154 Ind. 253 | Ind. | 1900
This action was brought by appellee against appellants to reform a mortgage on real estate executed by appellants, by correcting a mistake in the amount secured thereby, to foreclose the same, and to recover a judgment for the indebtedness secured by said mortgage.
The errors assigned call in question the action of the court in overruling appellants’ demurrer to the second paragraph of appellee’s answrer to the cross-complaint. In the second paragraph of said cross-complaint, it is averred that “in 1874 Erances Coffman (formerly Erances Spurlin) was the owner of a life estate in certain real estate in Shelby county, Indiana; that about said year the appellant, Tunis Garard, entered into a written agreement, by the terms of which he agreed to pay said Erances Spurlin an annuity of $25, and also furnish her a home as one of the family of said Tunis, and board her during her lifetime, or, if said Erances should desire to make her home elsewhere than in the family of said Tunis, then the said Tunis should pay her an annuity for her maintenance and support, in the sum of $125, for such time as she did not make her home in the family of said Tunis. In consideration of which it was further provided in said agreement that said Tunis should have the use and benefit of such life estate in said land, and that said Erances Spurlin should give and devise to said Tunis Garard all of 'said annuity not used by said Erances for her support and maintenance during her lifetime; that in pursuance to said agreement said Tunis took possession of said real estate, and received the income thereof, and said Erances made her home with him as one of his family from the year 1874 until the year 1879, and that said Tunis fully paid said annuity during that time; that in the year 1879 said Erances married one Henry Coffman, and from that time ceased to make her home with said Tunis. A copy of said written agreement cannot be filed herewith, nor be more fully set out, for the reason' that the same has been accidentally
It is alleged in the second paragraph of answer to said cross-complaint “that, prior to the year 1880, said Prances sold her life estate in said eighty acres of real estate to said Tunis Garard, in consideration of which he agreed to pay her the sum of $125 annually, on the 1st day of March of each year, so long as the said Prances should live; that said Prances Coffman and her husband received no consideration whatever from said Patterson for the conveyance to him of said real estate in Shelby county, but that the entire consideration therefor passed to said Tunis Garard; tha.t appellants ought not to recover on either paragraph of said cross-complaint, and the alleged contract therein referred to, for the reason that on March 30, 1881, appellants executed to Prances E. Coffman a mortgage on the real estate therein described, to secure said Frances the payment of such annuity or annual payment to be paid on account of the-sale of such life estate, in which mortgage appellants entered into an absolute agreement to pay such sum of $125 annually to said Prances, on the 1st day of March of each year, so long as she might live, which mortgage [after setting forth the description of the real estate in Hamilton county, Indiana,] is in the words and figures following: ‘To secure the payment when the same shall become due of a pension or allowance hereby declared due said Prances Coffman of the sum of $125 annually, said amount to be paid the said Prances Coffman on the 1st .day of March of each year so long as she lives and at her death said payments to stop, and the mortgage to be void. And the mortgagors expressly agree to pay the sum of money above secured without relief from valuation or appraisement laws.’ That on April 14, 1894,- said Tunis Garard, being desirous of pro
It is insisted by appellee that the agreement to devise contained in the cross-complaint was void for uncertainty as to the amount. It is true that the amount of said annuity, if any, that would not be used by said Frances for her maintenance and support, was not known when said agreement was made, and the amount was uncertain, but the expression in said contract, “all of such annuity which shall not be used for her support and maintenance during her lifetime” is certain, and the word “all” clearly indicates the intention of the parties. If Frances Coffman had, in compliance with her contract, bequeathed the unused part of said, annuity in said language, it would have been a sufficient description thereof. Brady v. Smith, 8 Misc. 465, 28 N. Y. Supp. 776; Roehl v. Haumesser, 114 Ind. 311, 314, 315; 1 Beach on Cont. §81, p. 107; 29 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 359. The language used by the parties in making said contract, concerning what was to be bequeathed to appellants, furnished the means of identification, which is all the law requires. Said contract is not void, therefore, on account of the description of what was to be bequeathed. Roehl v. Haumesser, supra.
Appellee next insists that the agreement to bequeath was not supported by any consideration whatever. It was alleged in the cross-complaint that the annuity which appellants were to pay was the consideration for said life estate, and the agreement on the part of Frances Coffman to be