74 Iowa 630 | Iowa | 1888
There can be no question that, if the claim made by the defendants is shown to be true, the plaintiffs cannot
Counsel for defendants cite and rely upon these cases, and insist that, under the facts disclosed in evidence, the decree of the circuit court must be sustained. The question to be determined is whether the defendants have made such a showing of facts as will overthrow the legal title; or, in other words, whether the ' plaintiffs ratified the acts of their father in conveying the land, by receiving and appropriating the consideration therefor, with a full knowledge of the facts attending the transaction. If they did, the transaction touches the conscience, and the plaintiffs ought not to be allowed to hold the land, and the consideration for which it was sold; and, -as the cause is here for trial anew upon the evidence, the question must be determined upon the preponderance of the evidence, and in view of the rule that, as the defendants seek to overthrow a plain legal record title, they must, in order to succeed, establish the equity which they assert by clear, satisfactory and conclusive evidence. There is no question made as to the original ownership of the land. It is the sixteenth section in the township in which it is situated, . and was therefore school land. The evidence shows that it was purchased from the government by Hanford Eddy with the money of May Eddy, his wife, and that Hanford Eddy caused, the patents to the four quarter-sections to be issued to their four sons, Hearett Eddy, Milton Eddy, Lincoln Edd y ■ and Harvey Eddy. Their patents were duly recorded long before the conveyance in question was made. The records of Hancock county, where the land was situated, showed the title to the land to be in the four sons, and their parents had no more right nor authority to divest them of their title than a
After the deposition was taken and filed, a formal motion was presented to the court, asking that the objectionable testimony be stricken out, on the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial. This motion was presented with the deposition to the court. We cannot conceive that appellants could have been more prompt than they were in .making objection to this incompetent testimony. They objected immediately upon the disclosure being made of record that Danford Eddy was dead, and the record shows that by motion they called the attention of the court to their objection some six months before the trial was had. The case of Watson v. Riskamire, 45 Iowa, 231, relied upon by counsel for appellees as authorizing the overruling of the objections and motion, has no application to the facts attending the taking of the testimony in question, and we think we must disregard the incompetent testimony in determining the case.
II. It appears from the record that the defendants paid the taxes on the land in controversy for several years, as shown ( by the abstracts of appellants and appellees. The appellees ask that, in case the decree' as to the title be reversed, the appellants be required to pay them the amount of said taxes, with six per cent, interest from the time the respective payments were made. As it sufficiently appears that the defendants paid said taxes in good faith, and in the belief that they were the owners of the land, an order will be entered that the same be made a special lien and charge upon the property in favor of the defendants, and the clerk will ascertain the amount from’ the abstracts on file in this court.
.' The decree of the circuit court will be reversed, and á decree will' be entered here quieting the plaintiffs’ title upon the payment of the said taxes with interest.
Reversed.