53 Neb. 495 | Neb. | 1898
In 1875 George II. Oilier resided, in Saline county, Nebraska, and was seized in fee-simple of a tract of land therein containing 280 acres. At this date Ohler left home and never returned, although he seems to have been heard from by members of the family from time to time. In June, 1887, his three children, Yesta Hagensick née Ohler, James Ohler, and Electa Wheeler née Ohler, partitioned among themselves the father’s real estate. This partition was effected by quitclaim deeds executed by the children, one to the other, each of the deeds reciting that the grantor therein “being one of the three heirs of George H. Ohler.” Each child took possession of that part of the real estate allotted to him under the partition. In 1891 the ancestor died, and soon after that two of his heirs, James Ohler and Electa Wheeler, conveyed to Tobias Castor by warranty deed all the real estate'which the decedent owned in his lifetime, except eighty acres thereof. The Castor conveyance by its terms included the part of the decedent’s estate allotted to Yesta Hagensick in the partition thereof made by the decedent’s children in 1887. On the 8th of July, 1892, Castor deeded to one Rosamond B. Westervelt the lands conveyed to him by the two children, and on the same day Westervelt, by another conveyance, became invested with the title to the eighty-acre tract above mentioned which had been allotted to Electa Wheeler in the partition made of the father’s real estate by his children in 1887. In the district court of Saline county Yesta Hagensick brought this action against Castor and others to have quieted and confirmed in her the title to the real estate allotted to her by the partition made thereof by Ohler’s children in 1887. She had a decree as prayed and Castor and others have appealed.
1. The.district court found, and the evidence sustains the finding, that the quitclaim deeds made by the children of George II. Ohler to one another in June, 1887, of his
Was this conclusion of the district court correct? We think it was. The general doctrine undoubtedly is that a.n ordinary quitclaim deed vests only in the grantee such title or estate as the grantor was, at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed, possessed of; and that if a grantor in such deed subsequently acquires the title to the real estate thereby conveyed, that title does not inure to the grantee in the quitclaim deed. (Compiled Statutes, ch. 73, sec. -51, and cases hereinafter cited.) The conveyance made to Vesta Hagensick by her brother and sister in June, 1887, of the real estate in controversy w7as a quitclaim deed; the grantors in that deed had no title to the real estate which it attempted to convey and, therefore, Vesta Hagensick acquired no title by that deed. In 1887 George H. Ohler was still alive, and his two children who conveyed a part of his real estate to
The question then is, can these grantors or those claim
Affirmed.