194 Mo. 588 | Mo. | 1906
This cause is now in this court upon an appeal from a judgment in an action in ejectment begun in the circuit court of Greene county, Missouri, against B. F. Meadows, the tenant in possession. Sue I. B. O’Day, claimed to be the owner, was made party defendant on her own motion. The judgment in the Greene Circuit Court was for the defendants. The petition in which the cause of action is stated is in the usual and ordinary form of petition in actions of eject
To fully appreciate the questions in controversy in this proceeding and in order to fully comprehend the basis of the relief granted the defendant, Sue I. B. O’Day, by the decree and judgment in this cause, it is necessary to reproduce her answer, which is as follows:
“Now comes defendant Sue I. B. O’Day and for answer to plaintiff’s petition admits that she is in possession by tenant of the land described therein, but denies each and every other allegation in said petition contained. Wherefore she prays for judgment.
“And further answering, and for a separate, distinct and equitable defense, defendant Sue I. B. O’Day says that on the 5th day of March, 1900, the plaintiff and one John O’Day were husband and wife, and had sustained said relation for a long time prior thereto; that on said day the said plaintiff and her said husband agreed in writting upon a marriage settlement of all property rights, by the terms of which, in consideration of the conveyance of certain properties therein described, including the land described in petition, and in further consideration of other things of value to said plaintiff paid, she agreed to relinquish all her marital rights in the estate of the said John O’Day, and in furtherance of said agreement the said plaintiff and her said husband executed the following instrument:
‘1 ‘ This agreement, made and entered into this 5th day of March, 1900, by and between John O’Day, of the city of Springfield, Missouri, party of the first part, and Clymena Alice O’Day, his wife> party of the second
“ ‘John O’Day, (Seal.)
‘‘ ‘ Clymena Alice 0 ’Day. (Seal.) ’
“That in execution of said agreement, and for no other purpose and no other consideration, the said John O'’Day, plaintiff herein, assigned said stock in the Oriel Realty and Construction Company to said plaintiff, and in execution of said agreement, and for no other purpose and no other consideration, the said John 0 ’Day on March 6, 1900, executed and delivered to his son, A. C. 0 ’Day, his certain instrument in writing, in which plaintiff herein joined, which instrument is in words and figures as follows:
“ ‘Know all men by these presents, that we, John O’Day and Clymena Alice 0‘’Day, his wife, of the city of Springfield, in the county of Greene and State of Missouri, have granted, bargained and sold, and by these presents do' grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said A. C. O'’Day the following described tracts and parcels of land, situate in said county of Greene and State of Missouri, that is to say, to-wit: All of the south half and 20 acres along the south end of. the north half of a body of land situate in sections 26 and 27, township 29, range 22 of said Greene county, Mis
“ ‘John O’Day, (Seal.)
‘‘ ‘ Olymena Alice 0’Day. (Seal.) ’
“Which instrument was duly acknowledged before a notary public on said 6th day of March, 1900, and delivered to said A. C. O ’Day, and the same was on said day duly filed for record and is recorded in book 179, at page 416, in the office of the recorder of deeds of G-reene county, Missouri.
‘ ‘ That on the same day and in further execution of said written agreement between said John O’Day and his said wife, plaintiff herein, and for no other purpose than to effectuate said agreement, and upon no other consideration, the said A. O. O ’Day executed and delivered to said plaintiff herein, who received and accepted the same at the time as a compliance with said agreementj the following described instrument in writing:
“ ‘Know all men by these presents, that I, A. C. O’Day, a single man, of the city of Springfield, in the county of Greene and State of Missouri, for and in consideration of the sum of ten thousand dollars, to' me in hand paid by Olymena Alice O ’Day, of the same place, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have granted, bargained and sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell and convey -unto1 the said Olymena Alice O’Day the following described tracts or parcels of land situate in said county of Greene and State of Missouri, that is to say: All the south half and 2Q acres along the south end of the north half of a body of land situate in sections 26 and 27 of township 29, range 22 of said Greene county, Missouri, known as Park Place, and which Park Place or body of
“ ‘A. C. O’Dav, (Seal.)’
