52 A.2d 2 | Conn. | 1947
This is an action brought by a cotenant seeking partition or, as an alternative, sale *426
of real estate. The named defendant has appealed from a judgment for the plaintiff decreeing that the real estate be sold. The statutory proceeding for sale in such a case as this (General Statutes 5927) is ancillary to that for partition (General Statutes 5922); Kaiser v. Second National Bank,
The facts are as follows: The defendant conveyed an undivided one-half interest in his farm to the plaintiff on September 19, 1936. About six weeks later the parties were married. They lived on the farm and worked it together until 1940 when, because of disagreements, the plaintiff left and has never returned. The defendant continued to live on the farm and derived an income from the land and from renting rooms in the house thereon. The plaintiff did not pay any of the expenses. On April 28, 1944, the defendant was granted an ex parte divorce from the plaintiff on the ground of desertion. On November 1, 1944, the defendant brought an action against the plaintiff to recover one-half of the expenses paid for the upkeep of the farm from May 14, 1940, when she left it, to the date of the complaint. Judgment for $1000 was entered in the action for the defendant herein, upon stipulation of the parties. The defendant then filed a judgment lien upon the plaintiff's one-half interest in the farm, and thereafter brought an action to foreclose it in which he obtained judgment fixing October 1, 1946, as the day for redemption. The parties have stipulated before us that the law day has been extended to March 25, 1947. *427 No appeal was taken from the judgment and no part of the debt has been paid. The plaintiff has never intended to surrender her interest in the farm. At no time has the defendant held adversely to the plaintiff but has continuously recognized her interest in the farm.
The defendant's claims pursued in his brief are that the "conclusion" of the trial court that the plaintiff did not intend to surrender her interest in the farm is not supported by the subordinate facts found; that the plaintiff was out of possession from the date of her desertion of the defendant in 1940; and that in any event she was ousted of possession by the foreclosure judgment of October 24, 1945. The trial court found as a fact that the plaintiff did not intend to surrender or relinquish her interest in the farm, and that finding is not attacked in the assignments of error. Intent is the determining element in deciding whether the plaintiff had relinquished her interest. Kievman v. Grevers,
The defendant's chief reliance for the claim that the plaintiff was not in a position to bring an action for partition after leaving the farm in 1940 is upon the authority of Adam v. Ames Iron Co.,
The remaining question is as to the effect of the foreclosure judgment. The defendant contends that the judgment changed the legal status of the parties before the day for redemption had arrived. We have said that, technically, strict foreclosure works no change in the legal title as the mortgagee derives such title from the mortgage itself and the decree simply converts this into an absolute title by extinguishing the equity of redemption. Dawson v. Orange,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.