64 Neb. 454 | Neb. | 1902
May 22, 1897, William F. Laing, plaintiff, commence! an action in Douglas county to subject 22-?,- acres of the west balf of the northwest quarter of section 16-16-10, to the payment of a judgment of the district court of Lancaster county recovered by plaintiff against defendant E. D. Evans, May 28, 1896, for $2,154.40, with interest and costs. It was also sought to subject to the same judgment the southwest quarter of said section 16, except 20.9 acres conveyed to L. D. Smith, and also the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 21, township 16, range 10. The judgment above mentioned was rendered upon a promissory note dated July 23, 1895, which was itself a
In 1885 E. D. Evans seems to have recovered a judgment in his own name for trespass and injury to timber on this land. After 1890 the leases of the land seem to have been generally made out by E. D. Evans in his own name. In 1892 Mrs. Evans seems to have executed a lease to Chas. Parson as the agent of E. D. Evans, and to have signed the lease in that way. The rents seem generally to have befen paid to Mr. Evans, and the notes for the rent seem to have been generally drawn in his favor. From 1871 to 1891 the family lived on the premises and cultivated them together. The plaintiff testified that he drew up a lease to one Parson of this land in the name of E. D. Evans in 1892 at the request of Mrs. Evans, and it was drawn in that form by her instruction, and that her signature to the lease as agent of her husband was in his presence. The school land contracts of purchase were made in the name of E. D. Evans, but deeds to Elizabeth L. Evans, as stated. The intervening payments are stated by Mrs. Evans to have been usually made by her husband at her instance, and with her money derived from the farm. There is evidence of statements made by Mr. Evans that the lands
Plaintiff’s case seems to rest upon the propositions that the real ownership of the lands was in E. D. Evans, and also that Mrs. Evans was estopped by her action in making a lease of the land as her husband’s agent to Parson, and in leaving the control and management to her husband, from asserting her ownership under the deeds to her. Só far as the question of estoppel is concerned it seems clear that plaintiff neither alleges nor proves enough to make out a case except, perhaps, as to the remaining 22| acres of the west half of the northwest quarter of section 16-16-10 east. To create an estoppel by representations some action upon them must be contemplated by the parties, or must naturally be expected to be taken by the person deceived. Such person also must have taken reasonable precautions himself. No intention to mislead plaintiff, or any one else having a right to know, as to the ownership of these lands, appears. Plaintiff’s testimony as to admissions made by Mrs. Evans that she knew beforehand of the borrowing of this money is met by her positive denial of all such knowledge. Her statement .is corroborated by that of T. J. Oliver, and by the circumstances. It seems clear that nothing of the kind was in contemplation in 1892 when the Parson lease was made. A mere statement that her husband was the owner of the land, made to one who was not expected nor intended to take any action upon such statements, and made in the face of the fact that her deeds were of record, can not be
The serious question arises as to the 22-| acres of the west half of the northwest quarter of section 16, which was not conveyed to Merriwether. Mrs. Evans testified that she was ill at the time of its purchase in 1881, and that she had her husband buy it for her; that about four years later she sold the 57-|- acres north of the Rawhide to her son. The latter in 1891 sold this tract to Robert Merriwether for $1,500, and Merriwether, as a part of the consideration, paid her $300, and to the state the remainder of the purchase price of the entire 80 acres. This was done and deed obtained in 1896. At the time of this loan and its renewal the contract for the entire 80 acres stood in the name of E. D. Evans. Merriwether is not a. party to the action, and does not testify. No complaint is made that his part in the transaction was not in good faith. The other 22J acres, however, which are claimed by Mrs. Evans, it is insisted should be subjected to the payment of this note. Assuming, as we must, that the trial court believed the woman’s statement that the husband purchased this land for her, and that the lower court was justified, in accepting such statement, in connection with her son’s, that he bought from her the 57£ acres which were subsequently conveyed to Mermvether, the question then presented is whether, after leaving this land in her husband’s name during the years from 1881 to 1896, and after the plaintiff’s loan had been made upon the credit of the husband’s ownership, she can now be heard to deny such ownership. In Roy v. McPherson, 11 Nebr., 197, the wife in 1864 purchased lands through her brother
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the findings and decree of the trial court, so far as the same relate to the southwest quarter of section 16-16-10 east and to the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 21-16-10 east be affirmed, and so far as they relate to the west half of the northwest quarter of said section 16, that said findings and decree be reversed, and that said cause be remanded to the district court of Douglas county, with instructions to enter a decree for plaintiff as prayed as to the 22-J acres of said last-named premises not conveyed to Robert Merriwether.
Judgment accordingly.