“Which instrument was duly acknowledged on said day before a notary public and delivered to plaintiff, who accepted the same, and the same was on said day filed for record and recorded in book 179, at page —, in G-reene county, Missouri.
“Defendants say that whatever title or estate plaintiff acquired of, in and to the land described in her said petition was acquired under and by virtue of the said agreement between her and her said husband and two instruments hereinbefore described, made in execution of said agreement, and that she, plaintiff, has no other right, title, interest or estate or color thereof in any other manner or by any other means, and. defendants say that the land described in plaintiff’s petition is the same land kno'wn as the M. C. Vinton land, and is described in the said deeds from M. C. Vinton to John O’Day by the description set forth in the petition herein.
“Defendants state that said agreement and the instruments herein described made and delivered in furtherance of said agreement and to effectuate the same were not binding in law or equity on the said Clymena Alice O’Day on account of the marital relation then subsisting between her and said 0 ’Day, and by reason of the premises she had the right to rescind and repudiate the same.
“And the defendants say that on the 31st day of August, 1900, she did repudiate said 'agreement and instruments made in execution of said agreement by then and there, in express contravention of the terms of said
“ ‘Plaintiff further states that the defendant is seized and possessed of real and personal estate and money of great value, hut the exact value is to plaintiff unknown. Wherefore plaintiff prays to he divorced from the bonds of matrimony, contracted as aforesaid with defendant; that the court will adjudge to her, support and maintenance out of the property of said defendant as the nature of the cause and the circumstances of the parties may require, and that the court will make such further orders and judgments from time to time touching the premises as may be meet and proper.’
“Defendant further says that on the trial of said cause judgment was rendered for said plaintiff, and other and different property than that described in said article of settlement and said instruments made to effectuate the same, and by different limitations were set aside, assigned, transferred, conveyed and ordered to be so set aside, assigned, transferred and conveyed to this plaintiff, but the property described in plaintiff’s petition was not set aside to or ordered to be conveyed to said plaintiff, but was expressly excepted and reserved from the said decree, all of which is in words as follows:
“ ‘And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the defendant pay to the plaintiff by way of alimony the sum of twenty four thousand dollars ; also that he transfer and deliver to her certificates for the full paid capital stock of the Oriel Realty and
“And defendants say that said decree and the orders of the court so made were fully complied with
“Defendants say that by reason of the premises the interest, if any was acquired by said plaintiff in the land in petition described, became in equity and good •conscience invested in the said John O’Day, and that said suit for divorce and said decree for alimony in equity avoided and was a rescission of said agreement hereinbefore set out and of said instruments so executed and delivered to effectuate said agreement, because the said agreement and instruments had no force or effect in law or equity to bind the plaintiff herein on account of her relationship to said O’Day, and because the filing of said divorce suit and the decree made therein was on the part of the said plaintiff a rescission •of said agreement and instruments. And defendants further say that under said agreement and said instruments no legal or equitable estate passed to plaintiff herein, but they had the effect only to cloud the title of said John 0’Da.y.
“Defendant further states that said John O’Day departed this life on the--day of----, 1901, and by reason of the premises died equitably and legally seized of the fee in said land. And defendants state that by his last will and testament, duly subscribed and witnessed as required by law, and duly proven and admitted to probate by and in the probate court of Greene county, Missouri, he (the said John O’Day) devised the said land in plaintiff’s petition de
“Defendant Sue I. B. O’Day says that by reason of the premises the said agreement between plaintiff herein and said John O’Day, and the instruments herein described from John O'’Day and Clymena Alice 0 ’Day to A. O. 0 ’Day and from A. O. 0 ’Day to plaintiff herein, are clouds upon the title of said defendant, Sue I. B. O’Day, who in law and in equity and good conscience is the absolute owner in fee of said land. But defendant states that she is remediless at law. Wherefore she prays that said agreement be cancelled, set aside and for naught held, and that said instrument from said plaintiff and, John O’Day to said A. C. O’Day and said instrument from said A. O. 0 ’Day to plaintiff herein be set aside, cancelled and for naught held, and that all rights, if any, acquired by said plaintiff thereunder, whether held by this court to be legal, equitable or colorable, be divested and that the same be vested in this defendant Sue I. B. O’Day. And she further prays for such other and further relief as to this court may seem proper, and for her costs herein expended.”
