93 P. 35 | Idaho | 1907
This action was commenced by the appellant to recover the title to certain mining claims. The action was brought in Kootenai county prior to the creation of Bonner county out of a portion of Kootenai, and this action was transferred to Bonner county. It appears from the allegations of the amended complaint that the husband of the appellant and the respondent became joint and equal owners of certain- mining claims, they having discovered and located the same in 1897; that on the fourth day of September, 1899, while they were joint and equal owners of said mining claims, a corporation known as the Grand Copper Mining Company was organized under the laws of the state of Washington, and it is alleged that by fraud and deceit, and through fraudulent promises and representations, and without any consideration
It is further alleged that on August 13, 1904, the said Amesdied intestate, leaving no heirs except his said wife, Hettie E.. Ames, the appellant, and that he left no estate except his said interest in said mining claims, and that he at the time of his death left no unpaid debts. It is further alleged that, said deed of said corporation conveying a three-fourths interest in said claims to Howes creates a cloud upon the title of' the plaintiff as heir at law of said Ames, deceased, in and to-the said undivided one-fourth interest in said mining claims..
It is further alleged that on the second day of May, 1906,. at Kootenai county, plaintiff made written demand upon defendant to convey to her as sole surviving heir at law of said Ames, deceased, the said one-fourth interest in and to said mining properties, but that said defendant for the first time-then and there laid claim thereto and refused and still refuses, to convey to her said one-fourth interest. The prayer is that, plaintiff be decreed to be entitled to an undivided one-fourth interest in and to said mining claims, and that Howes be compelled to convey to-her by good and sufficient deed, said interest, and that said Howes held said one-fourth interest as-trustee for Ames, and now holds the same in trust for the-plaintiff, and that said deed from the mining company be-so reformed as to convey to said Howes only one-half interest, in said claims, and that the cloud created by said deed to said one-fourth interest be removed and that the title to the same-be quieted.
It will be observed that the complaint is drawn upon and' proceeds upon the theory that Howes holds the title to said one-fourth interest in trust for plaintiff, and that he be compelled to convey said interest to the plaintiff.
"We will state here that after the original complaint was filed, a demurrer was interposed thereto on the grounds above stated, and was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff given time in which to file an amended complaint. An amended complaint was filed which was a copy of the original complaint, except that to the twelfth allegation of the complaint was added the following words, to wit: “For the first time then and there laid claim to the same, and.” The demurrer to the amended complaint was based on the same grounds as the demurrer to the complaint. Before the demurrer to the amended complaint was decided by the court,, counsel for respondent filed a motion to strike the amended complaint from the files on the ground (1) that it is identical in language with and the exact duplicate of the original complaint; (2) that on the fourth day of January, 1907, the court sustained defendant’s demurrer to the original complaint on the ground that the action was barred by the statute of limitations, to which ruling of the court counsel for the plaintiff excepted and was allowed thirty days from the fourth day of January, 1907, in which to prepare, file and serve an amended complaint; that plaintiff did on the fourteenth day of January,. file said amended complaint; that the order so made on the fourth day of January sustaining the demurrer has never been appealed from and is in full force and effect. Said motion was sustained by the court and the action was dismissed and judgmeht of dismissalr entered. The appeal is from that judgment.
It is first contended by counsel for appellant that the demurrer to the complaint should have been overruled, for the reason the complaint shows that at the time the defendant and the deceased, Ames, conveyed the properties to said mining company, Ames held and owned an undivided one-half interest therein; that Ames and Howes joined in an action for the
It is also alleged in said complaint that the mining company, under said decree and judgment, pretended and purported to convey to said Howes a three-fourths interest in said mining claims, when in fact and in truth it conveyed to him only an undivided one-half interest. The whole pleading, as we understand it, purports to allege that the mining company, disregarding said decree, conveyed a greater interest in said mining claims to said Howes than he was entitled to, and alleges that said Howes holds the same in trust for Ames.
