Cross v. Huffman

Appeal from the Jasper County Circuit Court. Elizabeth Cross was a widow with two children. Said children are plaintiffs in this cause. They lived in Jasper County, and on the 6th day of October, 1894, at a trustee's sale, under a deed of trust, which had been made to secure a note for money loaned by her to one DeCocq and wife, she purchased the east half of Lot Five of the northeast quarter of Section Six, Township nine, Range twenty-two, in said county, for which she received the trustee's deed, and thus became the owner. On the 10th day of January, 1895, Elizabeth Cross entered into a bond for deed, by which she bound herself to George W. Richardson to convey her said land to him in exchange for certain lands described in said bond owned by said Richardson, and which is the property in controversy in this case. Said bond further recited that "until she made a warranty deed of her said property to Richardson," he might "occupy andimprove her land for his own use." It seems to have been part of the trade, although not mentioned in the bond, that Elizabeth Cross should also, until Richardson conveyed his property to her, move onto and take possession of the property of said Richardson. *Page 644 Accordingly, we find from the evidence that on the 12th day of January, 1895, Elizabeth Cross moved onto the Richardson place. She had lots of young stock and some horses, cows and hogs, which she took with her. She probably had some money, how much does not appear. She was a woman of advanced years and uneducated. Her grandson, who was a good-sized boy, the son of the plaintiff, Mrs. Alyea, lived with his grandmother awhile, and helped milk the cows and do other work for her. Shortly after moving onto the Richardson place, she met George Middaugh. He was a widower, also advanced in years, with grown-up children. His children, by his first wife, are the defendants in this case. One of his daughters lived near Elizabeth Cross's new home, and it was at her home that she first met George Middaugh. The result was that George Middaugh and Elizabeth Cross were married in May, 1895. His property consisted of a black horse, that died soon after the marriage. On September 12, 1896, George W. Richardson, who, it seems, had gone to Colorado for his health, had returned to Carthage, and was ready to close up the contract for exchange of properties entered into in January of the preceding year. But Elizabeth Middaugh was sick, and unable to go herself, and sent her husband to Carthage to comsummate the contract and get her deed. Instead, however, of having the deed made to her alone, as the contract with Richardson called for, he had the deed made to himself and his wife, as joint tenants, or as tenants by the entirety. Up to this point, there is no dispute of consequence in the testimony.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Alyea, testified, among other things, and she is corroborated by Nora Shire, an apparently disinterested witness, that when her mother found out that the deed had been made to her husband and herself, she strenuously objected, and told him that the place belonged to her children, that their father had made the money with which she had purchased it, and that she was going to Carthage to have it changed and put in her name, but she was weak and sick, and death *Page 645 overtook her before the change was made. Plaintiff, Mrs. Alyea, and several other witnesses for plaintiffs, also testified, that George Middaugh frequently promised his wife that he would go to Carthage with her, when she was able, and change the deed to her name. On the other hand, the defendants, Susie Huffman and Lydia Scott, testified to several conversations with their step-mother, after the deed to her husband and herself had been made, in which she stated that she was satisfied to have the deed stand as it was, and that she wanted her husband to have the property in case she died first. J.C. Ross also testified to such conversation. But the plaintiff, Mrs. Alyea, testified that she had a lawsuit with Ross, about a line fence. The rental value of the property was ten dollars per month.

Elizabeth Middaugh and her husband continued to reside on the property, as husband and wife, until her death, on July 22, 1909, and thereafter the said George Middaugh continued to live thereon until his death in September, 1916, and thereafter the defendants were in possession until suit was filed December 27, 1916.

The petition is in two counts. The first count being a count to quiet title, sets up substantially the facts as claimed by the plaintiffs above narrated, and prays the court to determine the title, and to declare the defendants hold the title in trust for the plaintiffs, and by its decree divest said defendants of all title and invest it in the plaintiffs, to award plaintiffs possession, and that the court take an account of the rents and profits, and that plaintiffs have judgment against the defandants therefor, and for all other relief that plaintiffs may be entitled to under the pleadings and evidence. The second count in the petition is an ordinary count in ejectment.

