141 Ind. 471 | Ind. | 1895
Appellee, who is the widow of the testator, Nehemiah Burden, filed her complaint in the lower court against the executor and legatees of the last will of said Nehemiah.
Omitting the formal parts the complaint is as follows:
“The plaintiff complains of the defendants, and says that she was a second wife and is the widow of the deceased, with whom she intermarried in 1876; that to said parties no children were born; that she is now 67 years of age, and illiterate, ignorant, timid old woman, with nothing but an obscure domestic experience of life, utterly and demurely ignorant of business, law and property rights; that the defendants, except the executor whose wife is a daughter, are the heirs and all the heirs of the deceased, and are all adult, except Albert De-Haven, Maud DeHaven, George Barkman and John Barkman, who are minors; that her husband executed his said will on the 28th day of October, 1892, and died
“She avers she said to them she did not wish to sign any paper, as she had no friends or lawyer to advise her or explain the purpose to her; that she wanted to have and secure her proper interest in her husband’s estate, and her claim against it; said defendants as aforesaid still cunningly, fraudulently and deceitfully pressed and urged her to sign the said paper; and she avers that she knew nothing of widow’s election, widow’s portion or that widows had the option to accept under the will of her husband or under the law, and that no explanations were made to her, no information was given her, and she was still urged that it was necessary for her to sign such paper in order to give effect to her husband’s will, and she was thereby fraudulently and wrongfully trapped into executing a written election to accept the provision
“Wherefore she prays the court for an order and judgment revoking said election and declaring the same null and void, and an order setting aside and annulling and declaring void said quitclaim deed, and for all proper relief.’’
The sufficiency of this pleading to constitute a cause of action was assailed by a demurrer in the lower court upon the part of some of the appellants, and is challenged in this court by an assignment of error.
The assignment that the court erred in overruling the demurrer, and the one that the complaint is not sufficient, will be considered together.
From an inspection of this pleading we think it is apparent, as contended by counsel for appellee, that it is replete with ambiguities and omissions. The object of the action herein, and the result sought to be obtained thereby, is equitable relief in annulling and setting aside a written election upon appellee’s part to take under the will of her late husband, and also to set aside a quitclaim deed, executed by her under the alleged circumstances and facts.' The evident theory or pith of the complaint is that of fraud, perpetrated upon appellee by the appellants in procuring the execution of the instruments in question.
It is provided, by section 2666, R. S. 1894, “that if lands be devised to a woman, or pecuniary or other pro
She is not required to make her election to take under the will, but she is required, in effect, to renounce the provisions made for her therein and to elect to retain her rights under the law. Therefore, any act which will bar her from exercising this statutory privilege of election must be in its nature of such force and effect as to constitute an estoppel. Garn, Exr., v. Garn, supra.
Where, by the means of fraud or the contrivances or acts of those interested in the estate of her deceased husband, the widow is prevented from exercising this right of election, or is thereby procured to execute an instrument or to do an act which would serve, if permitted to stand, to estop her from electing to retain her rights under the law, a court of equity, upon application made within the statutory limit for her to exercise this right of election, will interpose and grant to her the necessary and proper relief upon the proper averment and showing of such facts. This doctrine is supported by the decisions of Fosher v. Guilliams, Exr., and Garn, Exr., v. Garn, supra, and cases there cited.
Actual fraud in cases of this kind is not alone necessary to authorize equitable relief, but its existence in any particular case under the rules governing other actions
If the complaint can be held to be sufficient in this cause it must be by force of the facts therein averred. We can not change the pleading by extending or limiting the effects of the same.
As we have said, the pith or gist of the issuable facts averred therein is that of fraud, and its sufficiency to constitute an actionable wrong or injury must be tested by the rules controlling in action, based upon fraud.
Recurring again to the charging part of the complaint and we find the following averments:
“That the defendants, by themselves and their agents and attorneys, fraudulently, deceitfully, wrongfully and covertly came upon her suddenly and unexpectedly in her loneliness and quiet, and then and there, for the fraudulent and wrongful purpose of cheating and defrauding her out of her just and proper interests in her husband’s estate and her just and well known and lawful claim against said estate, represented and said to her that for the purpose of protecting her interest and securing to her her interest therein and securing her claim against said estate, that it was necessary for her to sign her part of her husband’s will and a paper, which they said to her was a quitclaim deed, to enable the children to partition said estate so they could farm their portions this year, and the other papers were a part of her husband’s will. She avers that she said to them she did not want to sign any paper, as she had no friends or lawyer to explain the purpose to her; that she wanted to have and secure her proper interest in her husband’s estate, and her claim against it. Said defendants, as aforesaid, still cunningly, fraudulently and deceitfully pressed and
No where does the complaint allege or show that the appellee desired to renounce the provisions made for her by the will, and desired to elect to take under the law, and was prevented from so doing by the alleged fraud of the appellants in procuring the written election in question. No copy of the written election is filed as an exhibit, or nothing in regard to its terms or contents is alleged, so that we may be apprised of its character, and determine as to whether it in any manner tended to estop or affect appellee in exercising her right of election under the law. There is no averment or showing that she relied upon the representations made by the defendants and believed them to be true, or that they were in fact false. The complaint abounds in epithets and conclusions, but there is an absence of material facts going to constitute fraud, and the pleading lacking in these is thereby rendered bad.
A complaint based upon fraudulent representations must aver that the party complaining relied upon the-
Misrepresentations must be concerning a material fact, and not concerning matters equally within the knowledge of both parties, and it must appear that the party relying upon the same could not, or did not, know the falsity thereof. Jagers v. Jagers, 49 Ind. 428, and cases there cited.
It is urged by the learned counsel for appellee, that the complaint in this action contains averments similar to those in the case of Garn, Exr., v. Garn, supra. In this contention, however, they are mistaken. Several of the essential facts set forth in the complaint in that case do not appear in the pleading under consideration; if they did, a different question would be presented.
Other objections might be and are urged against the complaint, but we deem it unnecessary to consider the same, and thereby extend this opinion. In its present state it is wholly insufficient to constitute a cause of action or serve as a proper and valid basis for the judgment or decree which appellee seeks thereby to obtain, and for this reason alone the judgment must be reversed. Other questions are presented and argued by the appellants, but these may not again arise upon another trial, and are, therefore, not considered. However, we may suggest that if appellee received anything of value from appellants, growing out of the alleged execution by her of the instrument in question, she at least ought to aver that fact in her complaint, and allege her willingness and readiness to surrender the same as the court may order or decree. See Shaw v. Barnhart, 17 Ind. 183;
Judgment reversed, with, instructions to the trial court to grant a new trial, and sustain the demurrer to the complaint with leave to appellee to file an amended one, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.