To this answer plaintiff filed the following replication:
“Comes now the plaintiff, and for reply to the separate equitable defense of the defendant, Sue I. B. 0 ’Day, herein, denies each and every allegation in said answer and defense contained except such allegations as are hereinafter expressly admitted to be true.
“Admits that on the 6th of March, 1900, John 0’Da.y, deceased, and the plaintiff executed to the son of said John O’Day the instrument set out in said answer, and that said deed so set forth is a true and cor
“Admits that on the same day the said A. O. O’Day executed to the plaintiff the deed set forth in said answer from said A. O. O’Day to plaintiff, and that both of said deeds were duly executed, delivered and recorded as set forth in said answer.
“Admits that defendants have been continuously in possession of the premises sued for since the date of the entry alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and that the value of the rents and profits of said premises is two hundred and fifty dollars per annum, or twenty and ten-twelfths dollars per month.
“Admits that the premises sued for are the premises described in the Vinton deed referred to in the above mentioned deeds, and are also described as blocks two and three, Oklahoma addition, to the city of Springfield.
“Admits that after the execution of said deeds the plaintiff instituted a suit for divorce against the said John O’Day, and in said suit that she was awarded a decree of divorce from the defendant therein, and awarded alimony by the terms of said decree. Plaintiff states further that prior to said decree of divorce and award of alimony therein the plaintiff herein made claim to all the property which was awarded to her by said decree, and that her said claim was confirmed by said decree of alimony, and that by the said decree and the awards therein contained, all equities or alleged equities sought to be invoked by the defendants herein were adjudicated in favor of the plaintiff, and all property rights that were in issue or that could have been in issue were forever settled and determined.
“Wherefore the plaintiff prays that defendants be denied all equitable relief herein and that she have and recover judgment as hereinbefore prayed.”
The cause was tried by the court without the aid of a jury and the evidence was substantially as follows:
The plaintiff here rested her case.
The defendants then to sustain the issues on their behalf introduced evidence as follows:
It is admitted that the defendant Sue I. B. O ’Day is the widow of John O’Day, deceased, who is admitted to be the common source of title. The defendants then offered in evidence the last will of John O’Day, deceased, which was admitted to have been duly executed and properly probated and which will amongst other devises purports to devise to the defendant Sue I. B. O’Day, in fee simple, the property in controversy— objection being made to the competency, relevancy, materiality of said testimony, and exception being saved to the action of the court in overruling said objection.
