Groves v. Barber

98 Ind. 309, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 558
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1884
DocketNo. 11,299
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 Ind. 309 (Groves v. Barber) 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
Groves v. Barber, 98 Ind. 309, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 558 (Ind. 1884).

Opinion

Howk, J.

After this cause had been put at issue, the court, at the request of the appellant, Ann E. Groves, the plaintiff below, made a special finding of the'facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon. Over the appellant’s exceptions to the conclusions of law, the court rendered judgment thereon for the appellee.

Error is assigned here by the appellant which calls in question the correctness of the court’s conclusions of law upon the facts specially found.

The facts so found were, substantially, as follows:

1. John Harbison, the appellant’s father, died about fifteen years ago, leaving appellant as one of his surviving children, and the land now in controversy as part of his estate. By purchase from the other heirs of her deceased father, appellant became the owner of all such land, so that, on February 24th, 1875, she was the owner of all the lands as to which, in this action, redemption is sought, and upon which she seeks to have .her lien now fixed. She conveyed such land by a deed of general warranty, jointly, to Horace C. McQuirk and Isaac Harrison, and they thereby became the owners of such land; her husband, John W. Groves, joined in such conveyance. The deed was dated and delivered February 24th, 1875, and was upon a consideration of $2,700.
2. McQuirk and Harrison, for a part of the purchase-money of such land, executed four notes, dated April 1st, 1875, each in the sum of $278.43, and secured the payment thereof by their mortgage to John W. Groves on the whole of such land. Such notes and mortgage were assigned and delivered to C. D. and F. D. Cummings, and by them were assigned and delivered to Strauss, Strauss and Strauss, who foreclosed such mortgage when the notes were due and unpaid. After the execution of such notes and mortgage to John W. Groves, McQuirk and his wife conveyed by deed the undivided one-half of such land to Isaac Harrison. Afterwards, on October 16th, 1877, Harrison and wife conveyed, by deed, in consideration of $1,600, a certain part of such land to John W. and [311]*311Ann E. Groves; and on February 15th, 1878, Harrison and his wife, in consideration of $1,100, conveyed by deed the remainder of such land to John W. and Ann E. Groves. On September 16th, 1878, John W. and Ann E. Groves, in consideration of one dollar, conveyed all the land in controversy to John G. Waldo, for the purpose of vesting the title thereto in Ann E. Groves, and on the same day Waldo and his wife reconveyed such land, for the like consideration, to Ann E. Groves, who had since been and still was the owner and holder of the title thus accquired to such land. For the past seventeen years Ann E. Groves had been and still was a married woman, and the wife of John W. Groves.
3. The facts found by the court, and those recited and set out in “ Exhibit A,” were facts established by the evidence in this cause, and the various findings, recited and set out in such exhibit, were found as therein stated, and the several decrees and judgments, in such exhibit recited and stated, were rendered and the proceedings therein recited were had as therein stated and recited; which “ Exhibit A” was in all things adopted and made a part of this finding.
3-2-. On the 26th day of February, 1876, Isaac Harrison executed his note to appellee Barber for the sum of $-, and, to secure its payment, executed to appellee his mortgage on forty acres, particularly described, of the land in controversy. At the date of such mortgage Harrison owned the mortgaged land, and having failed to pay such note, the appellee Barber commenced his action against Harrison and others, and, in due form, procured a judgment against Harrison for the foreclosure of such mortgage, as shown in said “Exhibit A.”
This “Exhibit A” is a copy of the judgments, decrees and orders of the Kosciusko Circuit Court on change of venue from the Whitley Circuit Court, in the suit of Strauss and others against McQuirk and wife, Harrison and his wife, •John W. and Ann E. Groves, Edwin L. Barber and others, for the foreclosure of the mortgage described in the second finding of facts, etc.
[312]*3124. The return of the sheriff of Whitley county to the order of sale, issued on the aforesaid judgments and decrees of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, in the suit last mentioned, and to him directed, constituted the court's fourth special finding of facts in the case at bar.
5. All the parties to the foregoing proceedings were, at the time they were had, properly before the Kosciusko Circuit Court, and pleadings and issues in such proceedings were filed and joined, so that all the questions found and adjudicated were then properly before the court. Such judgments have never been appealed from, set aside, or in any way vacated.
6. Such judgments and decrees being in force, a certified copy thereof was duly issued out of the Kosciusko Circuit Court to the sheriff of Whitley county, who, as such sheriff,, by virtue of such decrees and order of sale, took the steps and did the acts set out in his return thereto, which constitutes the fourth special finding of facts.
7. At the time of the conveyance of such laud by Harrison to John W. and Ann E. Groves, they agreed with Harrison, as a part of the consideration of such conveyance to them, to pay off and discharge the mortgage, foreclosed and described in “Exhibit A," as belonging to said Charles Daniels, and the debt in said proceeding recited as due to David B. and Asher R. Clingston, the said judgment and debt, in favor of said Daniels, amounting at the time of the foreclosure to $355. This debt Ann E. and John W. Groves expressly agreed to pay as a part of the consideration of such conveyance. They never did in fact, however, pay such debt, unless the amount paid over to the. clerk, recited in finding No. 8, should be held as a payment and discharge of such debt. If that transaction operated as a payment of the Daniels mortgage, and not as a redemption, then she paid the debt, otherwise not.
8. Such real estate, on May 30th, 1879, was sold by the sheriff of Whitley county, as recited and set forth in Exhibit B, being finding No. 4, for the sum of $1,527.66, which sum [313]*313was paid therefor by the purchaser at such sale. On May 27th, 1880, Ann E. Groves, being then and at the time of the rendition of such judgments the owner, in fee simple, of the real estate so sold by her agent duly authorized so to do, proceeded to the office of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, and, then and there intending in that way and thereby to redeem such real estate from such sale, as the redemption money of such land from such sale, she paid to the clerk the sum of $1,679.08. The clerk received áuch sum as such redemption-money, and in redemption of and from such sale by Ann E. Groves, and executed his receipt to her reciting that such money was received for such purpose. As a part of the gross sum of $1,679.08, intending to redeem from the sale as an entirety, she paid the sum of $392.50, as the amount then due and necessary to be paid by her on the judgment in favor of Daniels, to enable her to redeem.

As conclusions of law upon the foregoing facts, the court found as follows:

“1. That on the day of the rendition of the several judgments and decrees, recited in ‘Exhibit A/ and also on May 27th, 1880, Ann E.

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ind. 309, 1884 Ind. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-barber-ind-1884.