Love v. Wells

25 Ind. 503
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 25 Ind. 503 (Love v. Wells) 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
Love v. Wells, 25 Ind. 503 (Ind. 1865).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

This was a suit brought by Wells, the appellee, against the appellants to recover the possession of a certain tract of land.

The defendants below answered by a general denial.. The court, to which the cause was submitted for trial by agreement of the parties, found for the plaintiff. A motion by the defendants for a new trial was overruled; judgment for the plaintiff. The defendants appeal. The evidence is made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions. On the trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence a deed of conveyance in fee, to himself, for the land in controversy, dated October 25th, 1845, from Charles F. Wells and wife, said Charles F. being the original patentee from the United States. The defendants then gave in evidence a deed from the plaintiff and wife to the Evansville, Cleveland and Indianapolis Straight Line Railroad Company, dated the 26th of April, conveying to said railroad company the land in controversy, in fee simple. This deed was acknowledged before a justice of the peace of Daviess county, the certificate of acknowledgment bearing the same date as the deed, and was recorded in the recorder’s office of said county on the 11th day of July, 1856. The consideration stated in the deed is $1,000,, [504]*504the receipt of which is acknowledged. The defendants further proved, by the proper deeds of conveyance, that the railroad company, for a valuable consideration, sold and conveyed said land to Carpenter and Love, in fee, on the 28ct of July, 1856,. who, on the'2d day of April, 1858, sold and conveyed the same to Olivér II. Smith. These deeds were also acknowledged and recorded; that from the railroad company to Carpenter and Love was recorded June 30th, 1857, and the one from the latter to Smith April 26th, 1858. It further appears by the evidence that since the date of the last named deed, the said Smith has deceased, leaving surviving him three children who are his heirs, one of whom is the wife of the defendant, Love, “ who claims to have the possession and some title to the lands mentioned in the complaint, under or through the deeds given in evidence by the defendants.”

The defendants having closed their evidence, the plaintiff, being sworn, was permitted, over the objection of the defendants, to testify in his own behalf that the deed executed by him to the railroad company, dated April 26th, 1856, was in fact executed on the 27th of April of that year, the same being Sunday. He testified, in substance, as follows: that although said deed from him to the railroad company purports to have been executed on the 26th day of April, 1856, yet that in'fact it was executed and acknowledged by him and his wife on the 27th of April, 1856, which was Sunday; that Asaihel L. Page, who resided in his -neighborhood, was, at the time of the execution of the deed, one of the directors of said railroad company, and negotiated the purchase of the land in controversy on behalf of the company; that said Page came to the plaintiff's house the day the deed was executed, bringing with ¡him the justice of the peace who took the acknowledgment, and told the plaintiff he would like to have the deed that day, to which the plaintiff assented. The deed was then prepared, signed and acknowledged, and by agreement between Page, the plaintiff and the justice, the deed and [505]*505the certificate of acknowledgment were dated back one day, so as to make all appear to have been done on Saturday, the 26th, instead of Sunday, the 27th of the month. At the time the deed was executed, “the land had some small improvements on it, but had been mostly vacant and wholly unoccupied since that time; some timber had been taken off' since, but not by order of the railroad company that he was aware of.” The plaintiff further testified that he had done nothing since to ratify the deed; “ that he had never since had possession of the land, or exercised any acts of ownership over it, but it had been his intention ever since a short time after the deed was executed to reclaim the land at some time or in some way,-but that he never gave the railroad company, or any body claiming the land under it, any notice that he claimed the land until some time in June, 1864, when Love,' one of the defendants, came to Washington, the county seat, to- sell this and some other lands, in pursuance of a notice previously posted; that on that day the plaintiff told said Love ‘that he claimed the land in controversy, and protested against its sale;’ that in consequence of said notice, Love, did not offer to sell the land in controversy on that day. That after the deed in. question was executed it was left with Browning, the justice of the peace who took the acknowledgment, to be delivered to Bage, and he, Browning, took it away the same evening, and the plaintiff never saw it afterward until its production on the trial.”

James Wade was also sworn as a witness for the plaintiff, and in his evidence substantially corroborated the statements of the plaintiff as to the circumstances attending the execution of the deed, and that it was executed on Sunday.

The plaintiff, Wells, bases his claim to recover the land exclusively on the ground that his deed to the railroad company, having been executed on. Sunday, is void, and therefore conveys no title whatever to the railroad company.

A statute in force at the time the deed was executed, provides “ That if any person of the age of fourteen years [506]*506and upwards shall be found on the first day of the week, commonly called Sunday, rioting, hunting, fishing, quarreling, at common labor, or engaged in their usual avocations, works of charity and necessity only excepted, such person shall be fined,” &c. An exception is also made in favor of those who conscientiously observe the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath, travelers, &c. 2 G. & H., 481.

In Link v. Clemmens, 7 Blackf. 479, it Avas held, under a similar statute, that a replevin bond executed on Sunday came within the term “ common labor,” and was therefore void, as being a contract prohibited by law.

And so in Reynolds v. Stephenson, 4 Ind. 619, it was held that a promissory note executed on Sunday was void. In that case it is said: “ It is admitted that the note in question was made on Sunday. Then the record presents this question : Did the making of it constitute an act of common labor ? ’ We think the statute was intended to prohibit every description of secular business not within the exceptions pointed out by itself. The execution of this note was secular business and not embraced by the exceptions. This view is sustained by various adjudications made upon statutes, the provisions of which are in effect the same as ours. Allen v. Deming, 14 N. H. 133; Towle v. Larrabee, 26 Maine 464; Adams v. Hamell, 2 Doug., (Mich.,) 73. See also notes to 2 Parsons on Contracts 764, e.”

It is also a general rule of the law that void contracts are not susceptible of ratification. But in Banks v. Werts, 13 Ind. 203, it was held that contracts not otherwise obnoxious, but void only because made or executed on Sunday,

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ind. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-wells-ind-1865.