The cause being submitted upon the evidence as herein indicated, the court rendered and entered of record the following judgment and decree:
“Now at this day comes on this cause tO' be heard, both parties appearing in person and by attorney, and the court doth proceed by consent and agreement of the parties to a trial of this cause, and all and singular the premises being seen, heard and fully understood, the court doth find that the plaintiff and John O’Day were on the 6th day of March, 1900, husband and wife and had sustained such relations for a long time prior thereto. That on said day the plaintiff and the said husband entered into an agreement in writing by the terms of which said husband, John O’Day, agreed to convey unto said plaintiff certain real estate therein mentioned, and including an agreement to convey to plaintiff the land in petition described, during the natural life of said plaintiff; that pursuant to said agreement the said plaintiff and her said husband conveyed the land described in plaintiff’s petition to one A. O. O’Day, to have and to hold to the said A. C. O’Day an estate therein commencing upon the death of the said John O’Day, and to continue during the life of said plaintiff; and that in further execution of said agreement and on the said day the said A. O. O ’Day by his deed, duly acknowledged and delivered, conveyed all the real estate in said last deed described, including the land described in plaintiff’s petition, to this plaintiff, and conveyed said land in plaintiff’s petition described to the plaintiff herein, to have and to hold an estate therein commencing upon the death of the said John O’Day and continuing so long as plaintiff herein shall live. The court doth further find that plaintiff herein ac
“Wherefore, all and singular premises being seen, heard and fully understood, the court doth order, decree and adjudge that the said agreement so made and entered into by and between plaintiff herein and her then husband, John O’Dav, be cancelled, set aside and for naught held; that the deed of Clymena Alice 0 ’Day and her then husband, John O’Day, conveying the land described in plaintiff’s petition to A. C. O’Day (which deed is recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds for Greene county, Missouri, in book 179, at page 416), be.cancelled, set aside and for naught held; and that the deed of said A. C. 0 ’Day, conveying the land described in plaintiff’s petition to plaintiff herein, Clymena Alice O'’Day (which deed is recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds for Greene county, Missouri, in book 179, at page 418), be cancelled, set aside and for naught held, and that all the right, title, interest and estate and color of title claimed or owned by the said Clymena Alice O’Day of, in and to the following land, to-wit, the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 27, township 29:, range 22, in Greene county, Missouri, also known and described as blocks 2 and 3 of Oklahoma addition to Springfield, Missouri, be and the same is hereby divested from and out of the said Clymena Alice 0 ’Day, and that the full legal and equitable title thereto be and the same is hereby vested in fee in the defendant, Sue I. B. 0'’Day, and that defendants recover their costs herein from plaintiff, for which execution may issue.”
Motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment were timely filed and by the court overruled. From this judgment plaintiff in proper time and form prose
OPINION.
The record before us fully discloses the propositions upon which it is sought to maintain the judgment and decree rendered in-this cause by the trial court.
1. It is insisted by respondent that the agreement between John O’Day and his wife, the plaintiff in this cause, was invalid and not binding on the wife according to the rules of the common law, and in fact that it was not a contract at all as it lacked mutuality. It is also insisted that this contract was voidable at the election of the plaintiff Clymena Alice 0 ’Day, and some act on her part or acquiescence on her part after she became discovert was necessary before the agreement could be dignified as a contract.
2. It is insisted by respondents that the conveyance from John O ’Day and wife to A. O. O’Day (being the deed upon which this plaintiff must base her right to-recover), does not pass a legal title sufficient to maintain ejectment: First. Because the.paper is testamentary in its nature. Second. It attempts by deed to create a freehold estate in futuro, that is, a contingent estate per autre vie without creating at the same time and by the same deed or instrument a particular estate to support it.
3. It is earnestly contended that the action of plaintiff for divorce in which she made claim to alimony, was a direct repudiation of the agreement between John O’Day and the plaintiff, and of the deeds made pursuant thereto, and that such conduct on her part operated as a rescission and cancellation of the deeds conveying the property in dispute to plaintiff.
We will treat the propositions in the order as above designated.
Following the doctrine as announced in that case it must be held that John O’Day and the plaintiff in this case, during coverture as husband and wife, had the full power and aiithority under the statute, as to their property rights, to contract with each other, and such contract will be enforced at law just as if she had contracted with third persons.
II. This brings us to the consideration of the second proposition, which in our opinion is the most serious question involved in this record. Upon this proposition it is urged by counsel for respondent that the
The record discloses that this deed was executed by John O ’Day and this plaintiff, who was at that time his wife, duly acknowledged and delivered to the grantee in that deed, A. C. O’Day, who caused the same to be placed of record, and that subsequently A. O. 0 ’Day, in substantially the same terms, conveyed the property in dispute to this plaintiff, which deed was duly and properly acknowledged before a notary public and duly recorded in the recorder’s office of Greene county, Missouri.
