44 Minn. 526 | Minn. | 1890
The action is for partition of real estate. The question is on the plaintiff’s title. The facts on which his claim' of title rests are: In 1871, John Murphy died intestate, seised in fee of the N. W. J of section 8, township 105 N. of range 23 W., leaving his widow, Catherine, and his children, Elizabeth, Margaret, Mary, John, and James. In 1872, the. widow executed to Elizabeth, Mary, and Margaret a quitclaim deed in the usual form of the real estate. Afterwards, administration proceedings were commenced in the probate court of the county, and resulted in a decree assigning to John the S. J of the quarter-section, and t'o the widow a life-estate in the N 13J acres of said S. J, and to James, Mary, Elizabeth and Margaret the N. §■ of the quarter, in equal undivided shares, and to the widow a life-estate in an undivided one-third of said three-fourths. The plaintiff claims title under execution sales of the interest of John and Catherine in the said N. § upon two judgments against them, one entered before, the other after, said decree of distribution, both sales being made after the decree. The court below rendered judgment, as is provided by Gen. St. 1878, c. 74, § 6, the chapter regulating actions in partition, directing partition to be made by referees named in it, according to the respective rights of the parties as determined by the judgment, and, upon the report of the referees coming in, confirmed it and rendered judgment, in which the court ad
The respondent urges that upon such appeal this court cannot review the decision of the court involved in the former judgment,— that is, the decision upon the respective titles of the parties, and the right to a partition; that in respect to those matters that is the final judgment, and that to obtain a review of the questions involved in it an appeal should be taken from it. We do not think this proposition is correct. The judgment from which an appeal is given by Gen. St. 1878, c. 86, § 8, subdiv. 1, and upon which this court may review any intermediate order involving the merits or necessarily affecting the judgment, must be taken to be the judgment which finally terminates the action, and determines the rights of .the' parties and the controversy between them. Any decision or adjudication, by whatever name it may be called, an order, or direction for judgment, or judgment, which leaves necessary a further judgment in order to give the parties the relief they are entitled to, and to terminate the action so' far as the judgment may, is not such a judgment. It frequently happens in the course of an action that the court makes decisions which determine, to a greater or less extent, what the final judgment shall be, and those decisions mhy be reviewed upon an appeal from such final judgment. What is called a “judgment” in section 6 is of that character. It determines to a certain extent what the final judgment shall be, but it does not terminate the action; and it certainly does not give a plaintiff the relief he seeks. He asks partition, and where, as often happens, there is no dispute about the title, it is all he seeks. To give him partition, the judgment provided in section 8, c. 74, is necessary. Where there is a dispute upon the title, the judgment mentioned in section 6 determines it. That determination is one of the steps toward giving him the relief sought, but it does not give it to him. If the court should
Whether or not the widow’s dower, not being set off, was, at the time she executed the quitclaim deed to her daughters, assignable so that she could convey it, there is no question that she could release it. And her deed operated either as a conveyance or as a release. In which way it took effect is immaterial in this action, for it left in the widow no claim upon the land.
It is claimed, however, by respondent that by the decree in the probate court it is, notwithstanding the deed, res adjudicate, that the dower right as set off by the decree remained in the widow. To give the decree that operation, it must have determined upon the validity or effect of the deed. Upon this point the case cannot be distinguished from Farnham v. Thompson, 34 Minn. 330, (26 N. W. Rep. 9,) in which it was decided that the probate court has no jurisdiction to determine a controversy between an heir or devisee and a third party claiming from him by reason of a transaction between them, and not claiming as heir or devisee; that the determination of such issues is not involved in administration, and belongs to some other than the probate court. In that case, a party claimed the land under a conveyance from the heir, as in this case the daughters claim under the widow’s deed, and the court held that the decree of the probate court assigning the land to the heir did not affect the previously acquired title of his grantee. We adhere to the decision in that case.
Note. A motion for a reargument of this case was denied December 15, 1890.