Elliott v. Buffington
Elliott v. Buffington
Opinion of the Court
Action of ejectment in ordinary statutory form in the circuit court of Chariton county. Petition filed Eebruary 19, 1894, to recover possession of all that part of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty-seven and the southwest quarter of section twenty-seven and the east half of the southeast quarter of section twenty-eight, and the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section twenty-eight, and the north half of the northeast quarter of section thirty-three, and the southwest quarter of^the northwest quarter of section thirty-four, all in township fifty-five, of range seventeen, lying and being on the north and west side of the Ohariton river, in Ohariton county.
Plaintiff deduced title as follows:
First. The patent from the State of Missouri to Chariton county, dated November 12, 1869, granting to said county all the lands in controversy in this case and all other swamp and' overflowed lands in said Chariton county.
Second. An order of the county court of said Chariton county, made on May 8, 1883, appointing John A. Lee, clerk of said county court, deed commissioner to convey by proper deed swamp and overflowed lands, sold under the orders of said court, to the purchasers thereof.
Third. Two deeds executed by John A. Lee, deed commissioner for and on behalf of said Chariton county, each to A. G. Kennedy, and dated, acknowledged and recorded on the 29th day of November, 1896, conveying to said Kennedy all the lands in controversy in this case.
Fourth. Two patents from Chariton county to A. G-. Kennedy, dated the 9th day of February, 1894, for all the lands in question in this case, and reciting in said patents that said Kennedy made full payment for said lands on the 27th day of November, 1886.
Fifth. The record of a deed of general warranty .from A. G-. Kennedy and his wife to Malcolm Bliss, dated November 27,1886, and recorded in the recorder’s office of Chariton county, on December 3, 1886, which deed conveyed all the lands in question in this case.
Sixth. Two deeds of quitclaim from Malcolm Bliss and wife to Alonzo L. Welch, dated, respectively, on the 8th and 16th of December, 1893, and duly recorded in the recorder’s office of Chariton county, December 12th and 22nd, 1893, conveying all the lands in controversy in this case.
Seventh. Two quitclaim deeds from Alonzo L. Welch and wife to- George N. Elliott (the plaintiff), dated respectively on December 12th and 22nd, 1893, and acknowledged and
The plaintiff on the trial also introduced proof that John A. Lee was the clerk of the county court of said Chariton county from January 1, 1883, to January 1, 1891.
The plaintiff also offered and read in evidence a special act of the legislature, entitled “An act to prescribe the manner of conveying swamp lands in Chariton county.” Approved March 16, 1861. [Sess. Acts of 1860, 1861, p. 394.]
George N. Elliott testified that the defendant had about 300 acres of the land inclosed and used it for pasturage.
Eor the defendant, A. G. Kennedy testified that he purchased of Chariton county the lands that he conveyed to Malcolm Bliss. That when he, Kennedy, purchased the lands he received certificates of purchase; and that he paid for the lands in full, and presented the treasurer’s receipts, showing such payments, to John A. Lee, who executed to him, Kennedy, the deeds in evidence. That after he bought and paid for the lands he sold and conveyed them by warranty deed to Malcolm Bliss.
Eor the purpose of showing title to the land in question the defendant offered in evidence a deed from Malcolm Bliss and wife to “one Gendron,” dated October 5th, 1887, and filed for record 21st of March, 1894, but on objections being made to the deed by plaintiff, the defendant withdrew it for the time being, and offered and read in evidence the deposition of L. E. Gendron, taken on the 29th of March, 1894. This witness testified that in 1887 he traded three lots in the city of Independence to Malcolm Bliss “and he sold me some land in Chariton county, Mo. That land was the only land in Chariton county that Bliss ever made a deed to. At the time of my trade with Bliss I and my brother owned the lots in Independence. My brother’s name is Julius Gendron. . . . Bliss was to pay $11,600 for the lots and gave me the land in Chariton county to the amount of $9,600, and made up the
The defendant’s counsel then again offered in evidence the deed from Malcolm Bliss and wife to J. E. Gendron, dated October 5,1887, and recorded March 21, 1894, and against the plaintiff’s objections, the court admitted said deed in evidence.
Malcolm Bliss, in his deposition taken March 20, 1894,. and read in evidence by defendant, testified: That he formerly owned two or three thousand acres of swamp land in Ohariton county, which he obtained from Kennedy. That a good many years ago he made a trade with L. E. Gendron and gave him some wild lands in Chariton or Wayne county, or both, and took in exchange some building lots in Independence. The consideration for the land was the lots in Independence. “I suppose I have some interest there yet, how much I don’t know, haven’t looked it up.” That in December, 1893, he made two quitclaim deeds to some Chariton county land, but don’t know the grantee’s name. That he looked over the deeds to see the number of acres included, and that was all. That he had no correspondence with Alonzo L. Welch about
Tbe defendant by bis counsel on October 16, 1895, took tbe deposition of tbe plaintiff, George N. Elliott, and on tbe trial tbe defendant read tbe same in evidence, “as an admission.”
