleas, and before the one in the Land Court.
The instructions sought on behalf of the defendants, and refused, ask that the proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas be treated as void for two reasons — first, the pendency of the suit in the Land Court; and, second, the minority of Elizabeth Miller when served with process. This can not be. The proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas were not void for'either reason. The defendants were all served with process, and it was
Defendant’s brief strongly presses upon the court the consideration of fraud on the part of the plaintiff, and I am not without suspicion that there may have been some unfairness on his part. But the record neither sets up nor shows facts that would constitute fraud. Elizabeth Miller, through whom the defendants claim an interest in the premises, was served with process in both partition suits when a minor. The judgment in both suits shows that she appeared upon the hearings. If this were false in fact, and the courts were so imposed upon as to suffer a false entry of the kind to be made ; if she neither appeared nor authorized any one to appear for her; if she has not received the petty proceeds of the sale of her interest in the estate; if, from her want of knowledge, or that of her husband, of the English language, and from their general ignorance of what was progressing, or of its effect, they -were in fact deceived by the plaintiff.; if by his acts they were induced to lie idle, and unwittingly suffered their patri
We are compelled to affirm the judgment below.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John L. Bernecker v. Wendelin Miller and Martin Miller
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published