The answer admits the ownership of Elizabeth Cross of the land that she agreed to convey to George W. Richardson in exchange for the land in controversy. It alleges "that on the 10th day of January, 1895, she, the said Elizabeth Cross, entered into a contract with *Page 646 one George W. Richardson, to trade the land above described for the land described in plaintiffs' petition; that after the execution of said contract, the said George Middaugh and Elizabeth Cross intermarried on the __ day of ____, 1895." The answer further alleges that said deed of September 12, 1896, from said Richardson and wife to Elizabeth Middaugh and George Middaugh, was made to them as husband and wife with the intent to create an estate by the entirety, at the request of and by the direction of said Elizabeth Middaugh. That since the death of said Elizabeth Middaugh, George Middaugh under and by virtue of said deed held the possession of said land, and claimed all of the right, title and interest therein. "Defendants further answering say that the cause of action in the petition mentioned did not accrue within three years before the commencement of this suit." The answer to the second count of the petition was a general denial.

The reply was a general denial.

The court made a finding of facts at the request of plaintiffs, which included most of the facts we have recited, and stated that the deed from Richardson and wife "was caused by said GeorgeMiddaugh to be made to said George and Elizabeth Middaugh, as husband and wife, on the 12th day of September, 1896, and on the following day said George Middaugh delivered said deed to said Elizabeth Middaugh, who knew and was fully informed and advised of the manner and form of said deed, and who thereafter caused the same to be recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds of Jasper County, Missouri; that said George Middaugh never, at any time, disputed or denied the right and interest of said Elizabeth Middaugh, by reason of the said property having been purchased with her means and property, and that such right and interest as said George Middaugh had or held under and by virtue of said deed to himself and wife, were a resulting and constructive trust for the said Elizabeth Middaugh; that said George Middaugh lived in said county from *Page 647 and after said conveyance until the time of his death in 1916, and that said Elizabeth Middaugh during that time brought no action to have such trust established and declared, and that these plaintiffs, the heirs of said Elizabeth Middaugh, have brought no action for said purpose, and did not file this action until the 27th day of December, 1916, or more than seven years after the death of said Elizabeth Middaugh, and they are precluded under the Statute of Limitations from maintaining this action." We have been unable to find any evidence in the record that George Middaugh delivered the deed to Elizabeth Middaugh the day following September 12, 1896, the date of the deed, or that she caused it to be recorded, or knew the contents thereof before it was recorded, as stated in said finding. And we find no evidence that she directed or authorized said deed to be made to herself and husband in the first instance, as stated in the answer, nor does the lower court so find.

The judgment of the lower court being for defendants, the plaintiffs appealed.

I. The facts set up in the petition present equitable issues, and there being a prayer for equitable relief, the suit may be regarded as an equitable suit to quiet title, to divest title from defendants and remove any claim they assert, asPractice. the heirs of George Middaugh under the alleged deed to George Middaugh and Elizabeth Middaugh, as a cloud upon plaintiffs' title. Equitable issues being present, we must consider the testimony in the case, as the findings of facts by the lower court are not binding upon us. [Koehler v. Rowland,275 Mo. 573, and cases cited.]

II. We rule that the deed in question conveyed no title to George Middaugh. Elizabeth Middaugh was in possession of the land, and was the equitable owner of it, when she married George Middaugh. She had then obligated herself to George W. Richardson to make him *Page 648 a deed to the property she formerly ownedDeed by in exchange for the land in suit, and inEntirety: part performance of the contract had givenResulting him possession of her land, with the rightTrust: Co-Parceners: to occupy and improve the same for his ownEstoppel. use and benefit until she delivered him a warranty deed thereto. She had also moved onto and taken possession of the land in controversy owned by said Richardson, in part performance of his obligation to convey to her. Since the Married Woman's Act of 1889, a married woman may employ her husband, as agent, to transact business for her. When George Middaugh delivered her deed to George. W. Richardson to consummate the contract of exchange, she thereby fully paid for the land Richardson was to convey to her, and she was in possession thereof. Her equitable title to the land was then complete. The fact that her husband and agent fraudulently, and without her consent, as we must hold, caused his name to be inserted in her deed jointly with her name as grantee, conveyed him no title as against her.

