82 Ind. 365 | Ind. | 1882
Elizabeth Westerfield, the plaintiff in this case, complained that she was the wife of William D. Westerfield, and that she and her said husband were in the possession of, and residing upon, the northwest quarter of section 35, in township 23 north, of range 6 east, in Grant county; that she was the equitable owner of the undivided five-ninths of said tract of land; that the defendant Samuel J. Kimmer claimed to have become the purchaser of the entire tract
Prayer for an injunction and partition.
Trial by the court; finding for the defendants; motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the finding.
The reasons assigned for a reversal of the judgment are, that the finding was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and was contrary to the law arising upon the facts established at the trial.
It was made to appear by the evidence, that the plaintiff and the said William D. Westerfield were married in the year 1839; that prior to the year 1853 the husband, William D. Westerfield, had purchased either the entire title to, or some undivided interests in, an eighty-one acre tract of land in Fayette county, for the whole of which he had ultimately to pay the aggregate sum of about $1,400; that on the 6th day of January, 1853, the plaintiff received from her father’s estate, and as one of the legatees under his will, the sum of $500, which she, within the next two weeks, turned over to her said husband, with an understanding and agreement with him that said money was to be invested by him in real estate for her benefit; that the money was after-wards used by her said husband in paying for the tract of land so purchased by him, and on which they then resided, with the further understanding and agreement that the plaintiff was to have an interest in -the land in proportion to the amount of money so furnished by her; that in July, 1864, the said William D. Westerfield purchased the land in controversy of one Kirkpatrick for the sum of $4,000, payable in instalments, and received a conveyance in his own name; that some months afterwards, that is, towards the close of the year 1864, he and the plaintiff sold the Fayette county land to one Weaver for the like sum of $4,000,
Upon these facts it is most earnestly contended that Mrs. Westerfield has become absolutely entitled to one undivided third part of the land mentioned in her complaint, as the wife of the said William D. Westerfield, under the act of March 11th, 1875, concerning the inchoate interests of married women in the lands of their husbands, and is also the equitable owner of one-third of the remaining two undivided third parts of said land as against Kimmer as well as her husband.
By the express terms of the act of 1875, to which reference is made, its provisions are only applicable to sales made on judgments which have been rendered since it went into effect. Section 2, Acts 1875, p. 179.
Kimmer’s claim to title in this case rests upon the sheriff’s sale made on the judgment rendered in favor of the bank in 1872, before that act was passed, and not on the decree of foreclosure entered in 1876. Hence, Mrs. Westerfield’s interest remains an inchoate, and not an absolute, interest.
Under the circumstances, Kimmer’s purchase of the decree of foreclosure operated as a cancellation, and not as an assignment, of the sheriff’s certificate of purchase issued upon it, and for that reason Kimmer acquired no title under the sheriff’s sale upon that decree.
We are, also, unable to see any ground upon which Mrs. Westerfield can base a claim to a resulting trust in the land in dispute. By the law in force in this State at the time she received money from her father’s estate, that money instantly became the property of her husband, and hence constituted
The common-law rule, which gave to the husband absolutely the personal estate of the wife, continued in force in this State until the 24th day of July, 1853, when an act of the Legislature of that year, establishing a different rule, went into effect. Buchanan v. Lee, 69 Ind. 117; Miller v. Blackburn, 14 Ind. 62; Holland v. Moody, 12 Ind. 170.
No trust, therefore, resulted to Mrs. Westerfield in the Fayette county land, and, as a consequence, she acquired no separate interest in the Grant county land, having had no share in the money which ■went to pay for it.
To establish a resulting trust by oral testimony, in opposition to the face of a deed, the evidence must be clear and explicit. Facts must also be shown from which a trust resulted at the time the deed was made and the legal title vested in the grantee. Perry Trusts, section 133; Fausler v. Jones, 7 Ind. 277; Turner v. First National Bank of Madison, 78 Ind. 19.
The evidence in this case fairly tended to show that William D. Westerfield had purchased the Fayette county land before he received the money which came to his wife from her fether’s estate, and before he had any agreement with her as to the manner in which that money was to be invested. Consequently, no trust could have resulted in favor of the wife at the time he purchased that' land.
The evidence failed to show notice, either actual or constructive, to Kimmer of Mrs. Westerfield’s claim at the time he purchased the land sued for. That constituted a fatal objection to her right to recover. Milner v. Hyland, 77 Ind. 458. Her residence on the land with her husband did not amount to such a possession on her part as constituted notice of a separate and distinct claim to any portion of it. Her possession was, under the circumstances, simply and only the possession of her husband. 2 Bishop Married Women, section 135.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.