Cole v. Cole
This text of 117 N.W. 988 (Cole v. Cole) 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.
Opinion
The petition is in the usual form, and alleges absolute and unqualified ownership in the plaintiff of a large number of articles of "household furniture, pictures, books, and the like. The defense' interposed was a general denial and a plea that the defendant, Thomas Cole, and plaintiff, were married March 17, 1881, and had lived together as husband and wife until shortly prior to February 4, 1907, when she left him, and on that day brought a suit for divorce, in which a decree was entered April 10, 1907, wherein all the property rights of the parties . were fully adjudicated, including the right to the property in controversy. This answer was assailed by motion on several grounds, none of which involved the sufficiency of the plea in bar or the merits of the action.
[612]*612As to'the power of the court we are not now concerned; but see Cizek v. Cizek, 69 Neb. 797 (96 N. W. 657, 99 N. W. 28), 5 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 469, and note. The inquiry is, not what the court might have done, had the issues been different, but what it did do; and, •as it did not undertake to point out the individual articles of each spouse, each is entitled to the possession of his or her own. See Webster v. Webster, 58 Me. 139 (4 Am. Rep. 253) ; Glaze v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, 116 Ind. 492 (18 N. E. 450) ; Thompson v. Thompson, 132 Ind. 288 (31 N. E. 529). The wife is permitted in this State to “own in her own right real and personal property acquired by descent, gift or purchase, and to manage, sell and convey the same and dispose thereof by will to the same extent and in the same manner the husband can property belonging to him.” Section 3153, Code. The evidence tended to show that several of the articles had been given to plaintiff, and that others had been purchased by her with money she had earned prior to marriage. Some others were purchased under circumstances showing the husband the owner. The issue should have been tried at law, and plaintiff awarded possession of such articles as she owned individually prior to the entry of the decree of divorce. — Reversed.
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117 N.W. 988, 139 Iowa 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-cole-iowa-1908.