Bunch v. Bunch

26 Ind. 400
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Ind. 400 (Bunch v. Bunch) 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
Bunch v. Bunch, 26 Ind. 400 (Ind. 1866).

Opinion

Elliott J.

Suit by Mary Jane Bunch against the appellant, Willis Bunch, to quiet the title to certain lands and to recover the possession thereof. The complaint alleged the following facts: That on the 22d day of January,. [402]*4021862, said Willis Bunch, who was then the husband of said Mary Jane, conveyed to her the land in controversy, by deed in fee simple, the consideration of which is thus stated in the deed: “That he, the said Willis, has received of the said Mary Jane the sum of about $800, through and by virtue of his marriage with said Mary Jane, and in further consideration that he, the said Willis, has used of said sum of $800, so received by and on account of his said marriage with said Mary Jane, about the sum of $400, in the purchase of and in part payment for the real estate hereinafter conveyed, and for the further eonsidei’ation -that the said Willis, for and on account of the natural love and affection he bears for his said wife Mary Jane, and to make her whole against the money received of her as aforesaid, is desirous of making her comfortable in this life.” It •is further alleged that said Willis; in addition to the $800 stated in the deed, received the further sum of “about $1,200, of the separate and individual property of said Mary Jane;” that the deed was executed by said Willis and received by her in good faith, and for the consideration therein expressed; that at the May term, 1865, of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery county, Indiana, she obtained a divorce from said Willis, and by the judgment and decree of said court her title to the land in controversy was in all things confirmed and held valid. The complaint prayed that her title to the land be quieted, and for the possession thereof. A copy of the decree of divorce in the Montgomery Common Pleas Court is made a part of the complaint, but it does not contain the complaint for-divorce on which the decree was rendered.

The defendant filed an answer, the substance of which is as follows: The defendant admits the execution of the deed mentioned in the complaint, but denies that he over received any sum of money of or from said plaintiff by virtue of his said marriage with her, or that he used any money belonging to or obtained from her in the purchase of the land described in the complaint; that said Mary Jane [403]*403was exceedingly poor at the time of their marriage, which occurred some twenty-six years prior to the date of filing-said answer, as was also said defendant; that some ten or eleven years before the date of the answer, they sold and conveyed her interest in certain real estate in Miami county, Indiana, and the defendant received in payment therefor two horses and a saddle, without any agreement or understanding between them, express or implied, that he was to account to her therefor; that said property was received by him and used for the common benefit of their family, and ivas not expended in the purchase of - said land; that said property wras the only property or money he ever received through or by virtue of his marriage with the plaintiff, and that she never had any other separate estate; that they were married in 1839, and afterwards had two children, both boys, the fruit of their marriage; that soon after their marriage she exhibited- a restless and discontented disposition; that when their children were quite small, she frequently abandoned the defendant and left the children without her care for -weeks at a time, whilst she was in search of company more congenial to her feelings; that from these ramblings at times she voluntarily returned, but at other times she remained absent until defendant went to her and urged her to return; that in the year-she left him and the children and went to the State of Iowa, among strangers, with the purpose, as the defendant believed, of finally abandoning him, and so remained in Iowa for five months, during which time one of their children sickened and died; that grieved at the loss of his child, and hoping that that sad event would tend to reform her,, and in that event being walling to forgive and forget the past, he went to Iowa, and, on her promise to do better in the future, brought her homo again; that for a considerable time thereafter her conduct, to all outward appearances, was unobjectionable, and she seemed comparatively contented, but frequently importuned and entreated him to convey the land to her, which then appeared to be her only [404]*404cause of discontent; that yielding to her importunities, hoping thereby to render her contented, and for the sole purpose of inducing her to remain with him, and without any other consideration whatever, he executed to her the deed set out in the complaint; that at the time of executing the deed, the defendant did not know or suspect that the plaintiff' had been guilty of infidelity to her marriage vow, by becoming an adulteress, but that in fact she had been guilty of adultery with one Martin Nem, who at the time was living with them, a short time before the execution of said deed, and that she had been guilty of adultery with other persons to the defendant unknown, at different times and places, to him also unknown, prior to the execution of the deed, all of which she carefully concealed from the defendant; that the land in dispute was all the property owned by the defendant at the time, except a wagon and team and a few other small items, of little value, which said property was not more than sufficient to pay his then existing debts; that soon after the deed was executed, the plaintiff' became restless and dissatisfied and abandoned the defendant several times, and finally was only induced to return by the defendant agreeing to rent the farm out and remove to Orawfordsville, in Montgomery county, which he did; that they had only lived there a short time when she again abandoned him, and. he then went back again to his farm; that during all the time they resided in Crawfordsville, the plaintiff, without the knowledge of the defendant, kept up a correspondence with one Dan. Shepman, “a man of base character for lewdness," who resides in Warren county; that the plaintiff remained in the vicinity of Crawfordsville, and knowing that the defendant was residing on the land in controversy, in Warren county, filed a complaint for divorce in the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery county, and procured an affidavit to be filed that the defendant was not a resident of the State, and thereupon procured notice by publication, and finally fraudulently procured a decree of divorce, without any actual notice to the defendant.

[405]*405The court sustained-a demurrer to the answer, for the reason that it did not state facts sufficient to bar the action, to which the defendant excepted. The court then rendered a decree and judgment in favor of the plaintiffj in accordance with the prayer of the complaint.

The ruling of the court on the demurrer to the answer raises the only question in the case. The deed to the land in question, executed by the defendant to the plaintiff during their coverture, was void in law. This is not questioned by the plaintiff’s counsel; indeed the complaint praying that the title may be vested and quieted in her is based on the assumption that the deed is void at law, and appeals to the equity powers of the court for its confirmation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ilo Oil Co. v. Indiana Natural Gas & Oil Co.
92 N.E. 1 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1910)
Sims v. Rickets
35 Ind. 181 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Ind. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunch-v-bunch-ind-1866.