38 Ind. App. 63 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
Martin Pence alone assigns as errors the sustaining of demurrers to each of his four paragraphs of answer to the complaint and the supplemental complaint of the appellee against Martin Pence and a number of other defendants.
The complaint alleged that the appellee and twelve certain persons of the defendants were the owners in fee simple of certain described real estate, being twenty-six and two-thirds acres of land in Grant county, stating their several shares; that the other three of the defendants, Martin Pence, Allen Pence and Lizzie Pence, his wife, each claimed some lien, interest and title in the land adverse to the appellee’s right and title and adverse to the right and title of each of the other defendants, which claims were without right and a cloud upon the title of the appellee and said twelve other defendants in and to the real estate; that the land could not be partitioned and the interests of the several parties could not be set off to them without injury to the parties. Prayer, that the appellee and the defendants except Martin Pence, Allen Pence and Lizzie Pence, his wife, be declared the owners, in the shares set out; that
In the first paragraph of the answer of Martin Pence it was shown, in substance, that in 1856, Adolphus E. Long was the owner in fee simple of a certain tract of eighty acres of land in Grant county, and in that year he died, leaving as his only heirs at law his widow, Mary Long, and eight children, named as follows: Susan M. Long (afterward Susan M. Bell, by marriage), Amanda Long (afterward Amanda Barngrover, by marriage), Dicey Long (afterward Dicey Grindle, by marriage), Emily J. Long (afterward Emily J. Boswell, by marriage), David P. Long, plaintiff and appellee herein, Benjamin F. Long, Jasper N. Long and Oliver M. Long; that by his death the widow became seized of the undivided one-third of said eighty acres in fee simple, and each of the eight children became seized of the undivided one-twelfth thereof; that afterward Mary Long, the widow, married William La Forge; that in 1867, said Mary La Forge, William La Forge, her husband, Susan M. Bell, Amanda Barngrover and Dicey Grindle, of the heirs of Adolphus E. Long, commenced in the circuit court of Grant county, Indiana, a suit in partition and to quiet title to
The second paragraph purported to answer the complaint so far as it was thereby sought to recover and have partition of the undivided two-eighths of the real estate
The third paragraph purported to be an answer as to the undivided four-eighths of the real estate. It contained the same averments as the second paragraph as to two-eighths of the real estate. It was then further alleged that, after the death of Mary La Forge, Joseph S. Boswell, who had joined in the conveyance made by her and her husband to this defendant, purchased from other heirs of Adolphus R. Long and Mary La Forge the undivided two-eighths of the real estate, and, prior to the commencement of this suit, conveyed the same to the appellee; but that Joseph S. Boswell and Emily J. Boswell, his wife, having joined in said conveyance by Mary La Forge to this defendant, and having thereby ratified and approved it, are estopped thereafter to claim any interest therein, and that the appellee, who is the assignee of said Boswells, is likewise estopped to claim any interest, right or title in the portion of said real estate conveyed to him by said Boswells; and that he has no right, title or interest in said four-eighths of the real estate.
The fourth paragraph purported to answer so much of the complaint and the supplemental complaint as sought to recover and have partition of five-eighths of the real .estate; and it was therein alleged, substantially, that said
In the third paragraph the appellant sought to defend as to the two-eighths part of the land upon the same grounds as in the second paragraph, and as to another two-eighths part he sought to defend on the ground that said Joseph S. Boswell, who was the husband of one of the children of the former marriage with whom he had so joined in the conveyance of Mary La Eorge and her husband to this defendant, had purchased from others of said children the undivided two-eighths part of the land after the death of Mary La Eorge, which before the commencement of this suit said Boswell had conveyed to the ap
All the paragraphs of answer were insufficient. Decree affirmed.