67 Ind. 429 | Ind. | 1879
The object of this action was to set aside a sheriff’s sale of, and to quiet the title to, a tract of land. Harrison Fearnaw was the plaintiff, and James E. Armstrong the defendant, below.
The complaint was in two paragraphs, each describing the same transaction somewhat differently, but, in their legal import substantially the same.
The defendant demurred to each paragraph of the complaint, but his demurrer was overruled as to both paragraphs.
Issue being joined, the court heard the evidence and made a finding of the facts out of which the controversy between the parties had arisen. Upon the facts thus found, the court came to the conclusion that the plaintiff’was entitled to the relief demanded, and rendered judgment accordingly, against the defendant.
The defendant has appealed, and assigned several errors upon the proceedings below, but the errors thus assigned really raise but two questions :
First. The sufficiency of the complaint;
Second. . The correctness of the conclusion of law at which the court arrived upon the facts as it found them.
The finding of the court was as folloivs :
“William Cunningham died in Clinton county, Indiana, in the year 1863, intestate, seized in fee of the east half of the north-east quarter of section eleven (11), and the west half of the north-west quarter of section twelve (12), all in township twenty-one (21) north, of range two (2) east, in Clinton county, Indiana; that said William left surviving him his widow and nine children; that said widow inherited one-third of said lands, and each of said children inherited two twenty-sevenths thereof; that James A.
“And the court further finds, that, at the date of the oral agreement aforesaid, the said William II. Avas married, and that his wife Avas under the age of tAventy-one years ; that said William II. paid off the mortgage aforesaid, and paid all taxes assessed against the lands in controversy from the time that he took possession thereof; that, at the time of the exchange of lands as aforesaid, the said James A. lived upon the lands left by his father, and continued to live there afterward.
“Conclusion : That the sheriff'’s sale passed no title to the defendant.”
The appellee insists that this finding can not be regarded as a special finding, because, as he alleges, all the requirements of section 341 of the code, necessary to make it such, Averenot complied Avith upon the trial ; but, as it was treated belotv by both parties as a special finding, and as the cause Avas disposed of by the court below upon the theory that it Avas such a finding, andas it contains AA’hat appears to De atafr synopsis of the material facts relied on by the appellee, both in his complaint and upon the trial,
We think the facts found by the court make it quite apparent that the verbal contract made by William H. Cunningham, for the purchase of the land in dispute, was taken out of the statute of frauds by a part performance on the part of the former, and became in that way a binding contract soon after it was entered into by the parties to it. That contract was not in any manner impaired by the minority of the wife of the said William H. Cunningham. Her coverture would have prevented her in any event from becoming bound by such contract, however much she might have assented to it. It was competent for her husband to bargain away any of his real estate, subject to her marital rights, and to acquire other real estate, without her concurrence, and without reference to her .minority. If the execution of the necessary deeds under said contract was mutually postponed by reason of her minority, the validity of the contract was not thereby affected.
Wé are therefore of the opinion, that William H. Cunningham had acquired an equitable title to whatever legal interest James A. Cunningham had in the lands in controversy before the judgment under which the appellant claims title was rendered.
A judgment lien is hut a general lien on the real estate of the judgment debtor, and is subject to all prior liens, whether legal or equitable, without notice even to the judgment creditor of the existence of such prior liens. Wharton v. Wilson, 60 Ind. 591.
As to the appellant, the possession of William II. Cunningham was sufficient notice, if notice was needed, of the latter’s claim of title.
The judgment is affirmed, at the appellant’s costs.