87 Ind. 443 | Ind. | 1882
The appellants, Mary Cooper, Nancy Martin, Mahala Peacock, Dorcas J. Aldridge and Malinda B. Boyd brought this action against the appellée, executor of the last will and testament of Margaret Sullivan, deceased, alleging in their complaint that the said Margaret died in 1878 the owner of certain real estate in Gibson-county; that said Margaret was the wife of Samuel Sullivan, who died intestate in 1877; that said Samuel was of unsound mind for twenty years before liis death; and that the purchase-money of said real estate was paid out of his individual property; that by fraud and undue influence said Margaret, during said time, procured the deeds to said realty to be made to her; that the appellants are children of said Samuel by a former marriage, •and that Munroe, Rosetta and Riley Sullivan are children of said marriage; that said Margaret devised said lands to said
An issue was formed, a trial had, and a verdict returned for the appellants. A motion in arrest of judgment was sustained, and this ruling is assigned as error.
The appellee has not filed a brief, and, hence, we are not advised by him what view the court adopted in sustaining the motion in arrest. The appellants say that the motion was sustained on the ground that the action could alone be maintained by the administrator of said 8amuel. They insist that this is wrong, and maintain that, inasmuch as the purghascmoney was paid by said Samuel, he rvas the equitable owner of said land; that at his death it descended to his heirs, and upon its sale by the executor the money for which it sold stands for the land, and may be recovered by the heirs. Authorities are cited to show that lands equitably owned descend to the heirs of the cestui que trust, and upon a sale of them by the trustee, or his representative, the money received for them may be recovered by such heirs. There seems to be no trouble in reaching the conclusion that the proceeds of lands thus hold and disposed of may be recovered by the heirs of the cestui que trust, but the difficulty in this case lies in the assumption that these lands were thus held. They were purchased and paid for by means belonging to said Samuel while he was a person of unsound mind. These facts, however, did not necessarily constitute him the equitable owner of the land. Assuming that such relation existed between him and his wife as enabled him to claim the benefit of the-purchase, still he was not compelled so to do, and he can not bo regarded as the equitable owner unless an election has been made to hold the land itself rather than to retain a claim for the means invested in it. As said Samuel was of unsound mind during life, he did not and could not make an election,
In Awdley v. Awdley, 2 Vernon, 192, the committees of a lunatic invested his personal property in land, and took a conveyance in the lunatic’s name, and, after his death, the question arose as to whether his estate went to the next of kin, as personal estate, or to the heirs at law. The court held that the heirs were not entitled to the estate, saying that if the lunatic had been restored he had the right to elect to take the land; but as no election was made the estate must be regarded as personal, and go to the next of kin.
Those cases are analogous in principle, and are decisive
It is therefore ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment be and it is hereby affirmed, at appellants’ costs.