49 Neb. 262 | Neb. | 1896
This is an action of ejectment brought in the district court of Douglas county by John A. Horbach against Louis Schields. At her request Dorothy Schields, wife of Louis Schields, was made a party defendant to the action. At the close of the evidence the jury, in obedience to an instruction of the court, returned a verdict in favor of Horbach, upon which judgment was rendered, to reverse which Schields and wife prosecute to this court petitions in error.
One link in Horbach’s chain of title was a deed from one Griffith. This deed was executed in the state of Kansas and acknowledged there before a notary public, who attached his seal of office to the certificate of acknowledgment. The deed.was not witnessed, and it is now insisted that the court erred in permitting this deed to be read in evidence because it was not witnessed. Conveyances of real estate situate within this state, executed in this state, are required to be witnessed (Compiled Statutes, ch. 73, sec. 1); and it is provided by sections 4 and 5 of said chapter that (section 4) a deed, “if executed and acknowledged or proved in any other state, territory, or district of the United States, it must be executed and acknowledged or proved either according to the laws of such state, territory, or district, or in accordance with the law of this state, and such acknowledgment shall be made before and certified by any officer authorized by the laws of such state, territory, or district to take and cer
The court having directed a verdict in this case if the evidence in the record would sustain a finding in favor of Schields and wife, or either of them, the judgment must be reversed. To the action of Horbach, Schields and wife admitted that they were' in possession of the premises sued for, and pleaded that they had been occupying said premises as their homestead since the year 1863; that in the year 1864 Horbach executed and delivered to Louis Schields a contract for the purchase of certain real estate, being á tract of three and one-fifth acres, the land sued for herein being a part thereof; that the purchase price was $1,600; that Schields made pay
Horbach, on the trial, introduced in evidence the pleadings and judgment in an action in which Louis Schields was plaintiff, and he, Horbach, was defendant. This suit was brought in the district court of Douglas county on the 14th of April, 1887, by Schields, against Horbach. In his petition in the action of 1887 Schields alleged that he was in possession of the said three and one-fifth acre tract of land; that he was in possession thereof by virtue of a contract of purchase existing between him and Horbach dated in November, 1863; that prior to January, 1873, he had made large payments upon the purchase price of said land and that on the 14th of January, 1873, he and Schields had a settlement and it was then found that he, Schields, was indebted to Horbach in the sum of §383.65; that on said date Horbach induced him, Schields, to surrender said contract of purchase and
It is to be said of this defense of Schields and wife that the pleadings and evidence of the suit of 1887 introduced in evidence here conclusively establish (1) that the contract of purchase of 1864 held by Schields was voluntarily surrendered by him in January, 1873, and he then entered possession of the premises as the tenant of Horbach; (2) that the option to purchase the premises given to him on that date was never accepted by him and that he never held possession of said premises under said option, but held as Horbach’s tenant.
But Schields and wife allege in their answer that they have been in the notorious and adverse possession of these premises since January, 1878. As we have already observed, the-pleadings and judgment of the action of 1887 put in evidence afford unimpeached and unimpeachable evidence that Schields was in possession of this property as late as the 14th of April, 1887, as tenant,, and not holding possession adverse to Horbach; and the undisputed evidence in this record further shows that in January, 1878, Schields leased the property in controversy here from Horbach for three years, or until January 1, 1881. He seems to have been holding over under that lease since January 1, 1881, until the bringing of this suit, October 17, 1891; but as he took possession as tenant of Horbach, his simply holding over after the expiration of his lease, without more, will not have the effect of making him hold adversely to his landlord; until he surrendered possession of the premises under his lease, or by some unequivocal act notified Horbach that he no longer held possession of the premises under the lease, but claimed possession adverse to him, he was not holding adversely. In Mattis v. Robinson, 1 Neb., 3, it was held that before a tenant could be permitted to assail his landlord’s title he must surrender the possession acquired under his lease. (Thrall v. Omaha Hotel Co., 5 Neb., 295.) In Lausman v. Drahos, 10 Neb., 172, it was held
It is also insisted that the judgment must be reversed because on the trial of this action Horbach testified that in October, 1879, he notified Schields to come in and pay his rent, and at that time he told him if he would move the house he was then occupying on the premises to another part thereof, — to that part of the premises embraced in this suit, — put it on a brick foundation, put it in a tenantable condition, and, when the house was thus repaired, pay him, Horbach, the amount which he, Schields, owed him, that when he laid the three and one-fifth acre tract of land out into lots he would deed the property in controversy to his, Schields’, wife; that Schields moved the house and put it on the real estate in controversy here, but that he never accepted the proposition made him by paying the amount due. To this argument it is to be answered, first, that no such issue as this was made by the pleadings in the case under consideration, and in the absence of such an issue, had the court been trying the case himself, he was not bound to consider this evidence; and as the case was tried to a jury, the court was not obliged to submit to the jury for their consideration the evidence not applicable to any issue in the case.
But this testimony only amounts to this: That in October, 1879, Schields was in possession of the premises as Horbach’s tenant, and Horbach made a verbal promise to convey him the premises upon certain conditions, with which he, Schields, never complied. The making of the
Another argument made here for a reversal of the judgment is that Dorothy Schields, the wife of Louis Schields, has been actually occupying the premises sued for, with her family and husband, since 1864; that she was not a party to the settlement made between Horbach and Schields in January, 1873, whereby Schields surrendered the contract of purchase that he held for the land and became Horbach’s tenant for the same, and that, therefore, notwithstanding the surrender of the contract of purchase, her homestead rights in the premises were not thereby affected. But a contract with reference to a homestead is to be governed by the law in force on the subject of homesteads at the date of such contract. (McHugh v. Smiley, 17 Neb., 620.) So much of the home
Affirmed.