Bedal v. Sake

66 L.R.A. 60, 77 P. 638, 10 Idaho 270, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 34
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 66 L.R.A. 60 (Bedal v. Sake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedal v. Sake, 66 L.R.A. 60, 77 P. 638, 10 Idaho 270, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 34 (Idaho 1904).

Opinions

STOCKSLAGER, J. —

The plaintiffs filed their amended complaint, to which defendant demurred. The demurrer was sustained and plaintiffs refusing to further plead, judgment was ordered entered in favor of defendant for costs.

The amended complaint alleges that plaintiffs, Charles Bedal and Maggie Bedal, ever since the twentieth day of March, 1900, have been husband and wife; that the plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, and the defendant, Harry Sake, are the joint owners and tenants in common of eighty acres of land in Ada county; alleges the marriage of Maggie Bedal and Harry Sake in the state of Iowa in the year 1872, “and thereafter lived together as husband and wife until January, 1895; that in the month of March, 1899, said Maggie Bedal commenced a suit against said Harry Sake for a divorce in the circuit court of the state of Oregon, in the county of Clackamas, and in the month of May, 1899, a decree of divorce was duly allowed and entered, .... and that said decree of divorce is now in full force and effect; .... that no mention was made in said plaintiff’s complaint for divorce of any property of any kind or description whatever, nor was any property rights of said parties mentioned in any of the proceedings, nor did said court adjudge or decree any property rights, or give plaintiff any alimony, or require said Harry Sake to give or pay to plaintiff in that action any money or property.The only effect of the decree being to dissolve the marriage relation.That there never has been any settlement or agreement of any kind between said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, and defendant, Harry Sake, of any property rights existing between them, nor has said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, by any act on her part waived her interest in and to the aforesaid community property; that the said circuit court of Oregon had full jurisdiction at the time said divorce decree was rendered of the said parties and subject matter in said divorce proceedings; that in said divorce proceeding personal service was not had upon said defendant Harry Sake, but service was duly had by publication in compliance with the laws of the state of [273]*273Oregon relative to service by publication in divorce proceedings; that at the date of said decree of divorce said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, and said defendant, Harry Sake, were, now are, and ever since said date of said decree, joint owners and tenants in common of all of the aforesaid real property, and the whole thereof was acquired, purchased and taken up from the United States government with the efforts, labor and expense of both plaintiff, Maggie Bedal and defendant, Harry Sake, during the time they were living together as husband and wife; that on or about October 4, 1893, with the consent and request of said defendant, Harry Sake, said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, filed for record a written declaration of homestead upon the aforesaid real property in recorder’s office of Ada county; said declaration was duly signed and acknowledged by said Maggie Bedal in the name of Maggie Sake, who at the time was the lawful wife of said Harry Sake, and was living and residing upon said real property with said defendant as their home and place of residence.”

The fourth allegation is that plaintiffs are informed and believe, and therefore allege, that Maggie Bedal is now the owner of and entitled to an undivided one-half part or interest in and to the aforesaid real estate, and that Harry Sake is now the owner also of an undivided one-half part or interest in said real estate; that defendant, Harry Sake, now is, and ever since on or about the thirtieth day of January, 1895, has been, in the possession of said property, and does, and has ever since said date, refused to allow said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, to enter upon, take possession, occupy or use said real estate or any part thereof, although she has requested and demanded said defendant to allow her to use said real estate, and has asserted her rights to her interest in said property by claiming and notifying said defendant as to the same; that she has never made conveyance of her said interest in said property to anyone; that there are no liens or encumbrances on said property appearing of record or to the knowledge of plaintiffs, and that no persons other than the said plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, and said defendant are interested in said premises as owners or otherwise. That plaintiffs are informed and believe, and therefore allege, that said premises produce each year a crop of the value of $500 net over [274]*274and above all expenses necessary for maintaining said premises and the raising of said crop, and that said premises have produced said crops each year since on or about the thirtieth day of January, 1895. Then follows a prayer for judgment for a partition of the said real property according to the respective rights of the parties aforesaid; or if a partition cannot be had without material injury to those rights, then for a sale of said premises and a division of the proceeds. The demurrer to this complaint is on two grounds: "1. That the complaint does not. state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. 2. That, said complaint is ambiguous, unintelligible and uncertain in this: that paragraph 3 of said amended complaint, commencing at the word ‘that’ in the fourteenth line of said paragraph to and including the word 'Sake’ in the thirtieth line of said paragraph is a single sentence in which no positive allegation of fact is made, in that several allegations are attempted to be made in said sentence, said allegations being connected with each other by the conjunctions ‘or’ and ‘nor,’ and that it does not appear therefrom what course or action was taken with reference to the matters and things therein referred to and as to what was, and was not, done with reference to the matters and things and by the parties therein referred to; and that it does not appear therefrom upon what theory the plaintiffs rely as to the matters and things therein stated; that in the fifth paragraph of said amended complaint in the ninth and tenth lines thereof that the following allegation, That said Maggie Bedal has never made a valid conveyance of her said interest in her said real property to anyone/ is ambiguous and uncertain in this: that the inference is that a conveyance of some kind or, character was made by said alleged Maggie Bedal to some person or persons who may or may not have an interest in this litigation, and who may be proper and" necessary parties either plaintiffs or defendants herein; and that said language implies that a conveyance was made hv plaintiff, said alleged Maggie Bedal, either to this defendant or some other person or persons, leaving said allegation ambiguous and uncertain as to the intent and meaning of the plaintiffs."

[275]*275We have read the briei of counsel for appellant, together with the authorities cited with a great deal of interest and care. He insists that notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff, Maggie Bedal, left her husband and home in Ada county, Idaho, in the month of January, 1895, went to the state of Oregon and in the month of May, 1899, obtained a decree of divorce from her husband and on the twentieth day of March, 1900, became the wife of her coplaintiff, Charles Bedal, that she is entitled to recover her interest in the property left in Idaho when she took up her residence in Oregon. The laws of Idaho deal very fairly with the wife in regard to community property. Certainly no fair-minded person would say that the wife should not share equally in the accumulation of a lifetime spent in the acquisition of property, and that is what our statute gives to the wife. Our divorce laws are certainly as liberal as could be desired.

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Bluebook (online)
66 L.R.A. 60, 77 P. 638, 10 Idaho 270, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedal-v-sake-idaho-1904.