Akers v. Hobbs

Black, J.

This is ejectment for eighty acres of land in Cole county. The trial, without a jury, resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff purchased the land from the United States, and received a patent dated in 1857. She married John McDaniel in 1863. He died in November, 1866, and in May, 1872, she married Mr. Akers, who died in 1885.

In 1867 and 1868, after the death of McDaniel, proceedings were had by his widow, the plaintiff in this case, and his heirs, for the assignment of dower and partition of the lands of the deceased ; and under these proceedings the land in question was sold to W. W. Hall and Edward McDaniel, from whom the defendant claims title. The plaintiff objected to the deed to Hall and Edward McDaniel, and to the record in the partition suit, on the ground that she was not a party to those proceedings, and also on- the ground that there was no judgment that partition be made.

The widow and heirs were all petitioners. The petition is signed by Messrs. Burke and Howard, attorneys for the petitioners, and then by each of the adult parties and the guardian of the infants, the plaintiff in this case signing by her mark. She testifies that she did not bring that suit; that it was brought by the children, and that she could not remember whether she did or did not sign the petition. The proof is clear that she knew the proceedings were pending, and that they included her land in Cole county. She was informed of the sale before it was made, and thereafter gave to the land no attention. The petition sets out and describes some two hundred and seventy-five acres of land in Moniteau county, owned by the deceased at his death. Also the eighty-acre tract in question, owned by the plaintiff, but alleged in the petition to have been the property of McDaniel.

The circuit court of Moniteau county, on the presentation of this petition, at a term held in 1867, made a *132finding that McDaniel died the owner in fee of the lands in both counties, and that Malinda McDaniel, as the widow of the deceased, was entitled to a third part thereof for life; and then made an order appointing three commissioners to assign dower to her. The com missioners made a report to the next term, setting forth the fact that they had set off to the widow described portions of the Moniteau county land as her dower in all of the lands described in the petition, and that the remaining lands were not susceptible of division. This report the court approved and confirmed, and at the same time ascertained and declared the interest of each of the heirs in the lands not thus set apart as dower, and ordered them to be sold and the proceeds divided among the parties according to their respective interests as declared by the court; and the causé was continued for report of the sheriff of each county. The Moniteau county lands, not set off to the widow, were sold, and the sheriff’s report was duly approved. The sheriff of Cole county sold the eighty acres in question, and executed a deed therefor to Howard and Edward McDaniel, dated second of August, 1869, but ibade no report of his sale.

1. The objection that the plaintiff is not bound by the partition proceedings because she was not a party thereto is without any foundation in point of fact. She does not even affirm that she did not sign the petition. All she can say is that she does not remember whether she did or did not sign it. She knew of the pendency of the proceedings, and that the land was to be sold thereunder, and she accepted the dower interest assigned to her by the commissioners. Under these circumstances, the assertion that she was not a party to those proceedings, for the first time after the lapse of twenty years, is entitled to no consideration whatever.

2. Regularly, the court should have first ascertained and declared the interest of each of the parties in the lands and then rendered judgment that dower be *133assigned and partition made. There was in this case no formal interlocutory judgment that partition be made, but the want of a formal judgment of that character does not render the proceedings void. The court did ascertain and declare the interest of the widow, and appointed commissioners to set off dower to her. The commissioners’ report assigning that interest to her was approved. The court then ascertained and declared the interest of each of the heirs in all the lands not thus set off to the widow, and ordered them to be sold and the proceeds divided. The same result was reached in the end that would have been reached had there been a formal interlocutory judgment that partition be made. There is here all the essential elements of a proceeding to assign dower and make partition among the heirs, and the want of a formal judgment that partition be-made is a mere irregularity which does not in the least. affect the validity of the assignment of dower or sale of the lands when the proceedings are assailed collaterally, as is the case here. Beyond this, we need express no opinion at this time.

3. It is next insisted that the sheriff’s deed to the land in Cole county is worthless, because the sale was not reported and approved by the court from which the order of sale issued, and in support of this proposition we are cited to Pomeroy v. Allen, 60 Mo. 530, where it was held that the report of the sheriff of his proceedings on an order of sale in partition must be approved by the court before any deed can be made. A judgment in partition is as conclusive as any other judgment. It establishes the rights and interests of all parties to the suit or proceeding. Hart v. Steedman, 98 Mo. 452, and cases cited ; Holloway v. Holloway, 103 Mo. 274.

Though the plaintiff owned the Cole county eighty-acre tract, and it should not have been included in the partition, still it. was included, and her dower as assigned in the Moniteau county land was increased by *134reason of that fact. Assuming that there was a final judgment in the partition proceedings it must follow from the principle of law just stated that plaintiff cannot now go back, and in a proceeding like the one in hand question the validity of that judgment. But it is insisted there was no final judgment as to the Cole county land, because under repeated rulings of this court it is the judgment of the court approving the sheriff’s sale, which is the final judgment from which an appeal must be taken. Now, the court gave judgment that the widow was entitled to dower in all of the lands, including the Cole county eighty acres. The commissioners assigned that interest to her, and the confirmation of their report fixed, established and set off to her her interest in all of the lands. The question whether she could have prosecuted an appeal from that judgment before the other lands were sold, and thus hold further proceedings in abeyance, is not the question before us. Neither she nor the other parties objected to the report. All accepted it and the confirmation thereof as a finality. She had no interest in the subsequent proceedings; for her entire interest had been set apart to her. It is, therefore, a matter of no consequence to her whether the sheriff’s deed is valid or invalid, for she had no interest in the land to be sold.

4. With the foregoing result it is not necessary to express our opinion on the many other questions debated in the brief. The defense based upon the statute of limitations, it may be added, appears to us to be perfect and complete. The judgment is simply reversed.

All concur.