In that deposition tbe plaintiff testified that at bis instance tbe county court issued tbe two patents in evidence to Kennedy, that be, plaintiff, then owned tbe lands, and Kennedy bad no interest in them. That bis, plaintiff’s, title was based on tbe title be acquired through a deed from Kennedy to Bliss and from Bliss to Welch and from Welch to plaintiff.
“Q. Did you ever know anybody to be in actual possession of tbe lands in controversy other than Mr. Buffington, tbe defendant ?
“A. No; I never knew of anybody being in possession of it at all.
“Q. Who was in possession of it when you bought from Mr. Welch?
“A. I didn’t know that anybody bad possession of it. I just supposed it was like all or a large part of those bottom lands, just laying out; and did not know that it was inclosed at all until we went up there.
“Q. When did you first learn that Mr. Gendron claimed to be tbe grantee of these lands ?
“A. I think it was some time in March, 1894. ___
“Q. Previous to that time and before you applied to tbe county court for a patent, hadn’t you been informed that Bliss bad conveyed bis interest in these lands before he conveyed to Welch ?
“A. No, sir; I bad not.”
And in bis said deposition tbe plaintiff further testified that be was acting for Mr. Welch when be wrote tbe letters in evidence to Mr. Bliss. Mr. Welch said to plaintiff that if
Alonzo L. Welch, called by defendant, testified: “I employed George N. Elliott to purchase the lands in question from Mr. Bliss. I knew the N. W. 5-54-17, but had no knowledge of the land in suit here before my purchase from Bliss, only what the record showed. . . . The land I employed Mr. George N. Elliott to buy for me from Bliss, the piece the first conversation occurred over, was the northwest 5-54-17. . . . That is the piece I got and now own. The second conversation was after he received a letter through the mail. He came into my office and said, T have got an answer from Mr. Bliss stating that if you will take all the land, that you can have it at forty cents an acre.’ ... I told him to look up and see how much Mr. Bliss owned, how much I would have to pay for it, and I forget the number of acres, but I think it came to $185. I told him I’d agree to take it, told him to make the deed and send it on for signature, and I would have the money ready. After the deed came I paid him the money for the deed, and put the deed on record, and in a day or two he came back and said he made a mistake of 80 acres of land; that is, he made the trade for me to buy all the land, he would like for me to pay for the other land. I asked him how much it was and he said 80 acres. . . . They sent on and got the deed and I paid the money, $32. The record title to the land I wanted was in Bliss. I had written a letter to Kansas City asking Mr. Bliss what he would take for the land. I think the letter was returned to me. I asked Mr. Elliott if he could locate Mr. Bliss and he said he thought he could. I told him I would pay him well if he got me a quitclaim deed from Mr. Bliss for the northwest quarter 5-54-17. . . . After the land had been deeded to me I proposed to Mr. Elliott to deed him the land in 55-17, in consideration of his services in getting me the deed to the northwest of 5-54-17, and the use of
The defendant then offered in evidence a sheriff’s deed, executed by the sheriff of Chariton county, dated July 13, 1894, purporting to convey the interest of L. E. Gendron in and to the lands in question to the defendant, Buffington. This deed, against plaintiff’s objections, was admitted in evidenefe. This deed recited that two judgments were rendered in the court of G. E. Purcell, a justice of the peace within and for Blue Township, Jackson county, Missouri, on September, 18, 1888, in favor of A. H. Spellman and against L. E. Gendron, each for $278.83, and transcripts thereof were filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of said Jackson county, on October 3, 1888, and that alias executions issued thereon, April 25, 1894, directed to the sheriff of Chariton county, who levied on the.lands in controversy, on May 8, 1894, as the property of said L. E. Gendron, and advertised and sold the same on the 13th of July, 1894, and Benjamin E. Buffington became the purchaser thereof, and to whom the sheriff executed the deed on said 13th day of July, 1894.
The defendant offered no evidence of any other claim of title to the land.
Eor the plaintiff the court declared the law, as follows:
“1. The plaintiff has produced and shown in evidence a complete and connected chain of legal title to the lands in question from the Hnited States down to the plaintiff, and the finding and judgment should be for him, unless his right to recover be defeated by the deed from Malcolm Bliss and wife to L. E. or J. E. Gendron, offered in evidence by defendant.
