28 Ind. App. 449 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
The appellant,Laura B. Hancock, in her complaint against the appellees, Daniel S. Wiggins and John T. Burroughs, a demurrer to which for want of sufficient facts was sustained, showed, in substance, that in 1877, Isaac R. Howard and Isaac N. Gaston recovered a judgment in the court below against the appellees for $830; that the appellant was then the wife of the appellee Wiggins, but thereafter they were divorced and she was again ■married, “and her name is now Hancock”; that after the rendition of the judgment, and while she was the wife of appellee Daniel S. Wiggins, his father, Samuel Wiggins, conveyed to said Daniel and the appellant, as husband and
The cause in the Supreme Court to which reference is made in the complaint is Thornburg v. Wiggins, 135 Ind. 178, 22 L. R. A. 42, 41 Am. St. 422; the ground of the reversal of the judgment of the circuit court being that the real estate was conveyed to the appellee Wiggins and his wife, the appellant, in joint tenancy, and they therefore were not tenants by entireties, and the undivided interest of the husband was subject to sale on execution under the judgment against him and the appellee Burroughs. The complaint now before us does not show that the appellant and the appellee Wiggins were joint tenants; but it shows that under the judgment of the Supreme Court, and the sale and conveyance in accordance therewith, the appellant was deprived of the undivided one-half interest in the real estate which the appellee Wiggins conveyed or sought to
The complaint must be construed most strongly against the appellant, and the deed of conveyance of the husband to the wife, therefore, must be regarded as a deed without covenants of title, its execution transferring to the appellant merely the existing interest of the grantor; and, accordingly, it is agreed by counsel in argument that it was a quitclaim deed.
The undivided one-half of the real estate owned by the appellee Wiggins had been subjected to sale as his property under the execution upon the judgment against him and the appellee Burroughs, and the sheriff’s certificate of sale had been issued to the purchaser, before the appellee Wiggins ■ Conveyed without covenants to the appellant his interest in the real estate, which was the interest of one for whose real estate another holds a valid sheriff’s certificate of sale on execution. The real estate was not redeemed from the sheriff’s sale, and the sheriff’s deed had been executed ‘before the commencement of this action. The date of the conveyance to the appellant is not alleged, nor is the amount paid by her stated, but it is alleged to have been the full value of his undivided interest in the real estate. At most, he then had no more than the right of one who has not redeemed his land- from a sheriff’s sale on execution. If it may properly be said that real estate conveyed to her was subjected after her purchase thereof to the satisfaction of the judgment against the appellees, it can not be said that she in any manner paid the judgment ylebt at the request, express or implied, of the judgment debtor, or that any right of action exists in her favor against them for money paid at their instance or request.
If a grantee accept a deed without sufficient covenants against encumbrances, he cannot recover for money paid in removing the encumbrances, unless paid under such circumstances as will raise an implied assumpsit.
Assuming, as we will, without critical consideration of the matter, that the title to the undivided one-half of the real estate was conveyed to the appellant, and that this real estate, the title to which was in her, was subjected to the payment of the prior encumbrance thereon, the view taken by the appellant, and the one most favorable to her that coxild be taken of her situation, it is not a case of a grantee who has paid off an encumbrance on the real estate, and has thereby saved the land from subjection to satisfaction of the debt secured by the lien, but it is a case where the grantee suffered the encumbered property to be applied to the discharge of the debt, she having no covenant of her grantor against such a result.
Counsel for the appellant propose the theory that the facts stated constitute a cause of action for contribution. The appellant can not, in any view of the case, be regarded as having been a surety for tha appellees, or either of them, or as having been personally liable, by herself or with any other person, for the payment of the indebtedness on which tire land was applied; and the encumbrance enforced against the real estate in question is not shown to have been an encumbrance also upon property of appellees, or either of them, which was released, and the lien on which was discharged by payment by the appellant. The land conveyed to her was primarily bound for the debt on which it was applied in payment. She did not pay a debt for which she and the appellees, or either of them, were together personally liable; and her land was not applied in payment of a
If she had not permitted the land to be applied upon the judgment debt (whether or not it fully satisfied it is not clearly shown), but had redeemed the land and had completely paid off the encumbrance, she might have kept it alive, perhaps, by way of protection against a subsequent encumbrance or title. See Pom. Eq. §§791 et seq., 1211, 1212 and notes. See, also, Springer v. Foster, 27 Ind. App. 15. But the facts here do not involve such a question.
There is no allegation of fraud, and any mistake involved in the case was a mistake of law merely. The appellant ■took her conveyance with full knowledge of all the facts, and accepted a deed without covenants. Whatever sum she paid, she can not be heard to claim that she did not receive all that she paid for, and she must be regarded as having in contemplation at the time the encumbrance for the discharge of which the land was sold, and as having purchased with knowledge of its primary liability thereunder, .and of the limited interest conveyed to her, and of the legal effect of the deed of conveyance executed to her. Whatever her hope or belief concerning the appeal, she must be regarded as having taken the conveyance with knowledge of the law applicable to the facts, with which she was fully acquainted, as it might be declared by the Supreme Court.
In Meikel v. Borders, 129 Ind. 529, 533, the opinion was expressed that where a person takes a quitclaim deed, he is put upon inquiry as to the title. Such a deed conveys the
"Where it is alleged in pleading that persons named conveyed their interest in certain lands to another person named, the inference to be drawn from the language used is that they only purported to convey such interest as they possessed. Nicholson v. Caress, 45 Ind. 479.
Where there is no fraud, and the conveyance is without covenants of title, the grantee having knowledge of the facts concerning a defect in the title, he assumes the risk of title, and has no remedy, either at law or in equity, for a failure of title. James v. Hays, 34 Ind. 272, and cases cited.
When the assignee of an equity of redemption accepts a deed without covenants, having notice of the outstanding encumbrance, in the absence of a special contract, or without some special circumstance, the purchaser takes the land charged with the encumbrance. Atherton v. Toney, 43 Ind. 211. In Habig v. Dodge, 127 Ind. 31, 40, it is said that the general proposition is abundantly maintained that a deed of release or quitclaim, or a conveyance of the “light, title, and interest” of the grantor, even though it be with full covenants of warranty, without designating in the instrument any particular estate, either as owned by the grantor or as conveyed by the deed, operates simply to transfer whatever interest the grantor may have had at that time. See, also, Nicholson v. Caress, 45 Ind. 479. In Shuler v. Hardin, 25 Ind. 386, South had contracted to convey a certain lot to Shuler by quitclaim deed. It was held that this did not bind South to discharge the lien of a certain judgment which rested upon the property when he so contracted; and that it was for Shuler, and not South, to look to its discharge.
We are unable to find in the facts detailed in the complaint any occasion for the application of the principles relating to contribution, exoneration, or subrogation.
Judgment affirmed.