78 Ind. App. 586 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1922
— This is a suit to quiet title, in second, third and fourth paragraphs of amended complaint.
It is averred in the second paragraph, in substance, that on and prior to February 8, 1901, one Martin Heckley was the owner in fee simple and in the possession of certain real estate in Wells county, Indiana. At said time and prior thereto the said Heckley and appellee Eugenia Heckley, hereinafter mentioned as appellee, were husband and wife, appellee being the second and childless wife. Appellants and appellee Frank Heckley, were the children 'of said Martin Heckley by a former marriage, and were his only children then living. On February 8, 1901, said Heckley desired to convey a life estate in said real estate to his then wife, appellee, and the remainder thereof to his said children, and appellee desired that he should so convey it, and they agreed to so convey it for the purpose of making a family settlement, and that they would make one James Lepper a single man, the agent through whom a life estate in and to said real estate should pass to appellee, and the remainder thereof to the said children as aforesaid, and to carry out said intent and purpose, they agreed that a warranty deed should be first executed by them for said real estate to said Lepper, and that said
“THIS INDENTURE WITNESSETH, That James Lepper, an unmarried man, of Wells County, in the State of Indiana, CONVEY AND WARRANT to Eugenia Heckley of Wells County in the State of Indiana for the sum of one dollar the following real estate in Wells County in the State of Indiana, to-wit: (here follows the description) — This conveyance carries with it and conveys to the grantee all the personal property of every description upon said land above conveyed. It is further agreed and it is an essential part of this conveyance that upon the death of said grantee Eugenia Heckley that the above described real estate shall be divided equally among the heirs of the said Martin Heckley, Sr.
IN WITNESS WHEREQF, ETC,”
The third paragraph of amended complaint is substantially the same as the second.
The fourth paragraph, upon the same facts, is based upon the theory that the children are the owners of the remainder by inheritance. We do not need to set
As stated in Prior v. Quackenbush (1868), 29 Ind. 475: “The deed does not bear the evidence that it was written by one ‘learned in law.’ ” It has been repeatedly held in this state that such mistakes, being of law, cannot be corrected. Nelson v. Davis (1872), 40 Ind. 366; Allen v. Anderson (1873), 44 Ind. 395; Baldwin v. Kerlin (1874), 46 Ind. 426; Heavenridge v. Mondy (1875), 49 Ind. 434; Baker v. Pyatt (1886), 108 Ind. 61, 9 N. E. 112; Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Rogers (1894), 11 Ind. App. 72, 38 N. E. 865.
In Nelson v. Davis, supra, the court portrays a situation that aptly describes the one here involved, as we understand it, as follows: “It may, perhaps, be supposed that a scrivener was employed to prepare the deed, to whom the parties explained their purposes in the matter, and that he prepared such an instrument as he supposed would be available in carrying them out, and that the grantors executed it, all parties supposing that the terms employed would be sufficient to effectuate
In Winslow v. Winslow (1875), 52 Ind. 8, deeds had been made to the heirs of certain living persons, and the court said: “It is not contended but that these deeds were void, for the reason that no one can have heirs while living, and that therefore, the grantees cannot be ascertained. Such we find to be the law.” Authorities are cited.
In Outland v. Bowen (1888), 115 Ind. 150, 17 N. E. 281, 7 Am. St. 420, the limitation over was to the “lawful heirs” of Joseph Bowen, the grantor who was then in life. The court said, “As no one can be heir to the living, it follows that there was no person in being competent to take the estate limited over.”
In Tinder v. Tinder (1892), 131 Ind. 381, 30 N. E. 1077, the court, speaking by Elliott, C. J., criticising the doctrine that conveyances to heirs of persons then living are ineffective, says that, “It is possibly true that this court is committed to the doctrine of Hall v. Leonard, 1 Pick. (Mass.) 27, for it has been approved by our decisions,” citing Winslow v. Winslow, supra,
In Booker v. Tarwater (1894), 138 Ind. 385, 37 N. E. 979, a deed purported to convey real estate to “Francis Carrico’s Heirs,” Francis Carrico being alive, and the court held that in the absence of words showing that the grantor meant the term “heirs” to mean “children,” the deed was void for uncertainty. The court reviewing the Tinder case, says: “The court then goes on to hold that where there are any other words in the deed,from which.it may be inferred that the grantors did not use the word heir or heirs in its strict technical legal sense, or that indicate that children were thereby intended, then the rule does not apply, and that effect will be given to the apparent intent. But here there are no other words in the deed to indicate any other intention on the part of the grantor than that he used the word ‘heirs’ in its strict legal sense. He may have meant children, and he may have meant Heirs. This makes it wholly uncertain as to'who the grantees were. If he had used words in addition indicating that he meant children by the word ‘heirs,’ that would have been certain enough, but he might have meant heirs in the legal signification of the word. If he did, then in addition to the fact that a man cannot have heirs while he lives, it would always remain a matter of great uncertainty who the man’s
The case of Prior v. Quackenbush, supra, cited and relied upon by appellants, is readily distinguished from the instant case in this, that “heirs” as therein used is expressly defined as meaning two persons, naming them, they being the only heirs contemplated in the deed involved. There could be no uncertainty as to the persons meant. Had these two persons not been named thereby defining the word “heirs” as used, extrinsic evidence could not have been heard to name them or to show that by the use of the word “heirs,” the grantor meant “children.” As stated above, there must be qualifying words in the deed.
Other questions are discussed but the foregoing is sufficient to justify us in holding that the trial court did not err in its rulings on the demurrers.
Judgment affirmed.