*674 “2. The court further declares the law to be that if it appears from the evidence that Alonzo L. Welch purchased the lands in question from Malcolm Bliss, in whom the record title thereto then stood, and paid him a valuable consideration therefor, then the deed, in evidence, from said Malcolm Bliss and wife to said Alonzo L. Welch, dated December 8, 1893, and recorded December 12, 1893, and the deed from said Bliss and wife to said Welch, in evidence, dated December 16, 1893, and recorded December 22, 1893, are sufficient to and did convey to said Welch the title to the said lands, notwithstanding said Malcolm Bliss and wife had theretofore, on October 8, 1887, executed to one Gendron the deed produced in evidence by the defendant, but which deed was not filed for record until subsequent to the recording of said deeds from said Bliss and wife to said Welch, to wit, on March 21, 1894.”
And for the defendant the court declared the law as follows: “It is alleged in the petition and admitted by the answer that the defendant, Benjamin Buffington, was in possession of ail the lands in controversy at the date of the commencement of this action, and there is no11 evidence that the plaintiff was ever in the actual possession of any of the lands in controversy.' The court therefore declares the law to be that the mere possession of the defendant, Buffington, is sufficient to defeat the plaintiff’s recovery, unless the court from the evidence in the case shall find that the plaintiff, George N. Elliott, was the owner of said land at the date of the commencement of this action.”
The court found for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed to this court.
I. The principal contention of defendant is that the two deeds from John A. Lee, commissioner appointed by the county court, to Kennedy, were wholly ineffectual to convey the interest of Chariton county in these lands in suit.
In the view we take of the case it is entirely unnecessary to consider the local act of 1861, approved March, 1861, Laws
On the 29th day of November, 1886, said Lee, while still commissioner, made, executed, acknowledged and delivered to A. Q-. Kennedy the two deeds now contested by defendant. The insistence of counsel that there is not a scintilla of evidence showing that Kennedy bought or that the court sold him these lands is not supported by the record.
On the contrary it most conclusively appears from the evidence offered by defendant himself that a part of the land in controversy was purchased of Chariton county by Caswell Courtney, who paid 20 per cent of the purchase price thereon, and received a certificate of purchase for said land and subsequently sold his interest therein and assigned his certificate of purchase to A. Gr. Kennedy who paid to said county the balance of the purchase money in full, principal and interest, and that as to the remainder of said land the said Kennedy purchased it of said county and paid the purchase price in full and received a certificate of purchase therefor.
The distinction between a sale by the court and one by the county is not tenable. No swamp lands of the county could be sold without consent or the order of the county court. Hence when the evidence showed that Courtney and he had bought the county’s title, it was tantamount to proof of a sale by the court. The order appointing Lee authorized the deed to Kennedy.
The further contention that when Lee was appointed commissioner and when he executed these conveyances, the general laws of this State governing the sale and conveyance of swamp lands restricted the sale to those made by the county court and prescribed that the conveyance could only be by patent by the president of the court and countersigned by the county clerk, is also untenable.
It follows that the commissioner’s two deeds conveyed the lands in dispute to Kennedy — Kennedy and wife conveyed the lands to Malcolm Bliss by a proper deed duly recorded December 3rd, 1886.
Alonzo Welch having purchased the lands for a present valuable consideration from Bliss without any notice or knowledge that Bliss had previously conveyed the same lands to Gendron the title passed to him notwithstanding his deed was only a quitclaim deed.
It has been repeatedly decided by the court that a grantee for value, and without notice, in a quitclaim deed, acquires the same rights against an unrecorded deed of which he has no actual notice as any other innocent purchaser; that he is protected by our recording acts. [Fox v. Hall, 74 Mo. 315; Munson v. Ensor, 94 Mo. 504; Ebersole v. Rankin, 102 Mo. 488; Hope v. Blair, 105 Mo. 85; Hickman v. Green, 123 Mo. loc. cit. 178.]
This view of the law renders unnecessary a discussion of what effect would have resulted from the delivery of the patents to plaintiff instead of Kennedy, the original purchaser, if plaintiff’s title rested upon said patents. As the commissioner’s deeds were valid, the patents were useless.
Finally it appears that while plaintiff’s petition only sought a recovery of that part of the lands described as “lying and being on the north and west side of the Ohariton river,” and the court’s finding was “plaintiff is entitled to the possession of the land sued for and described in plaintiff’s petition,”
This is such an evident mistake that the circuit court can correct it by a nwao^ro fimo entry from the abundant records for that purpose, and does not require the reversal of the judgment. On the contrary, the judgment will be and is affirmed, with directions to the circuit court to correct the clerk’s entry so as to conform to the petition and the court’s finding.
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