82 Neb. 1 | Neb. | 1908
December 24, 1894, Eilert O. Eranzen died intestate, leaving seven children and his widow, Tomke M. Eranzen, now by marriage Mrs. Tarnow, the pláintiff in this suit. Deceased owned at the time of his death 124 acres of land in section 33, and 160 acres in section 34, township 2, range 4, in Jefferson county, Nebraska. All of said land was incumbered by a mortgage of about $3,200. He and his family occupied the land in section 34 as their home
About.two years after the administrator’s sale plaintiff was desirous of disposing of the land she had purchased in section 83, and on August 15, 1898, plaintiff and Carmichael entered into a written contract, by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to sell and Carmichael agreed to
In an amended petition, plaintiff set forth the facts as above shown, and alleged, further, that she received no consideration for executing the stipulation incorporated in the mortgage and indorsed on the back of the $2,000 note, in which she agreed to procure a quitclaim deed from thé heirs to the real estate in controversy. Upon request of Carmichael, the heirs were made parties to the action, and each filed a cross-petition, alleging ownership of an undivided one-seventh interest in remainder in the land occupied by their father as a homestead. The prayer of each cross-petition is to the effect that the court adjudge that each is the owner of a one-seventh interest in remainder, and for general relief. Carmichael answered, requesting the court to determine to whom the $2,000 remaining due on the note and mortgage belongs, and that it may be paid accordingly, and prayed that his title to all the land be confirmed and quieted against the claims of all other parties to the action. The district court found that there was no consideration for the promise made by plaintiff to furnish such quitclaim deed, and adjudged that the heirs are not now entitled to the relief prayed for in their answers and cross-petitions; but inquired no further into the equities of the parties, and denied all relief to Carmichael, and decreed a foreclosure of the mortgage for the
It may be well to say at this time that, in view of the record had in the proceedings instituted by the administrator and of the other evidence in this case relative to the value of the land, the homestead interest was not sold by the administrator. The doctrine of caveat emptor applies to Carmichael. He was bound to take notice of the license and of the authority of the administrator and the power of the court. The evidence discloses that the land was capable of division, and that the homestead could have been appraised and set out by metes and bounds. The title, therefore, of the Franzen heirs in remainder has never been disturbed by any proceedings had. They are the owners, and have been at all times, of the homestead of their father, subject to the life estate of their mother, the plaintiff! herein. But it cannot be said that the plaintiff is now the owner of the life estate. She joined with the administrator in asking for the sale of all the land, and accepted a part of the purchase price thereof in lieu of her life estate. She is estopped from now claiming such title or interest in the land. That interest has been sold and conveyed to Carmichael. It is argued by Carmichael that, in the event the homestead title cannot be impressed upon the $2,000 for which he gave his note and mortgage, he should not be required to pay the same until quitclaim deeds from the Franzen heirs ar,e procured by the plaintiff, as stipulated. Plaintiff contends that her agreement to secure quitclaim deeds from the Franzen heirs to the land in 34 cannot be enforced, for the reason that there was no consideration given for such promise, as Carmichael was bound by contract to pay her this $2,000 on March 1,1899. If we could resolve this question against her, the case could easily be disposed of. A discussion of this question is unnecessary. We have given it careful attention, and have concluded that such promise was without consideration. See Esterly Harvesting Machine Co. v. Pringle, 41
There are broad principles of equity which call for recognition, and which must control the disposition of this case. At the time of the administrator’s sale, when the plaintiff by her conduct sold her interest in the homestead to Carmichael, or, in other words, barred herself from asserting title therein against him, she was entitled to receive the value of her interest at that time. She was entitled to the then value of the use of the homestead during her life. Whatever was hers, she received, but she received more. The excess did not belong to her. It was paid to her by mistake. It became a trust fund in her hands. Equity will so regard it, and will follow it so far as it may be identified.
It is argued that the doctrine of caveat emptor bars Carmichael from asserting any right to the fund in controversy. Indeed, purchasers at judicial sales buy at their risk, and to them the doctrine of caveat emptor applies, and they cannot take title as against parties not in court, or against those whose interests are not disposed of in the proceeding in which the judicial sale is made. We have applied this doctrine as against Carmichael and in favor of the Franzen heirs because the court in the proceedings instituted by the administrator did not attempt to dispose of their interests, and had no power to do so. But can it be said in justice and equity that this court will enforce the doctrine of caveat emptor as against Carmichael and in favor of the widow to the extent that we will permit her to retain the money she was not entitled to which was paid to her through mistake, and that mistake occasioned partially through her conduct? The doctrine of caveat emptor does not prevent a purchaser
It has been suggested that Carmichael might be entitled to subrogation to the $3,300 mortgage which was upon all of the Franzen land at the time of the administrator’s sale, inasmuch as his money was used for the satisfaction of the mortgage. We cannot see wherein he is entitled to subrogation, or wherein it would avail him. As he is not required to account for the rents and profits during his occupancy of the land in controversy, he has received all the benefits which he would be entitled to re
It is contended by the plaintiff that in the general distribution of her husband’s estate she has received less than she was entitled to, taking into consideration the dower interest which the law would have given her, and which she claims she has never received. We consider it unnecessary to discuss this question at length. The following facts, however, stand out prominently in the record against her contention. By joining with her husband in the mortgages upon the land, she waived her dower interest therein to the extent of the mortgages. Considering the land worth $7,100, and deducting therefrom the amount paid in satisfaction of the mortgage and the value of the homestead, we find a surplus of but $1,761. Her dower interest at the time of the sale was not of very great value. And, again, in this connection, we mention the fact that she, as the widow of Franzen, made application to the court to have the land sold in its entirety, and therefore she should have looked to the proceeds of the sale for the satisfaction of her dower.
The Franzen heirs were not estopped from alleging their title to the homestead of their father by their failure to object to the confirmation of the administrator’s sale. No record made in that proceeding challenged their attention to the attempted conveyance of the homestead by the administrator, and the court being without power to sell the homestead, and the heirs receiving no consideration for their interest therein, are not barred by the decree of confirmation nor by their own conduct from asserting the title they inherited. The district court should have affirmed their title to the homestead.
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the lower court be reversed and this cause remanded to the district court, with instructions to enter a decree quieting the title of the Franzen heirs as remaindermen in and to the homestead of their father, and further that an ac
By the Court: For the reasons given above, the judgment of the district court is reversed and this cause is remanded to the district court, with instructions to proceed further in the matter as recommended in the opinion.
Reversed.