It is apparent from the terms of this deed that John O’Day intended and undertook to carve out of the land embraced in that deed a life estate, that is, an es
It is ably argued by counsel for respondents that this instrument was simply testamentary in its nature and was not in fact a deed, and that no rights vested in plaintiff until after the death of John O’Day; hence the instrument amounted to nothing more than a will and was insufficient to pass such legal title as would maintain ejectment.
The grantor and grantee in this deed were capable of contracting, and the terms, used were those usually employed in a quitclaim deed, stating that “in consideration .... we hereby remise, sell and quit-claim to said A. C. O’Day an estate” in the land in controversy, coupled with the designation of the time when the possession and enjoyment of such estate should commence, which was “upon the death of the said John O’Day and continuing so long as the said Clymena Alice O'’Day shall live.” Then follows the concluding clause of that instrument, which fully recogmzes that the deed was operative and effective upon its execution and delivery, then and there fixing the rights of the grantee in respect to such property, and that an estate had been created by the terms of the instrument, which says: “To have and to hold said last created estate to the said A. O. 0 ’Day and to his assigns, heirs, executors and administrators during sMd period hereinbefore fixed.” The insistence of counsel for respondents that this deed was testamentary in its nature, leads us to the inquiry as to what are the essential characteristics of such instruments. The marks of an instrument testamentary in its character are nowhere more clearly stated than in Nichols v. Emery, 109 Cal. l. c. 329, where it was said: ‘ ‘ The essential characteristic of an instrument testamentary in its nature is, that it operates only upon and by reason of the death of the maker. Up to that time it is ambulatory. By its execution the maker
The law is nowhere more clearly stated as to when an estate is vested than by Chancelor Kent. [4 Kent’s Com. (14 Ed.), p. 202.] It is thus announced: “An estate is vested when there is an immediate right of present enjoyment, or a present fixed right of future enjoyment.”
It is clear by the execution and delivery of the deeds now in hand in which it is recited by the grantors that “we hereby remise, sell and quit-claim an estate” in the premises described, a life estate was created and the possession and enjoyment of that estate, by the other terms in the deeds, were simply postponed until the death of John O’Day. A present fixed right of future enjoyment of that estate was beyond dispute created by the terms of the deed in controversy.
In Abbott v. Holway, 72 Maine l. c. 304, it was contended that the instrument in judgment in that case was not a conveyance because it was contrary to public policy and an attempt to evade the statute regulating the making and execution of wills. Barrows, J., responding to that contention, said: “But the instrument was duly executed by the defendant’s .testator, a man capable of contracting, and having an absolute power of disposition over his homestead farm, subject only to the rights of his existing creditors. It was duly recorded so that all the world might know what disposition he had made of a certain interest in it, and what was left in himself. If operative at all, it operated differently from a will. A will is ambulatory, revocable. Whatever passed to the wife by this instrument became irrevocably hers.”
The mere fact that provisions in a deed may post
The distinction between wills and instruments testamentary in their character and deeds is very clearly drawn in McDaniel v. Johns, 45 Miss. l. c. 641-42. It was there said that “a will is an instrument by which a person makes a disposition of his property to take effect after his decease, and which is, in its own nature, ambulatory and revocable during his life. It is this ambulatory quality which forms the characteristic of
We have critically analyzed the provisions of the deeds involved in this controversy and we are unable to discover any design or purpose on the part of the grantors to make them testamentary in their character, but on the other hand, the terms employed in those deeds evince, in the clearest and most explicit manner known to the forms of conveyancing, an intention to convey and not to devise. As was said by Broom in his Maxims (8 Ed.), star page 540, in translating a fundamental maxim of the law, “a liberal construction should be placed upon written instruments, so as to uphold them, if possible, and carry into effect the intention of the parties.”
