144 Ind. 165 | Ind. | 1895
The appellee, Mary C. Grayston, sued the appellant for partition. The court overruled a demurrer to the complaint for want of sufficient facts. The defendant answered by a general denial and affirmative answers, to which the plaintiff replied by a general denial and several affirmative replies. A trial of the issues by the court resulted in a special finding of the facts at the request of the defendant, upon which the court stated certain conclusions of law favorable to the plaintiff, and upon which the court rendered judgment of partition in accordance with the prayer of the petition, over appellant’s-motion for a new trial. There was no ex
The errors assigned are on the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the complaint and overruling the appellant’s demurrer to the second, third and fifth paragraphs of appellee’s reply.
We are met by a verified answer in bar of the appeal by the appellees. After the report of the commissioners in partition had been confirmed, and the judgment rendered and before the motion for a new trial had been passed on, it was made to appear that the plaintiff, Mary C. Grayston, had sold and conveyed the portion of the real estate set off to her to Daniel Kitch. The court thereupon sustained a motion to substitute said Kitch as plaintiff.
He filed a plea in bar of the motion for a new trial, which plea, on motion, was struck out.
The answer in bar of the appeal states that after the rendition of the judgment of partition, on October 24, 1894, the commissioners to make partition were selected by agreement of the parties and appointed by the court accordingly; that appellant filed exceptions to their report, which were tried by the court, overruled and judgment of partition rendered. After said final judgment, to-wit: on December 15, 1894, tjie appellant sold the lands set off to him to Jacob Boos for the sum of $10,000, and he conveyed ,,the same to said Boos by warranty deed, and put him in possession thereof. On December 17, 1894, said Kitch, well knowing all the facts herein alleged and relying on them as having been done in good faith, purchased of the appellee, Grayston, the lands, set off to her for the full value thereof, to-wit: $5,400.00, and said Mary C. Grayston, her husband joining, conveyed her said portion of said lands so set off to her to said
Wherefore appellees say that the appellant ought not to prosecute an appeal of said cause or in.any way call in question the title and ownership of the land so acquired by the substituted appellee, Daniel Kitch.
The only fact alleged in this answer in bar of the appeal which has any resemblance to matter in bar of an appeal is that relating to the sale by the appellant of the portion of the lands set off to him after the judgment confirming the partition.
The right of appeal, though conferred by statute, may be forfeited and waived in many ways. It is an established principle of law that a party cannot prosecute an appeal and thereby seek to reverse a judgment, the benefits of which he has accepted voluntarily and knowing the facts. After such acceptance, he is estopped to reverse the judgment on error, and the same may be treated as a release of errors. Newman v. Kiser, 128 Ind. 258; Sterne v. Vert, 108 Ind. 232 ; Baltimore, etc., R. R. Co. v. Johnson, 84 Ind. 420; Patterson v. Rowley, 65 Ind. 108; State, ex rel., v. Kamp, 111 Ind. 56; McCracken v. Cabel, 120 Ind. 266 ; Sterne v. Vert, 111 Ind. 408 ; Clark v. Wright, 67 Ind. 224; 2 Ency. of Pl. and Pr. 174-175, and authorities there cited; Glassburn v. Deer, 143 Ind. 174.
This rule is founded on the principle that a party in a court of justice will not be allowed to acquire advantages by assuming inconsistent positions.
The case of Sterne v. Vert, 108 Ind. 232, supra, was something like the present case. There it was sought to foreclose a mortgage on three separate tracts of land. The defendants resisted the foreclosure as to
The foregoing language is very applicable to the present case. It is true, here the undivided two-thirds of the lands, as alleged in the complaint, belonged to the defendant and was not in controversy in the suit. But according to the plaintiff’s contention, she owned, as she alleged in her complaint, the undivided one-third of said lands. That claim extended to and permeated every inch of that portion of the lands that was set off to the defendant by metes and bounds in the decree and continued to hamper and cloud his title to all of it until the plaintiff’s claim was extinguished as to that part by the decree setting off to her another portion. That enabled him to sell the tract then set off to him free from her claim. In so selling it, he secured the whole of the purchase-price, $10,000, free from any claim in the plaintiff to share therein. It cannot be said that he did not, in so doing, accept the benefits of the decree or that it did not benefit him. It may be that he was entitled to all the land, freed from the appellee’s claim. That, however, could only be established by a decree to that effect after a trial of the issues. Until such decree, her claim was a cloud on his title to every inch of the land. The decree removed that cloud as to that part set off to him by metes and bounds, and he accepted the benefits of such removal by selling the same for $10,000, freed from her claim. He is, therefore, brought within the principle of one accepting the
This answer in bar of the appeal was filed on the same day the transcript was filed in the office of the clerk of this court, April 19, 1895. On August 28, 1895, the appellant’s attorneys endorsed on the transcript immediately following said answer, a waiver of notice of the filing of such answer. Thus they show that they have had notice of its contents nearly three months, and yet they have not denied its truth, or in any manner questioned its legal sufficiency. There-, fore, under the established rules of practice in this court, we are authorized to presume that the facts stated in the answer to the assignment of errors are true. Glassburn v. Deer, supra; Eckert v. Binkley, 134 Ind. 614.
The appellant having waived the errors alleged, if any were committed in the proceedings leading up to the judgment, by accepting the benefits thereof, his appeal therefrom is dismissed.