106 Ind. 147 | Ind. | 1886
Complaint by Sarah Kitts charging that, on the 13th day of January, 1864, David H. Kitts, her late husband, was the owner of certain particularly described real estate, consisting of two tracts of land in Ripley county; that on that day he and the plaintiff, who was then his wife, by a warranty deed in form, mortgaged said lands to James H. Cravens to secure the payment of a sum of money; that, on
Issue being joined upon the complaint, the Willsons filed a cross complaint, in two paragraphs, against the plaintiffs and their co-defendants.
The first paragraph averred the conveyance of the lands by the plaintiff and her late husband, to Cravens; that the conveyance was in consideration of the sum of $1,200 and the assumption by Cravens of the school fund mortgage on one of the tracts of land for $139; that Cravens conveyed the lands to William D. Willson by warranty deed in consideration of the sum of $2,500; that the latter conveyed a one-fourth interest in the lands to Thomas E. Willson in
No question arises here upon the second paragraph of the cross complaint. It need not, therefore, be further noticed.
A demurrer being first overruled to the cross complaint, issue was also joined upon it, and when the cause was called for trial, Sarah Kitts, the plaintiff in the original complaint, demanded that a jury be impanelled to try the issues formed between the parties respectively, but that demand was refused, and the circuit court proceeded to try the cause without a jury. After hearing the evidence, that court made a finding in favor of the Willsons upon the first paragraph of their cross complaint, and rendered judgment thereon quieting their title to the lands in controversy as against all the other parties to the proceeding.
It is first claimed that the circuit court ought to have sustained the demurrer to the first paragraph of the cross complaint for its failure to aver that the claim of title, set up by the widow and heirs of David H. Kitts, was adverse to the title of the cross complainants. As has been seen, the paragraph did not aver in terms that the claim of title so set up was adverse to the title of the cross complainants, but the obvious inference from the facts alleged was that the claim of title in question was inconsistent with, and hence adverse to, the claim asserted by the cross complainants, -and that made the paragraph, in respect to the adverse nature of the claim,
It is next claimed that the circuit court erred in refusing to impanel a jury to try the issues formed in the cause.
The Revised Statutes of 1843, p. 811, section 114, provided that “All persons holding lands as joint tenants or tenants in common, may be compelled to divide the same either by writ of partition at common law or by proceedings in chancery, or in the manner provided in this article,” the latter clause having reference to certain statutory proceedings for partition authorized by the article of the statute, of which such section 114 was the first section. This provision on the subject of the partition of real estate was in force when the present constitution of the State was adopted, and continued in force until it was superseded by the code of 1852. The partition of real estate was not, therefore, a matter of exclusively equitable jurisdiction in this State prior to the 18th day of June, 1852, within the meaning of section 409 of the code of 1881. Nor is it a subject of exclusive equitable jurisdiction within the general principles governing proceedings in chancery'.
The common law writ of partition is very ancient, and so, also, is the jurisdiction of courts of equity in cases of partition, a bill for that purpose having been brought as early as the reign of Queen Elizabeth. 5 Wait’s Actions and Defences, 82. Story, in his work on Equity Jurisprudence, says: “ That the writ of partition is a very ancient course of proceeding at the common law is not doubted. But it by no means follows that the courts of common law had an exclusive jurisdiction over the subject of partition.” See sections 646, 647, et seq.
Pomeroy, in his work on the same subject, in referring to cases in which courts of law and courts of equity have concurrent jurisdiction, includes suits for partition as belongiñg to that class of cases. See sections 174, 185.
As having some relation to the manner in which particular causes must be tried, see the cases of Hendricks v. Frank, 86 Ind. 278; Evans v. Nealis, 87 Ind. 262; Clouser v. Ruckman, 89 Ind. 65; Helm v. First Nat’l Bank, 91 Ind. 44; Anderson v. Caldwell, 91 Ind. 451 (46 Am. R. 613); Carmichael v. Adams, 91 Ind. 526; Lake Erie, etc., R. W. Co. v. Griffin, 92 Ind. 487; Pence v. Garrison, 93 Ind. 345; Israel v. Jackson, 93 Ind. 543; Edwards v. Dykeman, 95 Ind. 509; Redinbo v. Fretz, 99 Ind. 458; Rout v. King, 103 Ind. 555.
Cross error is assigned upon the alleged insufficiency.of the complaint, but no argument has been submitted in support of that allegation of error, and we have not in consequence considered the question of the sufficiency of the complaint. Besides, the judgment appealed from in this case rests entirely upon the cross complaint, as a pleading distinct from and independent of the complaint. Some light may be thrown, however, upon the question of the sufficiency of the
The judgment is reversed with'costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.