The terms of the deeds relied upon by plaintiff to support her title in this proceeding are very unlike the instrument under consideration in Murphy v. Gfabbert, 166 Mo. 601, to which our attention has been specially directed. It is manifest from the terms of that instrument that it was testamentary in its character and was properly so held. It was expressly provided by that instrument that, “the intention of this instrument of writing is such that Mrs. Ann Ellison relinquishes her entire right at her death, then this deed is to immediately come into effect, but not until then. ” It is clear that the instrument involved in that case, by its own terms, was not to take effect or become operative until the death of the grantor. Unlike the deeds involved in this controversy, which clearly, by the terms employed in them, fixed the rights of the grantees in respect to the property conveyed, upon the execution and delivery of them.
Upon this proposition it must be held that these deeds were not instruments testamentary in their char
The second subdivision of respondents’ contention upon this proposition is that it attempts by deed to create a freehold estate in futuro, that is, a contingent estate per outer vie without creatin'g at the same time and by the same deed or instrument a particular estate to support it. Upon this proposition we confess that if the rules of law which were applicable to ancient feudal tenures, and all the restrictive effects of such laws upon alienations of real property were in force and applicable to the conveyancing of real estate under the statutes of this State, the contention of respondents could well be maintained. This insistence on the part of the respondents involves for the first time a construction of the last subdivision or sentence of section 4596, Revised Statutes 1899. This section provides: “When an estate hath been or shall be, by any conveyance, limited in remainder to the son or daughter, or to the use of the son or daughter of any person to be begotten, such son or daughter born after the decease of his or her father shall take the estate in the same manner as if he or she had been born in the lifetime of the father, although no estate shall have been conveyed to support the contingent remainder after his death. And hereafter an estate of freehold or of inheritance may be made to commence in future by deed, in like manner as by will.” While the last subdivision or sentence of that section, “and hereafter an estate of freehold or of inheritance may be made to commence in future by deed, in like manner as by will, ’ ’ is in the same section making provisions in respect to posthumous children, yet it is apparent that it has no application to the first subdivision of the section which treats and fully disposes of the subject of posthumous children. The last sentence of that section of the statute is useless and meaningless unless it be construed as changing the rules applicable to conveyances at com
' Section 900, Revised Statutes 1899, upon the subject of conveyances, provides that “conveyances of lands,'or of any estate or interest therein, may be made by deed executed by any person having authority to convey the same, or by his agent or attorney, and acknowledged and recorded as herein directed, without any other act or ceremony whatever.”
Under a similar statute in respect to conveying real estate, the Supreme Court of Maine, in Abbott v. Holway, supra, held that even in the absence of a statute, with provisions similar to section 4596, a conveyance purporting to convey a freehold estate to commence at a future date, should be upheld. The decision in that case is such a practical and common-sense application of the rule which should govern the conveying of real estate under our system of government and method of conveyancing, that we will be pardoned for reproducing the full discussion applicable to the subject. In treating of the question involved in that case, which is similar to the one in the case at bar, Barrows, J., speaking for that court, thus discussed the question and announced the conclusions of that court:
“Our statutes (R. S. c. 73, sec. 1) provide that a person owning real estate and having a right of entry into it, whether seized of it or not, may convey it, or all
“In substance our law now says to a party having such an interest in real estate as is mentioned in R. S., c. 73, you may convey that interest or any part thereof in the manner herein prescribed with such limitations as you see fit, provided you violate no rule of public policy, and place what you do-on record so that you may see how the ownership' stands.
“In the discussion of the effect of the statute of uses and of our own statutes regulating conveyances of real estate in Wyman v. Brown, 50 Maine 139 (a leading case upon the validity of conveyances under which the grantee’s right of possession was to accrue not upon delivery of the deed but at some future day), Wad-ton, J., remarks: ‘We are also of the opinion that effect may be given to such deeds by force of our own statutes, independently of the statute of uses. Our deeds are not framed to convey a use merely, relying upon the statute to annex the legal title to the use. They purport to convey the land itself, and being duly acknowledged and recorded, as our statutes require, op
‘ ‘ And he concludes that deeds, executed in accordance with the. provisions of our statutes and deriving their validity therefrom may be upheld thereby, as well as under the statute of uses, notwithstanding they purport to convey freeholds to commence at a future day.
