154 Ind. 261 | Ind. | 1899
Appellant originally instituted this action to recover a personal judgment against John L. Denny on a certain promissory obligation, and to obtain a foreclosure of a mortgage executed to it by the said John L. Denny and wife, Hattie G. Denny, on June 17, 1895, upon certain real estate in Jay county, Indiana, owned and held at the time the action was commenced by David H. Parker, who, together with his wife, were made party defendants. Thereafter, the appellee, Hattie G. Denny, made application to the court to be made a party defendant, and her application was granted. Appellant then filed its amended complaint,
The second paragraph of her answer is substantially the same as the first except that the facts are more fully averred, and it is alleged that Mary O. Rownd, for the colorable consideration of $3,000, but without any actual consideration, conveyed the real estate to the husband, John L. Denny.
The cross-complaint alleges in the main the same facts as are set up in the answer, and also avers that, on June 17, 1895, John L. Denny, the husband, executed to plaintiff his certain undertaking or bond whereby he agreed to pay to plaintiff the sum of $1,000, together with interest at eight per cent, per annum, and certain charges, etc., and that defendant, said Hattie Gr., and her said husband executed to plaintiff the mortgage in suit upon the real estate described. The cross-complaint also alleges that the mortgage was recorded in the recorder’s office of Jay county, Indiana, and a copy of the instrument is filed as an exhibit; and the relief demanded, under the facts set out in the- cross-complaint, is that the mortgage in question be canceled and held for naught. John L. Denny, together with his wife, also answered the amended complaint by a general denial.
The plaintiff, having unsuccessfully demurred to each paragraph of Mrs. Denny’s separate answer, including the cross-complaint, filed a reply in four paragraphs, and also an answer in two paragraphs to the cross-complaint, the first of which was a general denial. By the first paragraph of its reply, the plaintiff admitted the coverture of Mrs. Denny at the time of the execution of the mortgage, and substantially
A demurrer upon the part of the defendant, Hattie G. Denny, was sustained by the court to the first paragraph of the plaintiff’s reply to her separate answer, and her demurrer was also sustained to the second paragraph of plaintiff’s answer to her cross-complaint. Upon the issues joined, under the pleadings as they stood after the action of the court in sustaining the demurrers, as above stated, there was a trial by. the court, and a finding by it that there was due to the plaintiff from the defendant, John Tj. Denny, on the bond executed by him, the sum of $1,243.71. The court found for the defendant, Hattie G. Denny, on her cross-complaint, that the mortgage in suit was void and ought to be canceled. The court also found in favor of the defendants, Parker and Parker, and McKee and McKee, and, over plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, a judgment was rendered upon the finding in favor of the plaintiff against John L. Denny for the
Counsel for appellants urge, under the assignment of errors, that the court erred, inter alia, — (1) In holding the several paragraphs of the separate answer of the appellee, Mrs. Denny, together with her cross-complaint, sufficient on demurrer; (2) that it erred in sustaining her demurrer to the first paragraph of the reply, and to the second paragraph of the answer to her cross-complaint.
It is settled by repeated decisions of this court that a mortgage by a married woman on her separate real estate, to secure the debt of her husband or any other person, falls within the provisions of §6964 Burns 1894, §5119 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, which forbids her from entering into a contract as surety for another, and that she may defeat the enforcement of such mortgage, unless her conduct or acts are shown to be such as will operate to estop her from calling in question its validity. It is also well settled that when she joins with her husband in the execution of a mortgage upon real estate, owned and held by her and him as tenants by entireties, to secure his debt, or that of some other person, such mortgage, at her instance, under the statute, is voidable, not only as to her, but also as to the husband. It is an ancient legal maxim that when anything is prohibited directly, it can not be done indirectly, or, in other words, a prohibition which the law imposes can not be evaded by any circuitous contrivance. Barton’s Leg. Max., p. 77; Broom’s Leg. Max., p. 488: Hence, in obedience to this rule, a married woman can not evade the positive prohibition of the statute in question by vesting the title to her real estate in her husband, or some other person, for the sole
Ve may next consider the second proposition presented in respect to the alleged error of the .court in sustaining the demurrer of the appellee, Hattie Gf. Denny, to the first paragraph of the reply, and to the second paragraph of the answer to the cross-complaint. The facts alleged in the first paragraph of the reply are, perhaps, not as certain or specific as the rules of good pleading exact. This paragraph of the reply and the answer of appellant to the cross-complaint both proceed upon the theory that the appellee, Mrs. Denny, under the facts therein, is estopped to deny that her husband was not the owner of the mortgaged premises for all purposes at the time the plaintiff made its loan and accepted the mortgage as security therefor. The facts, as ayerred in the answer to the cross-complaint, substantially disclose that the real estate in controversy, prior to February, 1895, was owned by the appellee and her husband as tenants by entire-ties; that subsequently they conveyed this real 'estate to Mary C. Rownd, and the latter, in February, 1895, conveyed it to the husband, John L. Denny. After the title, under the conveyance from Rownd, had been vested in the husband, and had so remained until some time in June following, a period of about four months, appellant made the loan to the husband, and accepted the mortgage in dispute as security for such loan. The public records, upon their
In Trimble v. State, 145 Ind. 154, on p. 162 of the opinion, in reviewing the question of suretyship of a married woman, under the statute in question, this court said: “The disability as to suretyship, imposed by the statute upon a married woman, must be considered in connection with another provision of the same act, to the effect that she shall be bound by an estoppel in pais, and no construction ought to be given to this exception by the statute of her ability to contract as will place in her hands a sword to defend her own fraud and imposition on others, instead of a shield for her protection as the law intended.”
In the ease of Long v. Crosson, 119 Ind. 3, it was held that where the wife transfers her real estate to her husband, by a conveyance importing a money consideration, for, the purpose of enabling him to mortgage it as his own property, to secure a loan of money for his own benefit, she will be estopped from asserting that such transfer was not in good faith, as against the mortgagee, who is shown to have had no knowledge that such conveyance to the husband was a mere contrivance to evade the statute.
In Duckwall v. Kisner, 136 Ind. 99, the question arose as to the estoppel of a married woman, in a foreclosure proceeding, to deny the ownership of her husband to the mortgaged premises. In that casé, Hackney, J., speaking as the organ of this court, said: “There is no doubt, upon principle and the decisions of this court, that a married woman may be estopped by acts in pais in cases involving her equitable title to real estate. [Citing numerous authorities.] The rule applied in'the cases cited is but the general rule that one may not stand by and permit another to invest on the strength of an adverse claim of title or may not permit another to remain clothed with the indicia of ownership by which third persons are misled in their investments.
Appellant, in the case at bar, in maldng the loan, was not dealing with the wife but with the husband, and it would seem, upon the facts alleged, that it was justified in believing that the title to the property had been in good faith transferred to him. Under the authorities cited, it must be held that the first paragraph of the reply and the answer to the cross-complaint stated facts sufficient to create an estoppel .against the appellee, Hattie Gr. Denny, and we therefore conclude that the court erred in sustaining a demurrer thereto. Other questions arising upon the evidence are discussed, but, as these may not arise again upon another trial, we dismiss them without consideration.
The personal judgment against John L. Denny on the bond in suit is affirmed. Por the errors pointed out, the judgment and decree in favor of the appellees, under the issues raised upon appellant’s complaint, in respect to the foreclosure of the mortgage, and as to its cancelation, under the cross-complaint of Hattie Gr. Denny, is in all things reversed, and the cause is remanded to the lower court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.