Back v. Back

148 Iowa 223
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 9, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 148 Iowa 223 (Back v. Back) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Back v. Back, 148 Iowa 223 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

McClain, J.

The facts out of which this controversy arises are not in dispute, being settled by stipulation of the parties appearing in the record. So far as we deem them material to a disposition of the case, they are as follows: In 1890, William Back, the decedent, married a widow, one Mrs. Dirke, who then had living a daughter by her former husband. The daughter is the plaintiff in this case, In 1900, the wife obtained a divorce from said William [225]*225Back, aud four years later he married the plaintiff. No children were born to William Back by bis first marriage, but as a result of bis marriage to plaintiff four children were born, all of whom survive him. About two years after tbe second marriage tbe divorced wife, mother of tbe plaintiff, died, and thereafter plaintiff and tbe decedent continued to live together as husband and wife until bis death in 1906. Tbe resistance of defendant to plaintiff’s application as widow to have tbe exempt property set apart to her was on tbe ground that tbe marriage was incestuous and void under the.'provisions of Code, section 4936, which within tbe definition of “incest” includes marriage between a man and his wife’s daughter, and prohibits such marriage. Tbe trial court ruled throughout that, notwithstanding tbe termination by divorce of tbe marriage between decedent and plaintiff’s mother before tbe marriage of decedent to this plaintiff, plaintiff continued to be decedent’s wife’s daughter within tbe statutory definition, and that tbe marriage to plaintiff was void in its inception and continued to be void ’after tbe death of plaintiff’s mother and until tbe death of decedent, and that, therefore, plaintiff is not tbe widow of decedent. Before- reaching tbe question as to tbe correctness of this ruling of tbe trial court, it will be necessary, however, to pass on a question of practice for tbe purpose of determining whether such ruling is properly before us for review.

1. Pleadings: effect of adverse ruling on demurrer. I. Defendant’s answer fully set out tbe facts on which was based the claim that the marriage of decedent to this plaintiff was void, and the demurrer of plaintiff to such answer distinctly raised the question whether it was prohibited under the statute alrea¿y referred to. This demurrer was overruled, and the plaintiff by standing on her demurrer and submitting to judgment might on appeal have had that question adjudicated in this court. Had she done so, a decision in this court affirming the ruling on the demurrer [226]*226would have concluded the controversy, and plaintiff would have had no opportunity to raise any other questions of law or fact in the case. She evidently desired, however, to raise other issues and havé them adjudicated, and therefore, instead of standing upon her demurrer, she filed a reply in the first division of which she alleged the same facts as to the marriage of decedent to Mrs. Dirke, the procuring of a divorce by her from him, and the second marriage of decedent to this plaintiff, no issue having resulted from the former marriage, as fully as such facts had been already stated in defendant’s answer, but with the legal conclusion that she was the due and legal wife of decedent, and entitled to participate as his widow in the estate of said decedent, and in other divisions of her reply she alleged facts relied upon as constituting an estoppel of defendant to assert the invalidity of the marriage. Thereupon the defendant demurred to each division of the reply, challenging the sufficiency of the facts pleaded in tke first division thereof as constituting a sufficient reply to defendant’s answer for various reasons, one of which was that the facts so alleged were fully set out in the answer to which the reply was filed, and had been held sufficient as a defense by the ruling on the demurrer thereto. This demurrer of defendant to plaintiff’s reply was sustained. Thereupon the case came on for trial on the issue arising as to the truth of the facts alleged in defendant’s answer which were by our rules of pleading deemed denied by operation of law. By stipulation the plaintiff admitted the facts to be as alleged in defendant’s answer, but objected to their being considered in evidence, for the reason substantially that they did not tend to show the invalidity of the marriage between plaintiff and decedent; and this objection was by the court overruled. Thereupon plaintiff' offered evidence by way of stipulation as to the facts tending to support the allegations of her reply in estoppel, to the consideration of which defendant objected on the ground [227]*227that such facts did not tend to support any issue -in the case, and this objection was by the court sustained. The court then sustained a motion for defendant on the record to render judgment in his favor for costs, and entered a judgment to that effect, in which it was recited that plaintiff never was the legal wife of decedent, and was not entitled to recover under the law as his widow and dismissed plaintiff’s application.

The contention of appellee now is that appellant by filing the reply after her demurrer to the answer had been sustained waived any error in such ruling, and can not now rely upon such alleged error as a ground for reversal. The rule which was well established by earlier decisions of this court, to the effect that, by amending or pleading over after a ruling on a demurrer, the unsuccessful party waived any error in such ruling, had the manifest result of depriving him of an opportunity to insist upon an error of law committed in a ruling on a demurrer if he by amendment stating additional facts relied upon as constituting' a cause of action, or by pleading additional matters of defense or reply, sought to raise other issues than those arising on the pleadings as they stood at the time the ruling against him on demurrer was made. For instance, the defendant could not question the legal sufficiency of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, and also question their truth. If he demurred to their sufficiency, and his demurrer was overruled, and standing on his demurrer judgment was entered against him, he could not afterward, when by appeal it had been determined that the ruling on demurrer was correct, get back into court 'for the purpose of contesting the truth of the allegations; while, on the other hand, if he relied subsequently on a denial of the truth of the allegations and went to issue on the facts, he could not on appeal question the correctness of the ruling on the demurrer, for any error in such ruling would have been waived by pleading over. By amendatory legislation incorporated now into Code, [228]*228section 3564, it was the evident purpose of the Legislature to abolish this rule so inconsistent with our system of pleading, by which either party is allowed to raise every issue of law and fact inhering in the case, and to have every ruling prejudicial to him reviewed on appeal. By that section it is provided that a ruling on demurrer shall" not be considered as an adjudication of any question raised by the demurrer and the sufficiency of the pleading may thereafter be determined as if no demurrer had been filed, and no pleading shall be held sufficient on account of a failure to demur thereto. Under these provisions, it has been repeatedly held that a ruling on demurrer does not become the law of the case, and the same question may be raised at subsequent stages of the procedure as though no such ruling had been made. Marshall Ice Co. v. La Plant, 136 Iowa, 621; Watkins v. Iowa Cent. R. Co., 123 Iowa, 390.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Iowa 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/back-v-back-iowa-1910.