Aсtion in partition. A city lot with a dwelling house thereon is involved. Plaintiff is the wife of defendant Frank Boland Leach. The property was conveyed to them as joint tenants. The husband bought the lot in May, 1912, for $550. In the same year a house was built thereon at a cost of about $2,350, of whiсh $2,000 was procured from defendant Mary Leach, the mother of the husband, as disclosed in Leach v. Leach,
*491 The trial court made findings adverse to defendants and eаch of them appealed from an order denying his separate motion to amend findings and conclusions of law or for a new triаl.
THE HUSBAND’S APPEAL.
If the premises were a homestead at the time of trial an action in partition would not lie. Grace v. Grace,
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It is сlaimed that the husband should have a lien on the wife’s share for one-half the amount of the permanent improvements made by him. The rulе of law is that when a permanent improvement has been made by one cotenant with the consent of the other he is entitled to reimbursement and on partition is to be protected. Hunt v. M. C. A. & L. Co.
THE MOTHER’S APPEAL.
Mary Leach sought to charge the premises with a lien to secure the payment of the interest on the $2,000 for which the other parties had obligated themselves. The $2,000 was used in building the house. That was a gift. But the transaction required the payment of interest. The lien is sought to seсure its payment. No lien or security was exacted as a part of the original transaction. We know of no rule of common lаw nor of any statute which will support or give a lien under such circumstances. It is urged that equity will reach the facts and create a lien. This case however cannot be classed with those cases where a court of equity will trace money after a wrongful conversion and impose a trust on the prop
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erty acquired by it; or where there is a violation of a trust such as in Sieger v. Sieger,
A motion was made to amend the findings and conclusion of law so that the mother might have a personal judgment for the interest now due even though she had no lien on thе property. This relief is sought under the prayer for “such other and further relief as may be just.” The court’s failure to award such money judgment is аssigned as error.
This is an equitable action. Hoerr v. Hoerr,
Both orders are affirmed.
