189 Ind. 31 | Ind. | 1920
This was an action by appellant against appellees for damages for breach of the covenants of warranty in a deed to certain real estate. The complaint was -in one paragraph in the usual form. The appellees filed an answer in four paragraphs. The first is a general denial. The second admits the execution of the deed set out in appellant’s complaint for the consideration named, and
Appellant filed a demurrer to the second paragraph' of appellees’ answer for want of facts, which" was overruled. It then filed a reply in general denial to all paragraphs thereof except the first. The issues thus formed were submitted for trial, and upon request of the parties the court made a special finding of facts, and stated its conclusion of law thereon.
The finding of facts is as follows: The defendants, Perry D. Perkeypile and Estella Perkeypile, on April 30, 1912, conveyed by warranty deed to plaintiff, the Globe Mercantile Company, the real estate described in plaintiff’s complaint, consisting of 120 acres'of land in Knox township, Jay county, Indiana. That the plaintiff paid the defendants therefor the sum of $90 per acre, and plaintiff took said lands, subject to a mortgage in the sum of $3,200, with accrued interest thereon, and also subject to all taxes and assessments falling due after' May, 1912. That plaintiff about June 1,1913, paid to William S. Helm the sum of $166 in full satisfaction of a judgment rendered against one Jeremiah Williams on September 16, 1904, in favor of said Plelm, and recorded on said date in judgment docket No. 11, at page 49, in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Jay county, Indiana,
From which facts the court concludes as follows: (1) That the judgments of record existing against Jeremiah Williams on November 25, 1908, in favor of William S. Helm, William G. Hervet and John Clark, the Cory-Leamon Company, and John D. Bathvon, at the time said real estate was conveyed to said defendants by said administrator, were not valid liens against said real estate or any part thereof, and were not valid liens against said real estate or any part thereof on April 30, 1912, when said real estate was conveyed by said defendants to plaintiff. (2) That plaintiff take nothing by his complaint that defendants recover of and from the plaintiff their costs in this action paid, laid out and expended.
On the conclusion of law the court rendered judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by its suit, and that defendants recover their costs of plaintiff. From this judgment appellant appealed and has assigned as error that the court erred in overruling its demur
to sell the lands, the devise being no obstacle whatever. Bennett v. Gaddis, Admr. (1881), 79 Ind. 347.
Our conclusion is that the judgments named in the special finding of facts in this case were not liens on the real estate conveyed by appellees to the appellant at the time of such conveyance, and that the payment of such judgments by appellant was a voluntary payment, and that appellant has no right of action against appellees for the récovery of the amounts so paid. It .follows from what we have said that the court did not err in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the second paragraph of the answer of appellees and in stating its first conclusion of law.
The court, therefore, erred in stating its second conclusion of law. The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to restate its second conclusion of law in appellant’s favor as to said amount of $20.58 paid on that portion of the Hamilton-Heller drainage assessment which fell due prior to June 1, 1912, with interest on said amount from the date of payment, and to render judgment thereon in conformity therewith.