159 Ind. 373 | Ind. | 1902
— Joseph Schenck died the owner of real estate in Vanderburgh county leaving children, appellant, and appellees, Eberhardt P., Joseph, and Erank Schenck and-three others as his only heirs at law.
On July 26, 1898, appellant and her sister Elizabeth Marx, instituted in the Vanderburgh Circuit Court against the appellees herein their suit for partition of the lands inherited from their deceased father; the plaintiffs alleging that they and the defendants, except Eberhardt P. Schenck, were the owners of the land as tenants in common, and each entitled to an undivided one-sixth thereof in severalty; that the defendant Eberhardt P. Schenck had been advanced by his father his full share of the estate. The record does not disclose whether the defendants, or either of them, filed an answer; but such proceedings were had that the court found and decreed that each of the plaintiffs and defendants was the owner and entitled to a share equal in value to one-seventh of the whole, and ordered that the plaintiffs have set off to each of them, in severalty, her share. Certain described parcels were set off to the plaintiffs to have and to hold in severalty and the “remainder of said lands” set apart to the five defendants, including Eberhardt P. Schenck as their five-sevenths in value, without partition. Pending the partition suit, to wit, August 27, 1898, Eberhardt P. Schenck conveyed to his brothers, Joseph and Erank, by quitclaim deed, all of his right, title, and interest, being the undivided one-seventh of the described lands; the expressed intention being “to convey to said grantees all the right, title, and interest of the said Eberhardt P. Schenck in and to the estate real and personal of his father,” as one of the heirs at law, for the sum of
The real question for decision is the eonelusiveness of the partition proceeding upon the title and ownership of the inherited interest of Eberhardt P. Schenck in his father’s estate, and arises upon the admission in evidence of his deed purporting to convey that interest to his brothers. Without basis therefor in the record, the argument on both sides assumes that the conveyance in question was executed before the interlocutory order of partition was made; the appellant contending that the decretal order of partition was an adjudication of Eberhardt’s title and ownership upon the facts as they existed at the time the decree was entered, and is therefore conclusive, and, being subsequent to the, alleged conveyance, the deed was improperly admitted in evidence to impeach the decree, while, on the other hand, appellees insist that the title of Eberhardt was not called in question by any pleading or issue in the partition action and was not therefore either established or overthrown.
It will be borne in mind that the judgment invoked by appellant was rendered in an ordinary action for partition. The complaint was in the usual form, alleging the common source of title, and common equal interests of plaintiffs and
There is no pretense that the conveyance of Eberhardt to his brothers, Joseph and Erank, was fraudulent, or for less than full value. It was accomplished eight months before appellant recovered her judgment against Eberhardt, and hence no lien had attached. The deed to appellees, Joseph and Erank Schenck, was properly admitted in evidence as tending to prove their ownership, and that the land conveyed thereby was not subject to sale for payment of appellant’s judgment.
The decision of the court is sustained by the evidence, and is not contrary to law. The motion for a new trial was correctly overruled. Judgment affirmed.