In this State it is the settled law, that if the wife is a tenant in common, and there is a voluntary partition of the common estate, a deed made to the husband and wife, as joint tenants, or tenants by the entirety conveys no estate to the husband and invests the entire estate in the wife, even though the wife directed the deed to be made to her husband and herself jointly. This, for the reason that the wife really owned the title before the deed was made, and the only effect and purpose of the deed was to sever the possession of the property between the coparceners. In such case, the land is the wife's by virtue of being a coparcener and not by virtue of the deed. [Powell v. Powell, 267 Mo. 117; Starr v. Bartz, 219 Mo. 47; Whitsett v. Womack, 159 Mo. 14; Palmer v. Alexander, 162 Mo. 127; Propes v. Propes, 171 Mo. l.c. 416 et seq.] In Powell v. Powell, supra, l.c. 125, the court also ruled that "the statute relating to married women would require such a direction to be in writing." *Page 649

In the case before us, however, there is no evidence and no finding that the wife ever directed that the deed should be made to herself and husband. We see no reason why, when the wife has purchased and paid for property, and is in possession of it, and she is thus the equitable owner of it, if the formal deed or document conveying the legal title should be made to her husband and herself, without her consent, instead of to her alone, that he should receive any more title, and she any less title, than if she had been a tenant in common, and in making partition, her share was set off by a deed purporting to convey the same to herself and her husband. The substance and very right of the matter is the same in each case. In neither case has the wife conveyed anything to her husband and she has done nothing to estop herself from claiming her own. Accordingly, it has been held that where a guardian purchases property at the instance of his ward, and for her benefit, and pays for it with her means, but it is conveyed to the ward and her husband jointly, the title was vested in the ward alone, the husband being vested with no interest therein. [Moore v. Moore, 12 B. Mon. l.c. 664; Simmons v. McKay, 5 Bush. 25; 13 R.C.L. p. 1110, and cases cited.] Also, where a wife has a perfect title to land, a deed executed by a third party to her husband and herself, and accepted by them, does not preclude the wife from setting up her original title. [Jackson ex dem. White v. Cary, 16 Johns. 302.] "It is one of the essentials of the peculiar estate by entireties sometimes enjoyed by husband and wife that the spouses be jointly entitled as well as jointly named in the deed. Hence, if the wife alone be entitled to a conveyance, and it be made to her and her husband jointly, the latter will not be allowed to retain the whole by survivorship." [Sprinkle v. Spainhour, 25 L.R.A. (N.S.) l.c. 169; Moore v. Moore, 12 B. Mon., supra.]

We hold, therefore, that under the circumstances in this case, the deed of September 12, 1896, made by George W. Richardson and wife to Elizabeth Middaugh and George Middaugh, her husband, conveyed no title *Page 650 whatever to the husband, but vested the sole legal title in said Elizabeth Middaugh.

III. Nor does the Statute of Limitations in any way deprive the plaintiffs, as the heirs of their mother, of the title to their property. There is an utter absence of evidence of adverse possession by George Middaugh during the life time of Elizabeth Middaugh. The lower court finds, and we agree toLimitations. that finding, that, he, at all times during her life, recognized the equitable right of his wife in the property. He, therefore, did not claim to be in possession adversely to her. Furthermore, she was, herself, in possession of the property. In order to perfect title by adverse possession, the possession must not only be adverse and hostile, but it also must be exclusive and under claim of right, as against the owner. [Lumber Co. v. Craig, 248 Mo. 319; McCune v. Goodwillie,204 Mo. 339; Long v. Coal Co., 233 Mo. l.c. 739; Buford v. Moore, 177 S.W. l.c. 869; Norfleet v. Hutchins, 68 Mo. l.c. 600.]

Since the Married Woman's Act of 1889 went into effect, the husband has no right, in cases governed by that act, as this case is, to the possession of his wife's real estate during the marriage. The right to possession of the wife's real estate, in such cases, is in the wife and not in the husband at all.

In Powell v. Powell, 267 Mo. l.c. 128, quoting with approval from Arnold v. Willis, 128 Mo. l.c. 150, this court, per GRAVES, J., says: "The Married Woman's Act as it now stands, in so far as the marital rights of the husband to the possession of land belonging to the wife are concerned, materially changed his common law rights, and in legal contemplation has completely deprived him of all the right to the possession or control of the increased and profits, as if it belonged to some other person."

