The record discloses the following material facts: Appellant and appellees, except Rhoda Darling, were tenants in common of certain real estate in Steuben county. An action for partition was instituted in the Steuben Circuit Court on the 11th day of January, 1897, and such proceedings vrere had that commissioners were appointed to make partition, who reported that the land was not susceptible of division; whereupon, on the 5th day of May, 1897, S. A. Powers was appointed by the court a commissioner to sell the same. Said commissioner accomplished the sale on the 12th day of June, 1897, for $2,200, one-sixth part of which amount, less expenses, by the iudgment of the court, be
A number of errors are assigned but the only one discussed by appellant arises upon the second conclusion of law. It is as follows: “(2) That the defendant Darling is entitled to the payment of $122.46 out of the funds in the hands of
It is true that the title of a purchaser at a commissioner’s sale in a partition proceeding is not affected by a mortgage executed bv a cotenant after the suit is begun. The action of partition being in rem, if a sale results, the purchaser is protected in the status of the property as it existed at the commencement of the action, and any conveyance or lien created by one of the parties pendente lite will be devested in favor of the purchaser. Arnold v. Butterbaugh, 92 Ind. 403. But it does not follow from this that a cotenant cannot convey or create a lien upon his share, pendente lite, that will be valid against him. We perceive no reason why he should not be able to do so. The property remains his pending the litigation, in the same way and to the same extent it was his before the commencement of the suit. The title is not vested in the commissioner, as is asserted, any more than the title is vested in the sheriff pending the execution of a decree. The commissioner is only the instrument of the court in conveying the title from the owners to the purchasers. Once appointed, the commissioner may resign or be removed, and the court, upon motion, may appoint another; and the court may, under the statute (§1215 Burns 1894), appoint some one, other than the commissioner to sell, to make the conveyance to the purchaser. Even judgments rendered after the appointment of a commissioner to
There is no merit in appellant’s contention that there was no consideration for the mortgage. It is admitted that appellant’s indebtedness to Darling was unpaid, and is still unpaid, and that an execution upon Darling’s judgment was about to be levied upon appellant’s property, and that, in consideration that Darling would stay the execution and grant three months’ extension for payment of the judgment, appellant would and did execute the mortgage. This was a sufficient consideration for the mortgage.
And it is insisted that Mrs. Darling did not come into court and set up her mortgage, and ask to have her lien transferred to the fund, as she should have done. The record shows that, when the commissioner reported the sale of the land to the court, she appeared and set up her claim; and it can make no difference as to her rights whether she came into court voluntarily or was brought there by the process of the court. She asserted her claim timely, and before any right was injuriously affected.
What we have said touching the mortgage makes it unnecessary for us to extend this opinion by a consideration of