Bowers v. Lillis

115 N.E. 930, 187 Ind. 1, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 1
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1917
DocketNo. 22,500
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 115 N.E. 930 (Bowers v. Lillis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Lillis, 115 N.E. 930, 187 Ind. 1, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 1 (Ind. 1917).

Opinion

Lairy, C. J.

— Appellee Lillis brought this action in May, 1907, to quiet title to lots Nos. 1 to 9, inclusive, in block No. 13 in the Chicago, Tolleston Land and Investment Company’s Fourth Addition to Tolleston and to two other lots in another addition, all of such real estate being situated in what is now the city of Gary, Indiana. Upon a trial a decree was rendered in favor of Lillis and against the several defendants named, after which a new trial as of right was obtained. The [4]*4cause came on for hearing again in 1910 before a special judge upon the issues formed by the usual complaint to quiet title and separate answers in general denial filed by the defendants Bowers, Spindler and Knotts. The court rendered a special finding of facts and announced its conclusions of law thereon adjudging appellee Lillis to be the owner in fee of the lots in controversy and quieting his title to the same as against the defendants named who are now the appellants.

By the errors correctly assigned appellants question the trial court’s action in overruling their several motions for a venire de novo and their motion for a new trial; they also question the correctness of the court’s conclusions of law upon the special finding.

The finding discloses in brief the following facts: Richard K. Swift in the year 1868 was the owner of a certain tract of land in Lake county, a part of which land is now the lots in dispute. In February of that year he was adjudged a bankrupt by the United States District Court and all of his estate, including this land, was duly ordered sold. Thereupon his assignee by deed sold and conveyed the same to Aaron N. Hart in 1869. In 1884 said real estate was set off to Martha R. Hart, his widow, in an action in partition, Aaron N. Hart having theretofore died intestate. ' A deed for the land was then made by her to the Chicago, Tolleston Land and Investment Company in 1890, which company at five different dates during that year acknowledged and recorded from this land plats of what were denominated respectively after the First, the. Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth additions to the town of Tolleston. On August 2, 1890, the land company made and executed to the appellant Spindler a deed to lots Nos. 3 to 9, inclusive, in block No. 13 of the company’s Third addition and such deed was recorded, certain erasures and insertions appearing on the record in ref[5]*5erence to the number of the addition, in which the lots v/ere situated. Later Spindler executed a quitclaim deed to the lots here in controversy, which are located in the Fourth addition as-above stated, to his codefendant Bowers.

Appellee Lillis purchased of the land company on December 2, 1895, lots Nos. 1 to 9, inclusive, in block No. 13 in said company’s Fourth addition, a deed for which was duly recorded nine days later. At the time the purchase was made and up until the deed of Spindler to Bowers in 1906, Lillis had no knowledge of any claim of Spindler to such numbered lots in the Fourth addition.

Richard K. Swift died in 1883, leaving a will disposing of his estate, and leaving a widow, Melissa A. Swift, who had been his wife prior to 1868 and remained such from that time on, and also three daughters of himself and Melissa A. Swift. The will was probated and the estate duly administered, the widow accepting from the executor under the provisions of the will all of the estate except what had been used for the expense of administration. Melissa A. Swift died intestate in 1895 without having remarried and in 1907 her heirs and the husbands of. such as were married executed to Charles Surprise a deed conveying their undivided one-third interest to the real estate in controversy. This interest Surprise then conveyed to appellant Knotts, in 1908.

It thus appears as between Lillis and Knotts that Richard K. Swift is the common source of title, while as between Lillis and Bowers and Spindler the land company is the common source through which claims to title are made.

In determining the controversy as to title as between Lillis on the one hand and Spindler and Bowers on the other, it is not necessary to look beyond the deeds exe[6]*6euted by the land company. The deed to Spindler, through whom Bowers traces his title, was executed on August 2, 1891, and recorded within forty-five days thereafter in the recorder’s office of Lake county, Indiana, while the deed to Lillis was executed and recorded more than five years later. It is the claim of Spindler and Bowers that the deed to Spindler described and conveyed the same lots which were described in the deed later executed to Lillis and that for this reason the latter deed conveyed no title, while it is the claim of Lillis that the deed to Spindler did not describe the lots later conveyed to him (Lillis), but described lots 'in another addition. An issue of fact was thus joined upon which the court found for Lillis, and, while there is a conflict, the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding.

Appellant Knotts claims title to one-third of the land which'was formerly owned by Richard K. Swift and transferred by his assignee in bankruptcy to Hart. This claim is based upon a deed executed by the heirs of the widow of Swift to Charles L. Surprise, from whom Knotts later received his deed. The deed from the heirs of the widow of Swift recites that the grantors are the sole and only heirs of Melissa A. Swift, who departed this life in the year 1895, and who was at that time the widow of Richard K. Swift, deceased. Such deed describes the land formerly owned by Richard K. Swift lying north of the Michigan Central Railroad in the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section ■9, township 36 north, range 8 west, and recites that the land described was sold on March 8, 1869, as the land of Richard K. Swift, a bankrupt, by Carol Gaytes, his assignee, and that Melissa A. Swift, who was at that time his wife, survived her husband and thereby became the owner in fee simple of the undivided one-third of said real estate.

[7]*71. [6]*6It is the theory of appellant Knotts that Melissa A. [7]*7Swift upon the purchase of said land by her husband acquired an inchoate interest in the undivided one-third thereof as purchaser; that this interest of the wife was not divested by the conveyance of the land by the registrar in bankruptcy but remained inchoate during the lifetime of her husband, and that upon his death it became a vested fee-simple interest of which she died seized, transmitting it to her heirs, from whom Knotts acquired it as before stated. The sale by the assignee in bankruptcy occurred in Í869 and it was not, therefore, affected by the statute passed in 1875 by which it was provided that, upon judicial sale of lands in which a married woman had an inchoate interest by virtue of her marriage, such interest should become a vested absolute interest by which she was entitled to immediate possession and with reference to which she might maintain proceedings in partition. Acts 1875 p. 178, §2508 R. S. 1881. As this statute was not in existence in 1869, the sale by the assignee did not affect the interest of Melissa A. Swift in the lands, neither operating to divest such interest nor to vest it absolutely. After such sale and during the life of her husband, she held an inchoate interest in the lands so sold which upon his death if she survived him would ripen into a fee-simple interest under the statute in force at the date of his death. §§3014, 3029, 3037 Burns 1914, §§2483, 2491, 2499 R. S. 1881.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.E. 930, 187 Ind. 1, 1917 Ind. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-lillis-ind-1917.