“In other words the mere technicalities of ancient law are dispensed with upon compliance with statute requirements. The acknowledgment and recording are accepted in place of livery of seizin, and it is competent to fix such time in the future as the parties may agree upon as the time when the estate of the grantee shall commence. No more necessity for limiting one estate upon another, or for having an estate (of some sort) pass immediately to the grantee in opposition to the expressed intention of the parties.
‘ ‘ The feoffment is to be regarded as taking place, and the livery of seizin as occurring at the time fixed in the instrument, and the acknowledgment and recording are to be considered as giving the necessary publicity which was sought in the ancient ceremony.”
Upon the provisions of section 900, Revised Statutes 1899, in respect to conveyancing of real estate, supplemented by the provisions of section 4596, supra, we are of the opinion that the deeds involved in this controversy conveying the property in dispute, were valid and conveyed a sufficient legal title upon which to predicate an action, in ejectment.
The record discloses that to the action for divorce he made no defense whatever to her claim for alimony; he simply filed a general denial (except as to the marriage), and that general denial of course went only to the causes alleged in the petition as ground for divorce and the amount of property of which it was alleged he was seized. He made no objections to the decree of divorce or to the judgment for alimony, allowing it to stand unappealed from. Even in the action for divorce the defense' that the mere bringing of an action claiming alimony was in violation of an original agreement, could not have been made the basis of a cancellation or rescission of a fully executed contract. While the court having jurisdiction of the parties could have proceeded to have adjusted their property rights, yet it by no means would have undertaken to have settled by a decree that a fully executed conveyance
A great deal is said in the briefs of both counsel for appellant and respondents upon the subject of res adjudicaba. "We are of the opinion that the doctrine of res adjudicaba has very little to do with this case. It is contended by respondents that plaintiff in her reply failed to properly plead res adjudicaba. Under the pleadings in this case there was no necessity for any such pleading. The answer of Sue I. B. 0 ’Day simply charged that the institution of the action for1 divorce and the recovery of judgment for alimony was a repudiation of the original agreement, and operated as a rescission or cancellation of the deeds of conveyances. The reply of plaintiff denied this allegation and that ..denial put in issue the allegations of the answer. As to whether or not the institution of the divorce suit was a repudiation of the original contract and a rescission oi cancellation of the deeds of conveyance, were not as a • matter of fact adjudicated in the divorce proceeding; however, it is clear that was the place for the settlement of that question, and the failure of the defendant John O’Day in that proceeding to avail himself of all defenses that he was called upon by the nature of the proceeding to make,- must be treated under the law as
The answer of the defendant Sue I. B. O'’Day in this cause does not proceed upon the theory that these conveyances vesting this life estate should be rescinded or cancelled by reason of any fraud or mistake, or that they had been rescinded or cancelled by any affirmative action of any court of competent jurisdiction, and it nowhere appears that the parties to these conveyances were consenting to any cancellation or rescissiou of such instruments. If there is any presumption to be indulged from the divorce proceeding and the judgment rendered therein, and the conduct and action of all parties surrounding that transaction, it is that the validity of the conveyances assailed in this proceeding were fully recognized in the divorce proceeding. But there was not an utterance by either of the parties, nor an allegation in either the petition of the plaintiff or the answer of the defendant in that proceeding*, in any way indicating that there was a contest as to the validity of the deeds which had been fully executed and delivered by the grantors prior to the action for divorce; but on the contrary, as before stated, the validity of such instruments was fully recognized.
The deeds offered in evidence by plaintiff conveyed to her a life estate and were sufficient to authorize a recovery of such estate in an action of ejectment. She was entitled to the possession of the land in controversy upon the death of John O ’Day.
We have thus indicated our views upon the propositions involved in the record before us, and nothing remains to be done except to announce our conclusion, which is that the decree and judgment as rendered in this cause by the trial court was erroneous. There should have been a judgment for the plaintiff. It is, therefore, ordered that the judgment in this cause be