53 Iowa 299 | Iowa | 1880
“ I give and devise to Emanuel J. Hilton and his heirs, forever, fifty acres of land out of the above tracts. I give and bequeath to Robert Hume and his heirs, seventy acres out of the foregoing tracts of land. * * * I give and bequeath to my son Edwin Long and his heirs, ninety acres out of the. above lands. I also give and bequeath to my son Parker Long, eighty acres out of the above lands. * * * I give and bequeath to Elizabeth McKinnen, thirty acres out of the foregoing lands, to her and her heirs.”
No other land belonged to Robert Long, at the date of his death, than the one hundred and sixty acres in controversy, and no purchase of other one hundred and sixty acres was made, as directed in the will.
On the 6th of March, 1845, a special administrator of the estate of Robert Long was appointed, in Muscatine county, Iowa. Such special administrator obtained an order of said court to sell the land in controversy; and, on the 3rd day of January, 1846, he sold it to one Kimberly. Kimberly sold the land to Thomas Burnett on the 9th day of January, 1850.
Parker Long, also mentioned as a devisee in the will of Robert Long, deceased, died December 19, 1866. His only children are the plaintiffs, Joseph Long and William B. Long.
Elizabeth McKinnen, a devisee in the will of Robert Long, was an illegitimate child of Lucinda Long, who married Robert Hume. Elizabeth McKinnen died in 1858, unmarried, intestate, and without issue, leaving her mother, Lucinda Hume, her sole heir.
The children of Robert Hume, and the children of Parker Long, are'the plaintiffs in this action. They seek to establish their title and claim to a portion of the land, as against the defendants, W. C. Long and wife. As has been already stated, the defendants rely alone upon the statute of limitations.
Affirmed.