42 Ind. App. 386 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
Appellee brought suit against appellants, alleging that on November 20, 1902, appellee, being the owner and seized in fee simple of certain real estate (de-. scribing it), sold and conveyed the same by a good and sufficient warranty deed to appellant James Mauzy; that, as a part of the purchase price, said appellant executed to appellee three several promissory notes- for $600 each, payable on January 1, 1904, 1905 and 1906, respectively, with interest on each note at seven per cent from date and attorneys’ fees; that, to secure the payment of said notes, said James Mauzy executed a mortgage on said real estate, in which mortgage his wife, the appellant Hamitie Mauzy, joined. Judgment is asked on the notes, with interest and attorneys’ fees, and a decree for a foreclosure of the mortgage.
To this complaint appellant James Mauzy filed his amended first and his second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth paragraphs of answer, in each of which, except the second, it is alleged that the mortgage was executed to appellee by appellants James and TIamitie Mauzy, to secure the payment of the notes in suit, which were executed by appellant Janies Mauzy, evidencing the unpaid purchase money for the real estate described in the mortgage, and which on the day and at the time the notes and mortgage were executed was sold and conveyed with covenants of warranty by appellee to said appellant.
In the amended first paragraph of answer it is further alleged that the acreage is short, and that appellee, at the time of the conveyance, was the owner of only eleven-twelfths of said real estate, and that the agreed price was $39.18 per acre; that the shortage was nineteen acres, and asking a set-off, at the agreed price, for that number of acres. The third paragraph is in set-off, on account of shortage in acreage, in the sum of $500. The fourth paragraph alleges that the notes and mortgage sued upon were executed by appellants for the unpaid purchase money for
The facts found by the court show substantially that on November 20, 1902, plaintiff and his wife, Isabel Flint, executed a warranty deed for certain real estate (deserib
As conclusions of law the court finds that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for the amount found due to him and to a decree of foreclosure of the mortgage, and that said defendant is not entitled to any deduction from the purchase money, by reason of. the claim of defective title. The defendants excepted severally to each conclusion of law.'
The errors assigned are the action of the court (1) in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the first and sixth paragraphs of appellant Mauzy’s answer; (2) in overruling said appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The only first paragraph of answer in the record is the amended first paragraph. We take it that the specification of error is intended to apply to, and shall be considered as applied to, that paragraph. It is argued that the first paragraph was sufficient to withstand a demurrer, because it alleges that, at the time of the eonvevance of the real estate • by appellee to appellant Mauzy, appellee had no title, and since that had acquired no title to the real estate so conveyed.
It is the claim of said appellant that, inasmuch as the complaint does not allege that he was put in possession of the real estate, the first amended paragraph of answer is good. In support of this position Bethell v. Bethell (1876), 54 Ind. 428, 23 Am. Rep. 650; Craig v. Donovan (1878), 63 Ind. 513, Fisher v. Perry (1879), 68 Ind. 465, and Jackson v. Green (1887), 112 Ind. 341, are cited. The first of said cases holds that where a grantor, having no title thereto or possession of land, conveys the same with the covenant of seizin, but fails to put his grantor in possession, such covenant is at once broken, and does not run with the land, but is purely personal. The second is to the same effect. The third and fourth hold that a conveyance of land in another state is governed by the lex rei sitae.
The defense of shortage of acreage is made to depend upon the failure of title of an undivided one-twelfth of certain real estate in question, but, if without eviction there is shown to be a defective title in said portion, there could be no recovery in an action for breach of covenants beyond mere nominal damages.
The fourth paragraph of answer alleges that “appellant had possession of said real estate as tenant in common with said-Hickey, and in no other way, and that appellee could not deliver possession of the same in any other way.” Appellee’s reply formed the issue upon which the finding set out was founded.
No attempt is made to make the evidence a part of the ■ record.
Judgment affirmed.