Gibson v. Gibson

217 N.W. 852, 205 Iowa 1285
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 7, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 217 N.W. 852 (Gibson v. Gibson) 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
Gibson v. Gibson, 217 N.W. 852, 205 Iowa 1285 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

— There are involved in this canse of action approximately 230 acres of real estate, situated in Union County. It was formerly owned by Marietta Hoover Gibson, who died intestate October 28, 1912, leaving the appellant O. B. Gibson as her surviving husband, and her sons, the appellants C. T. Gibson and L. J. Gibson, and the defendant, George II. Gibson, as her sole heirs-at-law.

On January 2, 1911, the aforesaid Marietta Hoover Gibson and her husband, O. B. Gibson, made a warranty deed for all of said real estate, which was duly acknowledged on said date before William A. Wright, a notary public in and for Union County, in which the defendant, George H. Gibson, is named as grantee. In the covenant of warranty, the grantors warrant the premises as free from incumbrance, except a mortgage of $500 in favor of Union County, Iowa. The deed recites, “In consideration of the sum of $10,000 in hand paid by George H. Gibson,” and contains the following reservation:

“We, the grantors of this deed, reserve a fully paid life lease in all the above described property, possession not to be given the grantee until the death of both Marietta Gibson and O. B. Gibson.”

On November 4, 1912, said deed was filed for record in the recorder’s office of Union County, Iowa, and was at that time duly recorded in the deed records of said county. Prior to the time of the death of Marietta Hoover Gibson, the father, mother, and the son George II. Gibson resided upon said real estate, and after the mother’s death, the father and son George II. Gibson continued to reside upon said farm until 1917, when another son, C. T. Gibson, and his wife, Emma C. Gibson, moved into the house with them; and thereafter, the house upon said real estate was occupied by the father, said two sons, and the. wife of ,C. T. Gibson, until the fore part of the year 1926, when the third son, L. J. Gibson, came from Idaho, and gained a residence with the rest of the family upon said farm.

Ob March 8, 1926, Fred Codings, the sheriff of Union *1287 County, was shot and killed, and soon thereafter, the defendant, George H. Gibson, was indicted for the murder of the said Col-lings, and was tried and convicted (see State v. Gibson, 204 Iowa 1306), and was, at the time of the trial of the instant case, confined in the penitentiary, resting under a life sentence. Two days after the murder, Ida Collings, as administratrix of the estate of Fred Collings, commenced a civil action against George II. Gibson for damages for the wrongful killing of Collings, and prayed that a writ of attachment issue against the property of the said George II. Gibson, which attachment, under order of court, issued, and was levied upon the real estate herein involved. Thereafter, upon trial of said cause, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff therein, and against the said George H. Gibson, in the sum of $12,000 and costs, and said judgment confirmed the attachment levied against the real estate herein involved.

On June 28, 1926, the appellants herein commenced against George H. Gibson the instant case, a partition suit, and in their petition they alleged the death of Marietta Hoover Gibson, as aforesaid, and that she was the owner of said real estate at the time of her demise. To this petition the defendant, George H. Gibson, filed no answer; but he was represented, at the time of the trial, by Boy E. Burns, as his attorney. The adminis-tratrix of the estate of Fred Collings intervened herein, alleging in her petition of intervention the execution of the aforesaid deed unto George H. Gibson and the fact that she, as administratrix, has a lien against said real estate, and she further avers therein that plaintiffs seek to ignore the existence of the title conveyed by the father and mother unto George H. Gibson; that they undertake to institute' an action for the recovery of real property in this partition proceeding; that they are attempting to join with an action in partition an action of right for the recovery of real property; and that said action for the recovery of real property is barred by the statute of limitations.

The plaintiffs, by way of reply to the petition of intervention, deny, the conveyance unto George H. Gibson of the real estate by the deed aforesaid.

The defendant, George H. Gibson, by way of answer to the petition of intervention, alleges that he is not possessed of suffi *1288 cient information to either affirm or deny the allegations thereof, and demands strict proof.

Upon trial of these issues, the court found for the inter-vener; that the defendant, George H. Gibson, is the owner of said real estate; that the aforesaid deed is a valid deed, duly executed and delivered as of the day it bears date; and that the evidence offered by plaintiffs upon the question of delivery of said deed is insufficient to overcome the presumption that said deed was delivered as of the day of its execution; that the plaintiffs have no right, title, or interest in said real estate, except only the life estate of the appellant O. B. Gibson, as stated and referred to in said deed of conveyance.

From this action of the trial court the plaintiffs have appealed.

The appellee intervener contends that the action of appellants is, in effect, an action for the recovery of real property, and that the same is barred by the statute of limitations. They rely upon Paragraph 6, Section 11007, of the Code of 1924, and Tilton v. Bader, 181 Iowa 473; School Dist. Twp. of Richland v. Hanson, 186 Iowa 1314; Williams v. Allison, 33 Iowa 278. Under Paragraph 6, Section 11007, of the Code, an action may be brought for the recovery of real property within ten years, and not afterwards. In School Dist. Twp. of Richland v. Hanson, supra, the question involved was the right to the possession of a certain one-acre tract formerly owned for school purposes, and the action, an injunction proceeding, was begun by the plaintiff; and the defendant, by way of cross-petition, alleged certain facts claimed to entitle her to the possession, to which pleading the plaintiff in its reply set up the bar of the statute of limitations. To this reply the cross-petitioner filed a demurrer, which was overruled; and we therein held that, while an action for the recovery of real, property should be by ordinary proceedings, yet, upon a ruling on a demurrer which sets up the statute of limitations, it is immaterial that the petition in the suit was filed in equity. It is quite clear that the matter alleged in the reply constituted a good defense, to wit: the bar of the statute of limitations. But there is no analogy between that case and the instant case. In Williams v. Allison, supra, and Tilton v. Bader, supra, both being equitable actions, in *1289 •which the relief asked by the petitioner was based on fraud, it was held that, while relief was asked for the frand, yet the allegations and evidence of fraud are merely incidental to the relief asked and granted, said requested relief being the establishment of the title or the recovery of the real estate, because of the fraud; and that, therefore, neither of said actions was outlawed until ten years after the cause of action accrued. In 25 Cyc. 1026, we find the following:

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Bluebook (online)
217 N.W. 852, 205 Iowa 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-gibson-iowa-1928.