45 Ind. 589 | Ind. | 1874
This was an action by the appellant, against the appellees, who were the widow and heirs at law of Joseph E. Hepner, deceased, to recover possession of certain real estate situate in said county of Vermillion.
The complaint was in three .paragraphs. The first was in the usual statutory form. In the others, the alleged facts were stated more specifically. In them it was alleged in substance, that in 1834 the plaintiffs recovered a judgment in
Issue, trial by jury, verdict and judgment for the defendants William and Greenbury Plepner. William and Green-bury, we suppose, obtained their verdict and judgment on •the ground of the conveyance to them of the property, and not on the ground of inheritance from their father. The *other heirs of Joseph E., though some or all of them made
The record is somewhat confused, but we gather from if that William and Greenbury answered together, as follows:
1st. General denial.
2d. Statute of limitations of twenty years.
3d. Statute of limitations of twenty years.
4th. To the second and third paragraphs of complaint, statute of limitations of fifteen years.
5th. To the second paragraph of complaint, statute of limitations of six years.
6th. To the same paragraph, statute of limitations of twenty years.
7th. To the third paragraph, statute of limitations of twenty years.
8th. To the third paragraph, statute of limitations of six years.
gth. To the second and third paragraphs, that before the commencement of the action the said Joseph E. Hepner fully paid and satisfied the judgment in the Park Circuit Court.
The ninth paragraph seems to have been stricken out on motion of plaintiff, but afterward, as we infer from the record, a demurrer was filed to the fourth and ninth paragraphs, for want of sufficient facts, which was overruled, and exception ■taken. As there was no proof offered in support of the ninth paragraph of the answer, we incline to think it was not regarded as in the record. We shall, therefore, not notice it further.
The plaintiff moved to strikeout all the paragraphs of the .answer, except the first, the general denial, but the motion was overruled, and he excepted. This ruling is assigned for ■error. We think there was no error ip this ruling. The statute, it is true, provides that in actions to recover possession of real estate, every defence, whether legal or equitable,
It is assigned for error that the court erred in overruling the several demurrers to the answers. We find no demurrer in the record except to the fourth and ninth paragraphs of the answer. The ninth, as we have seen, was struck out on motion. The fourth, directed to the second and third paragraphs of the complaint, was the statute of limitations of fifteen years. These paragraphs of the complaint, as well as the first, were for the recovery of the possession of the land. The period within which such actions must be brought is twenty, and not fifteen years. 2 G. & H. 158, sec. 211. The answer in question was bad, and the demurrer to it should have been sustained. If these paragraphs of the complaint had sought nothing more than the quieting of the plaintiff’s title, perhaps the fifteen-year limitation, provided for in sec. 212, would have applied to them, but this is only suggested, and not decided.
We have thus noticed, we believe, all the questions made upon the pleadings in the cause. The plaintiff filed a reply of general denial.
There was one trial of the cause, which resulted in a finding for the defendants, and the record proceeds as follows: “And on motion of said plaintiff under the statute authorizing new trials, it is ordered that a new trial be granted in. this cause, and that the cause be continued until the next term of this court.” Afterward it was tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment as before stated.
The appellees make the point that the order granting a new trial and all subsequent proceedings were nullities. The ground on- which this is claimed is, as we understand
It may be gathered from the evidence that after Wilkinson purchased the land at sheriff’s sale, as the property of Joseph E. Hepner, and received the sheriff’s deed therefor, he sold it back to Hepner for one hundred and thirty dollars, which the latter paid, but he being insolvent procured Wilkinson and wife to convey it to the two boys, William and Greenbury, who paid no part of the consideration,’to place it beyond the reach of creditors; that afterward the plaintiff purchased the land at sheriff’s sale on execution issued on his Park county judgment, and received the sheriff’s, deed therefor; and that from the time of the plaintiff’s purchase to the death of Joseph E. Hepner, the latter with his. family occupied the land.
The court gave the following, amongst other charges, to. which the plaintiff excepted:
“ 1st. The statute provides that actions for the recovery of the 'possession of real estate shall be commenced within, twenty years after the cause of action has accrued, and not. afterward. The defendants in this case have set up that the-plaintiff’s action did not accrue within twenty years before-the commencement of this suit. The plaintiff’s action-accrued at the time of the delivery of the sheriff’s deed to. him, if such deed was delivered; and if you believe from.*594 the evidence that Wilkinson and wife made a deed to- William and Greenbury Hepner, while they were infants, in 1836, and lived with their father, Joseph E. Hepner, on the land in controversy; and if you' believe that the sons and father continuously occupied said land from the date of said deed to the sons until 1867, and Vanduyn has never been in possession, the plaintiff is barred by the statute of limitations, and you should give a verdict for the defendants.
