51 P. 774 | Idaho | 1898
The plaintiffs (appellants here) brought their suit in the court below for a partition of certain lands described in the complaint, and in which they claim to be part owners, and tenants in common with certain of the defendants, The facts of the case, as they appear in the record, are substantially as follows: John L. Stephens, in 1867, married the mother of plaintiffs, who is known in the record only as “Cordelia B. Stephens.” During coverture of said John L. and
In 1874 the territorial legislature of Idaho enacted a statute in words as follows: “Upon the dissolution of the community by the death of either the husband or the wife one-half of the common property shall go to the survivor and the other half to the descendants of the deceased husband or wife; the whole, however, is subject to payment of the debts of the deceased. If there be no descendants of the deceased husband or wife, the whole shall go to the survivor, subject to such payment.” (8th Sess. Laws, p. 636, sec. 11.) This statute was repealed in 1879. Under the above statute the plaintiffs claim title to an undivided one-half interest in and to said lands. The defendants contend that the plaintiffs must fail in their action, and that the judgment of nonsuit was proper, among other reasons, for the following, to wit: (1) The burden of proof was on the plaintiffs to show that the said lands were not sold by the said John L. Stephens to pay community debts, and this they failed to do. (2) That the said Milton Kelly was an innocent purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without knowledge or notice of the marriage of said John L. and Cordelia B. Stephens, and did not know that they left children; and the record title to said lands being in said John L. Stephens, and the said Milton Kelly having purchased without any notice of the claims of the plaintiffs, his title is protected in law and in equity. (3) That the action is barred by the statute of limitations, which was pleaded in the answer.
Counsel for the plaintiffs make an able and very ingenious argument to the effect that said statute creates a partnership between the two spouses, as to the community property; that on the death of either spouse the record title, whether in the surviving or deceased spouse, immediately terminates, by operation of law, and vests, one-half in the surviving spouse, and the other half in the descendants of the deceased spouse, who in this case are the plaintiffs. After a careful study of the said statute,
These conclusions are supported by the weight of authority. It would neither be just, reasonable, nor equitable to hold that twenty years after the death of Cordelia B. Stephens, and ten years after the purchase of the lands in question by Milton Kelly for a valuable consideration, in the absence of any allegation or proof showing that said purchaser knew of the existence of the claims of the plaintiffs, and without showing that the sale of said lands was unnecessary to pay community debts, the title, or any part thereof, acquired in apparent good faith by Milton Kelly from one who held, and had held for fifteen years, the paper record title to said lands, could be defeated in the manner attempted by the plaintiffs in this action. A purchaser in good faith from the husband after the death of the wife is not bound to show, in order to support his title against a child of the community, that the sale of the premises conveyed to him was in point of fact necessary to provide for the payment of the community debts. (Cook v. Norman, 50 Cal. 638; Johnston v. Savings Union, 63 Cal. 554; 75 Cal. 143, 7 Am. St. Rep. 129, 16 Pac. 753; Carter v. Conner, 60 Tex. 52; Freeman on Cotenancy and Partition, sec. 149; Jones v. Jones, 15 Tex. 143.)