So, in Teckenbrock v. McLaughlin, 246 Mo. l.c. 717, this court, per BLAIR, C., said: "So far as concerns the right of the husband in lands of the wife acquired *Page 651 since 1889, the common law has been much modified by statute. In such lands, under the statute (Secs. 8309, 8304, R.S. 1909; Vanata v. Johnson, 170 Mo. l.c. 274-5) the husband has no right of possession during the life of the wife, and she alone can sue therefor."

In State v. Sinclair, 250 Mo. l.c. 288, this court said of Section 8309, Revised Statutes 1909: "This section has been construed to give the wife the exclusive control of her real estate, regardless of whether she is living with or apart from her husband, and regardless of whether she is faithful or unfaithful to her marital obligations. [Woodward v. Woodward,148 Mo. 241.] However, she may voluntarily permit her husband to remain in her home and enjoy the use of her property without paying rent. [Donovan v. Griffith, 215 Mo. 149.]"

But, the mere fact that by his wife's permission he lives with his wife, as her husband, without paying rent in a home which belongs to her, gives him no joint, nor any control, or rights whatever, in the possession of her home. This is the extent of the possession we find the evidence shows that George Middaugh had of his wife's property during her life. There is no evidence, and no allegation in the answer, that he ousted his wife from the possession of her property in any manner.

We, therefore, find that George Middaugh was not in possession, nor in control of the property in controversy, either jointly with or separately from his wife, but that she was in the exclusive possession of it until her death. Consequently, the Statute of Limitations never started to run in favor of said George Middaugh against his wife in her life time, and there was never any adverse, nor any possession on his part until after her death. She having died July 22, 1909, and this suit having been brought December 27, 1916, the ten years required to vest title by adverse possession had not expired when this suit was instituted. [DeHatre v. Edmonds, 200 Mo. 246; Snyder v. Elliott,171 Mo. 362; Rutter v. Carothers, 223 Mo. 631; Davis v. Cummins, 195 S.W. 752.] *Page 652

IV. We have held that, under the circumstances in this case, the fraudulent or unauthorized insertion by the husband of his name in his wife's deed, as a grantee with her, was an absolute nullity, and, therefore, left the sole legal title in her, just as if his name had never been inserted in the deed. But the result of this case would be the same, if he tookResulting legal title with her, and held it as a resulting trustTrust. for her, as held by the learned court below, and as would have been the case had the deed been made to him alone. [Fogle v. Pindell, 248 Mo. l.c. 75, and cases cited.] She was in exclusive possession during her life, and the husband was not in any manner in adverse possession during that time. She, being in possession, and her husband not in adverse possession, her equitable rights in her property were in no manner impaired by the mere lapse of time during her life (Goltermann v. Schiermeyer, 125 Mo. 304; Davis v. Cummins, 195 S.W. l.c. 756); and as this suit was brought within less than eight years after her death, assuming that the husband's possession was adverse during that period, the plaintiffs, her children, are not barred by the Statute of Limitations, because ten years' adverse possession had not run against them prior to the filing of this suit. [Authorities, supra.]

V. Reed v. Painter, 145 Mo. 341, is relied upon by respondents. That case is not to the point. It differs in essential features from this. Mrs. Painter was not in possession during her life time, and the husband was. Mrs. Painter did not have anPainter equitable title to the land, before the deed was made,Case. and the deed named the husband alone as grantee. It is, therefore, not necessary for us to determine whether the ruling in that case is out of harmony with the subsequent rulings of this court, as most earnestly pressed upon us by learned counsel for appellant.

VI. The result is the judgment is reversed with directions to the lower court to set aside its judgment *Page 653 herein and enter judgment on the first count of the petition for the plaintiffs, declaring the plaintiffs are theConclusion. owners in fee of the property described in the petition, and the defendants have no title thereto, and that the monthly rent of the property, since the institution of this suit, is ten dollars per month, which plaintiffs are entitled to recover from defendants. The circuit court is also directed to enter judgment for plaintiffs against defendants on the second count of the petition, for possession of the property, and damages and monthly rent, at the rate of ten dollars per month, as found due plaintiffs by the decree upon the first count.

Brown and Ragland, CC., concur.