“ 3d. In this case, the deed of Wilkinson to William and Greenbury - Hepner bears date June 20th, 1836, and was recorded. The sale of the land to Vanduyn on his execution by the sheriff was made August 10th, 1838. The title of Wiliiam and Greenbury Hepner is the oldest title and has priority in point of time; and if the consideration was paid to Wilkinson by Joseph E. Hepner, and the deed to his two sons was made to defraud Vanduyn and other creditors, the title so conveyed was good against Joseph E. Hepner and all the world, except as to creditors; and John Vanduyn as a creditor had six years within which to attack and have the said deed set aside for fraud; and if you believe their deed was put upon record, and duly recorded, and that six years had elapsed from that time before the commencement of this suit by the plaintiff, he cannot now attack said deed for fraud, and you should find for the defendants William and Greenbury Hepner.”
It is claimed by the appellant that the first instruction is erroneous, inasmuch as it assumes that the mere fact of occupancy for twenty years by Hepner would bar the plaintiff’s right- of recovery. “This,” say the counsel, “is not the law, even if Hepner were not the "execution defendant. An occupancy of a hundred years would not bar the owner •unless- such occupancy was under claim of title and ownership, and was absolutely adverse. No length of occupancy will bar the true owner, unless such occupancy is hostile.5’ Upon this point, a number of authorities are cited. This brings us to a point that has not been decided, so far as we are advised, under the code of 1852. It maybe conceded
The statute of 1852, 2 G. & H. 158, sec. 211, provides that the “ the following actions shall be commenced within the periods herein prescribed after the cause of action has accrued, and not afterwards: * * * for the recovery of the possession of real estate—within twenty years.”
The plain reading of this statute requires the action to be brought within twenty years after the cause of action has accrued; and this, whether the defendant’s possession has been under a claim of title or otherwise, or whether his possession has been adverse or otherwise. Whenever the right or cause of action has accrued, the statute begins to run. An English statute enacted “that after the 31st day of December, 1833, no person shall make an entry or distress, or bring an action to recover any land or rent, but within twenty years next after the time at which the right to make such entry or distress, or. to bring such action, shall have first accrued to some person through whom he claims; or, if such right shall not have accrued to any person through whom he claims, then within twenty years next after the time at which the right to make such entry or distress, or to bring such action, shall have first accrued to the person making or bringing the same.” This statute we quote from Smith Lead. Cas., 7 Am. ed,, p. 561. In the case of
Keeping in view the explicit language of the statute, and the authorities cited upon the construction of asimilar statute, we are of opinion that th© possession of the defendants need not have been adverse or hostile to the plaintiff, in order that the lapse of the specified time should bar the action. Consequently, the charge was unobjectionable so far as the point we have been considering is concerned.
But it is clear that if after the purchase by Vanduyn, Joseph E. Hepner, either by express contract with Vanduyn, or by circumstances from which the law will imply such contract, became the tenant of Vanduyn, the possession of Hepner was the possession of Vanduyn, and the statute of limitations would not begin to run until such tenancy was in some way terminated. This brings us to a point that may here be properly noticed. It was proved on the trial that when the deed was made to the boys, William and Green-bury, they were not over six or eight years old; that after the sale to Vanduyn, Joseph E. Hepner lived on the land, farmed it, raised his family, including the two boys, who lived with him as members of the family, cleared some of the land, made and repaired fences and buildings, and used the crops; that when the two boys came of age, they married and lived on the place for a while, but about eighteen years before the trial moved off and went west. It might
The plaintiff also offered to prove by himself, as against William and Greenbury, the same tenancy and agreement, but the evidence was excluded, and the plaintiff excepted.
We are of opinion that the evidence offered and rejected was competent, as tending to show that the elder Hepner occupied as the tenant of the plaintiff and that the court erred in its exclusion. The plaintiff was a competent wit- • ness to prove the facts to which he offered to testify, and the • facts were admissible. The admissions or statements of' Joseph E. Hepner were admissible against William and Greenbury, so far as they claimed by descent from their father, if not in respect to their claim by purchase.
We proceed now to the consideration of the third charge above set out. That charge was, in our opinion, radically wrong. It has been the law of Indiana from an early period, that whether a deed be fraudulent and void as to creditors, may be examined and decided in an action of ejectment. Brown v. Wyncoop, 2 Blackf. 230. In very many actions to recover the possession of real estate, the plaintiff’s right to recover depends upon the question whether some deed, under which the defendant claims, is fraudulent and void. The
There are some other questions made in the cause which are not very important, and which may not arise upon-another trial. We therefore pass them. For the errors above noticed, the judgment below will have to be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.