These several actions for the partition of certain real property, involving the same general facts, were tried together, resulting in judgment for the defendants in each, from which plaintiff appealed.
It appears that Edward F. Wilson was formerly the owner of the property, consisting of farm lands in Blue Earth county. On June 9, 1903, he conveyed 160 acres thereof to his son Arthur F. Wilson, defendant in one of the actions, and by deed bearing date April 2,1903, and a second deed bearing date June 8, 1903, and a third bearing date June 11, 1903, he conveyed 240 acres of the land to his son Henry E. Wilson, defendant in the first entitled action. On March 22, 1909, Henry E. Wilson conveyed 80 acres of the land so conveyed to him to Merritt W. Babcock, defendant in the third action. Immediately following the execution and delivery of the deeds, Arthur and Henry entered into the possession of the tracts conveyed to them and have since continuously lived thereon with their families, making improvements, and paying the taxes assessed against the same, except that Henry surrendered to Babcock the 80 so sold and conveyed to him. One of the considerations for the deeds to the sons was their agreement to pay Wilson annually one dollar per acre for the land conveyed to each during the remainder of his
Plaintiff’s alleged title and interest in the lands and her asserted right to a partition thereof are founded on the claim that prior to the execution and delivery of the deeds just referred to she had become; and thereafter and until his death in 1917 remained, the common law wife of the senior Wilson; that by such relation she became vested with an interest in the lands prior to the transfer, to which she did not assent in writing or otherwise. She fixed January 25, 1903, as the date of the origin of those relations. Defendants offered evidence tending to show that the relationship, to constitute a common law marriage, did not commence, if at all, until July 4,1903. In response, and to obviate the effect of that evidence, plaintiff further claims that the deeds, though executed prior to that date, were not in fact delivered until long thereafter, therefore that her rights as the widow of Wilson have priority, though July 4 be conceded the date of the marriage. Wilson died intestate.
Upon the issues thus presented the trial court found among other things:
“That no marriage ceremony was ever had by and between said Edward F. Wilson and Amanda A. Notestein (plaintiff), and that no agreement in writing or in the presence of witnesses was ever entered by and between said persons, but that from and after a time shortly subsequent to the 4th day of July, 1903, the said Edward F. Wilson and Amanda A. Notestein continuously lived together in common association in the same dwelling and in outward appearance and in their relations to other persons conducted themselves habitually as husband and wife.”
The court further found that the transfer of the land by Wilson was made for a good and valuable consideration, and in consummation of a prior verbal agreement to do so upon certain conditions, not necesary to here state, which the sons had kept and performed. The findings of the court are also to the effect that the deeds were delivered to the grantees on the date of the excutiom. From all of which the court concluded as a matter of law that plaintiff has no
The assignments of error present, among others, the questions: (1) Whether the findings of the trial court to the effect that the rights of plaintiff as the common law wife of decedent originated on July 4, 1903, and not prior thereto; and (2) whether the finding that the deeds were delivered on the date of execution, are sustained by the evidence.
Our conclusion is that the findings have the necessary support in the evidence, and, as the facts found control the result in this court, we pass without comment other general but not decisive points discussed in the briefs. The findings are sufficiently specific in both form and substance.
We need not go further into the facts or discuss the evidence in detail; it is quite voluminous; what has been said covers the case in a general way, and that is sufficient, for we are not required to demonstrate the correctness of the conclusions of the trial court in respect to its findings of fact. Carver v. Bagley, 79 Minn. 114, 81 N. W. 757; Barnum v. Jefferson, 109 Minn. 1, 122 N. W. 453. Upon the pivotal question, the date of the alleged marriage, the evidence is not clear; it is conflicting, presenting a simple question of fact unmixed with legal entanglements. We have considered it in the light of the arguments of counsel with care and are unable to reach the conclusion that the view taken by the learned trial judge is either clearly or as sometimes expressed manifestly against the evidence. The finding, therefore, that the marriage agreement between the parties was not entered into until after July 4, 1903, must be
This covers the case and all that need be said in disposing of the appeal. The evidence has been carefully considered and found not clearly against the findings of the trial court and there the matter must rest; the record presents no reversible error, and the judgments appealed from are therefore affirmed. It is so ordered.
