67 Iowa 97 | Iowa | 1885
The following facts are admitted by the pleadings, or established by the evidence.
Plaintiff E. D. Lunt is the surviving husband of Augusta E. Lunt, who died October 11, 1882. The other plaintiffs are her children.- Prior to the thirteenth of March, 1878, the property in controversy was owned by the defendant James Neeley, and on that day he entered into a contract with said Augusta E. Lunt for the sale of said property to her. The price agreed upon was $100, and she agreed to pay the same in monthly installments of $10 each. He gave her a title-boud, in which he bound himself to convey the property to her upon the payment by her of the purchase price as provided in the contract. She took possession of the property immediately, and occupied it with- her family as a homestead. Her husband, E. D. Lunt, was engaged in publishing a newspaper in Perry, the .town in which the property is situated. In the fall of 1879 he sold out his business there, and went to Colorado, leaving his family in Perry, however, in the occupancy of said property. His object in going to Colorado was to find a location in which to establish himself in business, and he intended to remove his family there if, upon examination, he found it to be a desirable country
On the thirty-first day of January, 1880, the said Augusta E. Lunt made a contract with defendant D. W. Payne for the sale of said property to him. She had then paid to Neeley $220 of the purchase price. Payne paid her that amount for her interest in the property, and she assigned the bond to him. Her husband did not sign or concur in this assignment. She continued to occupy the property as a place of residence until the first of March following, when she yielded possession to Payne, and removed to Colorado, and joined her husband at Marysville, where they lived and kept house for five or six months, when they removed to Denver. In December, 1880, E. D. Lunt returned to Perry, and reestablished himself there in business. In January following he was joined by his wife and children, and they moved into a house near the property in controversy, and continued to occupy the same as a place of residence until the death of Mrs. Lunt. On the twenty-fifth of May, 1880, or prior to that, D. W. Payne paid Neeley $180, that being the amount of the unpaid installments of the purchase price at the time the contract was assigned to him. And on that day Neeley conveyed the property to Maria Payne, who is the wife of D. W. Payne. On the twentieth of June, 1881, Mrs. Payne sold and conveyed it (her husband joining in the conveyance) to Mrs. Minerva Warren for the consideration of $600. In making the, purchase, however, Mrs. Warren acted as agent for C. R. Warren, who furnished the money to pay for the property, and she subsequently conveyed it to him. At the time of the purchase from Mrs. Payne, C. R. Warren had no actual notice that the Lunts had or made any claim to the property; but, during the time it was occupied by them
The judgment of the district court will be
Affirmed.