146 Iowa 660 | Iowa | 1910
Through a chain of conveyances by warranty deed from' the devisee of one James Brewer, the plaintiff claimed title, and was in possession by himself or those holding under him by contract, of the tract of land in controversy, when an action for partition was instituted against him by one Vespasian Warner, claiming to hold legal title to an undivided interest in said land to the extent of fifteen fifty-fourths thereof. This plaintiff, one of the defendants in the partition suit, notified this defendant, who is his immediate, grantor and certain other remote grantors in the chain of title intervening between James Brewer’s devisees and said defendant- to come in
The allegations of plaintiff’s petition with reference to the suit by Warner against him are that, at the time of the execution and delivery of the warranty deed of defendant to him, defendant was not lawfully seised of the legal title by reason of the fact that there was an outstanding legal title to a one-third undivided interest in the land, which said interest was vested in the devisees of one Grace Brewer, the widow of James Brewer, from whom title Was derived, that Warner acquired by deed of conveyance the interests of certain of the devisees of said Grace Brewer, and commenced an action for partition; and plain
By stipulation of counsel in this court we are referred to the record of the case of Warner v. Hamill to determine what was decided in that case, but, as no specific references are made in argument to that record we have not felt called upon to search it for that purpose. We think,
Tbe judgment is reversed.