The demurrer to the complaint was sustained upon the ground that it appeared upon the face of the complaint that the cause of action therein mentioned was barred by the statute of limitations. We think that the demurrer was properly sustained, for the reason that if there was any trust alleged in the complaint, it was a trust arising from an implication of law, an implied trust. It was not an express trust, as it is not alleged that it was created by contract, but arises from the fact that the mining company had conveyed a greater interest in said claims to Howes than he was entitled to, although it reconveyed to him just the same interest that he had conveyed to it. Express trusts are those which are created by the direct and positive acts of the parties by
No fraud is alleged in the complaint against Howes, and no express agreement is alleged. We think the court correctly sustained the demurrer.
The appellant amended her complaint simply by inserting in paragraph 12 thereof the following words: “For the first time then and there laid claim to the same, and.” In order that that amendment may be fully understood, we will here insert a copy of paragraph 12 as found in the original com- . plaint, and following that, a copy of paragraph 12 as found in the amended complaint.
Paragraph 12 of the original complaint: “That on the 2d day of May, 1906, plaintiff made written demand upon the said defendant to convey to her, as sole surviving heir-at-law of the said George Ames, the said demanded one-fourth interest in and to said mining properties, but that the said defendant refused and still refuses to do so.”
Paragraph 12 of the amended complaint: “That on the 2d day of May, 1906, at Kootenai county, Idaho,' plaintiff made written demand upon the said defendant to convey to her, as sole surviving heir-at-law of the said George Ames, the said demanded one-fourth interest, in and to said mining properties, but that the said defendant for the first time then and there laid claim to the same and refused and still refuses so to do.”
It will be observed that in paragraph 12 of the original complaint appellant alleged that she demanded of respondent the said one-fourth interest in said mining properties, but that
We gather from the complaint that Howes never owned the one-fonrth interest in controversy; that the mining company conveyed it to him by mistake. That being true, Howes held that interest under an implied trust, and as implied trusts come within the operation of the statute of limitation, the complaint on its face shows that the action is barred by the provisions of section 4036, Revised Statutes, and for that reason the court did not err in striking the complaint and entering a judgment dismissing the action.
While this was on motion, it raised the same questions as raised by the demurrer. It is contended that Ames and Howes were tenants in common of said mining claims and that the law presumes the possession of all cotenants, and before the possession of one can become adverse there must be an actual ouster, and before a tenant in common can rely on an ouster of his cotenants, he must claim the entire title to the land in himself and must hold an exclusive and adverse possession. We find no fault with the proposition of law there stated, but in the case at bar, there was a decree of a court of general jurisdiction, in a ease where Ames was one of the plaintiffs, in which a decree was entered requiring the mining company to reconvey to Ames and Howes the title to said mining claims, and on the twelfth day of June, 1900, the mining company did reconvey said mining claims, a one-fourth interest to Ames and a three-fourths interest to Howes, and said deeds were filed for record in the proper county. The filing or registration of that deed was notice to Ames that Howes had the title thereto so far as the mining company was concerned,. and it is well settled that “the possession of one tenant asserting an exclusive right to the land under a deed conveying the land to him by specific description is adverse to eotenants having notice of the deed. The registration of a deed under which a tenant in common claims exclusive right to the land
It is alleged in the complaint that on September 4, 1899, Ames and Howes, “by virtue and right of discovery and location, were joint and equal owners” of said mining claims, and on that date Ames conveyed a one-fourth and Howes conveyed a three-fourths interest therein to said mining company; that thereafter under a judgment and decree the mining company reconveyed to Ames and Howes by separate deeds just the share or interest in said mining claims that .each had theretofore conveyed to it. If Howes only held one-half interest in said claims under the location notices thereof or deed, the fact that he conveyed a greater interest than he owned did not devest Ames of any interest that he owned therein, and a reconveyance by the mining company to Howes of just the interest that Howes had conveyed to it would not devest Ames of any part of the interest he owned in said claims. I must admit that I do not understand in what manner the transaction between Howes and the mining company devested Ames of any interest he owned in said claims. If A sells and conveys real estate to C that belongs to B, the legal title to which is in B, and C thereafter reconveys the same to A, B is not thereby devested of his title to said land, and if the legal title to one-half of said mining claims was in Ames, the fact that Howes attempted to convey the same to said mining company, and thereafter said mining company reconveyed it to Howes, that transaction could in no manner affect Ames’ title to said one-half interest thereto.
Judgment affirmed, with costs in favor of respondent.