89 Ind. 73 | Ind. | 1882
Lead Opinion
Petition by the appellants for partition. The facts alleged in the petition are, in substance, the following: Philip Hauk died testate, seized of a tract of land consisting of three pieces of 40 acres each, and a fourth piece of 77 acres; by his last will he devised the first named pieces, one to each, to Daniel Hauk, Absalom Hauk and Marion Hauk, appellees, and the fourth piece to his widow, Sarah Hauk, for life, with remainder to the appellants Margaret A. Switzer and Mary C. Comas, and the appellee Amanda L. Gray. The widow elected to take under the law, and, having thus become the owner of the undivided one-third of all the lands so devised, conveyed the same by deed to the appellants and the said Amanda L. Gray. Upon these facts the appellants claimed to be the owners each of the undivided one-ninth of the lands devised to the appellees Daniel, Absalom and Marion Hauk respectively, and asked that partition be made accordingly.
The appellee Amanda Gray made default, but afterwards filed an answer disclaiming any interest. The other appellees named answered by a denial, and by two special pleas, to which the appellants demurred, and have assigned error upon the overruling of the demurrers.
In the first of these pleas, being the second paragraph of the answer, it is alleged, in addition to the facts stated in the petition, that by the terms of the will the devisees of the three 40 acre pieces of land were required to pay to the executor the sum of $500, to be applied in discharge of debts and legacies; that after her election to take under the law, and before the making of the conveyance to the appellants and Amanda Gray, the widow and the defendants, in 1879, mutually -agreed to a partition of said lands, and by virtue of this parol agreement of partition their several lines were fixed and the fences set upon the lines agreed upon and the said Sarah and each of these defendants agreed upon the parcel of land which each should take as owner in severalty, and accordingly they each did take exclusive possession of their re
It may be noted here that it is not stated, in any of the pleadings, who were the heirs at law of Philip Hauk, or that he left heirs. The contrary not being averred, it is to be presumed that the defendants who joined in this plea each took, under the alleged agreement with the widow, the particular piece of land which had been devised to him. These defendants, so far as it appears, had no interest whatever in the piece of 77 acres, of which the widow is alleged to have taken possession for her part. The result of the alleged parol partition is, therefore, no partition at all, but simply an agreement or consent on the part of the widow, after electing to take under the law, to refrain from claiming an interest in the lands devised to said defendants, in consideration that they should pay to the executor the sum which, by the terms of the devise under which they held, they were already bound to pay.
This agreement to renounce her interest in land was not binding upon her, both because not in writing and because without consideration; and nothing is averred which shows an estoppel against her asserting her rights. Neither is there shown such an adverse possession by the defendants as to invalidate the conveyance made by her to the appellants and Amanda Gray. 1 Washb. Real Prop. (3d ed.) 566, 587; 3
The fifth paragraph of the answer differs from the second in that it is alleged that the appellants and the appellee Gray were parties to the alleged parol partition, and that it was a part of the agreement that the widow should own and hold in fee all of the 77 acres, and at her death should invest the appellants and Gray with the title thereto, and that her deed whereby she conveyed her interest in the lands to the appellants and Gray was made in pursuance and for the pui’pose of accomplishing this agreement.
We do hot perceive that this paragraph is any better than the second. In respect to the lands of which partition is sought, both paragraphs show that Mrs. Hauk, being a tenant in common of one piece with Daniel Plauk, of another piece with Absalom Hauk, and of the third piece with Marion Hauk, agreed with them by parol and without consideration, that she would release and renounce her interest to them each in his respective piece, and they accordingly each made improvements. As between tenants in common no such part performance is shown as to take the case out of the statute of frauds, if the agreement were otherwise binding. Adamson v. Lamb, 3 Blackf. 446; Atkinson v. Jackson, 8 Ind. 31; Lafollett v. Kyle, 51 Ind. 446.
We do not question that “A parol division, carried into effect by possessions taken according to it, will be, sufficient to sever the possessions as between tenants in common whose titles are distinct, and when the only object of the division is to ascertain the separate possessions of each.” Jackson v. Harder, 4 Johns. 202. Wood v. Fleet, 36 N. Y. 499; Moore v. Kerr, 46 Ind. 468. No such case is presented in this record.
The appellees who filed these special pleas also joined in a cross complaint which is obnoxious to the same objections as the pleas-
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrers to the second and fifth paragraphs
Rehearing
On Petition for a Rehearing.
In their very earnest and able brief for a rehearing, the learned counsel for the appellees assume that the appellees Daniel, Absalom, and Marion Hauk are children of Philip Hauk, deceased. If this is a fact, the pleadings fail to show it. The parties may, on the return of the case to the court below, reconstruct their pleadings, and when the fact of the relationship, assumed as above stated, is properly brought to the attention of the court, a question may be presented which can not be decided in the present condition of the pleadings. The opinion of the court pronounced by the Chief Justice, on the record before us, is without doubt a correct exposition of the law.
The petition for a rehearing is overruled.