Carr v. McCauley

245 N.W. 290, 215 Iowa 298
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
DocketNo. 41574.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 N.W. 290 (Carr v. McCauley) 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
Carr v. McCauley, 245 N.W. 290, 215 Iowa 298 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

— John McCauley, Sr., at the time of his death, owned the real esta'te in question. In the year 1922, he died intestate survived by eleven adult children. There being no surviving widow, each of the eleven children inherited from their father, John Mc-Cauley, Sr., an undivided one-eleventh interest in and to the above named real estate.

Included among the surviving children of John McCauley, deceased, were Thomas J. McCauley, Henry McCauley, and Frank McCauley, the defendant-appellant. Thomas J. McCauley, above-named, is the husband of Alma McCauley, who materially figures in the quiet title and partition proceedings now under consideration. *300 On December 2, 1924, Thomas J. McCauley, for the purpose of placing his undivided one-eleventh interest in said land beyond the reach of his creditors, executed a quit-claim deed to his brother Henry McCauley purporting to convey the property to such alleged grantee. At the time the quit-claim deed transaction thus took place, Thomas J. and Henry McCauley- entered into a written contract for the purpose of evidencing the' fact that the title to the one-eleventh interest in the land in truth remained in Thomas J. McCauley and would he reconveyed to him by Henry unless, certain creditors filed claims. ...

The above mentioned Thomas J. McCauley, on August123, 1927, sold, assigned, and transferred to his wife, Alma McCauley, his right, title, and interest in and to the aforesaid contract. So far as áppellant is concerned, the above-named condition (assuming, without deciding, that the alleged condition is such in law or equity), under the facts of the record, as hereinafter sét forth, in no way prevent the return of title from Henry to Thomas J. McCauley.

Mrs. Alma McCauley, in turn, on October 17, 1930, conveyed the real estate in question by warranty deed to E. M. Carr, who thereafter, by warranty deed, transferred the property to the plaintiff-appellee Hubert Carr on July 22, 1931. Both warranty deeds were duly filed for record.

On August 10, 1931, the appellee commenced the present proceedings ¿gainst John McCauley, Jr., Frank McCauley, Peter Mc-Cauley, Margaret Thyne, Mary Donlan, Sarah McCauley, and Winneshiek County State Bank, for the purpose of :First, quieting title in himself to the undivided one-eleventh interest in the real estate named in the above described deeds; and, second, partitioning the whole real estate. Whereupon, the appellant Frank McCauley appeared in said cause and filed answer claiming title to the said real estate through the aforesaid, and another, quitclaim deed, to wit: Thomas J. McCauley, above-named, on December 2, 1924, for the alleged purpose of placing the property beyond the reach óf his creditors, executed, as previously stated, the quitclaim deed before mentioned for the undivided interest in the realty in question to his brother, Henry McCauley. Then on October 29, 1925, Henry McCauley, for the alleged purpose of securing a $1,000 indebtedness, conveyed (in violation of the before mentioned contract dated December 2, 1924) the aforesaid interest in the real property to *301 the appellant Frank McCauley. Frank McCauley claims not to have known at the time that Thomas J., and not Henry, owned the one-eleventh interest in the real estate.

It is to be noted that both deeds in appellant’s chain of title are alleged to have been executed before any deed in appellee’s chain of title. Consequently, it is argued by the appellant that his title is superior to that of appellee because when the latter’s deeds were executed Thomas J. McCauley and the subsequent grantors under him had no interest in the land under consideration.

The district court, however, found for the appellee, quieted title in him to the undivided one-eleventh interest, and ordered the partition of the entire tract. From that judgment and decree, the appellant appeals.

I. A .petition was first filed by the appellee. By way of answer to that petition, the appellant made certain admissions and denied ¿11 other allegations therein contained. In his prayer to the answer, the appellant not only asked that appellee be given no relief under his petition, but in addition thereto affirmatively prayed for such further equitable relief as might seem just to the court. Responding to that answer, the appellee in a reply pleaded that on July 24, 1930, the appellant for a valuable consideration contracted with the aforesaid Alma McCauley that he had no interest in the aforesaid land. Likewise it was' agreed in that contract between appellánt and Alma McCauley that the quitclaim deed Décember 2, 1924, from Thomas J. McCauley to Henry McCauley, and the quitclaim deed of October 29, 1925, from Henry McCauley to appellant, before mentioned, were to be treated as void and of no validity whatever. Therefore the appellee further pleaded in the reply that because of the foregoing contract and his reliance thereon,- the appellant is estopped to now assert a superior interest in and to the above-named real estate. Thereupon the appellant moved to strike the aforesaid reply because it was .not authorized under section 11156 of the 1931 -Code. This motion was overruled by the district court, and the appellant alleges that he is entitled to a reversal on the ground that the motion should have been sustained.

Obviously the motion was indefinite and uncertain because the appellant did not state why the section of the statute referred to barred the filing of a reply. -It is true that a counterclaim was not contained in appellant’s answer. But when fairly construed, it is *302 evident that the appellant in his answer did ask for affirmative relief. Apparently feeling that the allegations in the answer supplemented by the statements in the petition entitled him to affirmative relief, the appellant prayed therefor.

Under all the circumstances, then, it cannot be said that the district court erred in failing to strike the reply from the files.

II. Because of the pleadings in this case, it is a little difficult to understand appellant’s position on the merits. In paragraph four of appellee’s petition, as set forth in the appellant’s amendment to the abstract of record, appears the allegation that the latter “makes some claim [to the real estate under consideration] adverse to the title and interest of” the appellee. The appellant, when answering the petition, admits the allegations contained in paragraphs one and five, and certain allegations in paragraph two in reference to the defendant Winneshiek County Bank. All other allegations of the petition are expressly denied by the appellant’s answer. Consequently, it is evident under the denials contained in the answer that the appellant does not admit that he claims an interest in or claim on or to the real estate in question, as alleged in paragraph four of appellee’s petition. If that is true, the only remaining question is whether the appellee in his own right has the legal or equitable title to the real estate.

As before stated, appellee does have title to an undivided one-eleventh interest in the real estate in question through the following three conveyances:

First, the conveyance of August 23, 1927, from Thomas J. Mc-Cauley to his wife Alma L. McCauley.

Second: The conveyance of October 17, 1930, from Alma Mc-Cauley to E. M. Carr; and

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W. 290, 215 Iowa 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-mccauley-iowa-1932.