Lucas v. Hendrix

92 Ind. 54, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 432
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1883
DocketNo. 10,014
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 92 Ind. 54 (Lucas v. Hendrix) 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
Lucas v. Hendrix, 92 Ind. 54, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 432 (Ind. 1883).

Opinion

Hammond, J.

Complaint by the appellant against the appellees, as heirs and devisees of Isaac Hendrix, deceased, to review a judgment rendered in the court below in favor of said •decedent in his lifetime, against the appellant and others.

The grounds for review, as claimed in the appellant’s complaint, are that the complaint of Isaac Hendrix in the former .action did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action j that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer of said Isaac Hendrix to the 2d, 3d and 4th paragraphs of the appellant’s answer to said complaint, and erred in rendering judgment against the appellant in the former case for costs.

A demurrer for the want of facts, etc., was sustained to the appellant’s complaint for review, and this ruling is the only •error assigned in this court.

In the case sought to be reviewed, Isaac Hendrix was plaintiff. Benjamin F. Hendrix and his wife and the appellant were defendants. The complaint in that case was based upon .a deed executed July 19th, 1873, by Isaac Hendrix to Benjamin F. Hendrix. After the preliminary averments as to the execution of the deed, the complaint stated the plaintiff’s •cause of action as follows:

“ Which conveyance was made upon a condition subsequent to this, to wit: The said Benjamin F. Hendrix agreed to pay to the plaintiff five annual payments of $440, to be paid at the end of each year, and on failure to pay the said several sums at the end' of each year, then the whole sum of [56]*56$4,400 was to become due and collectible, with ten per cent, interest and attorneys’ fees, which plaintiff avers were reasonably worth $200, and the- plaintiff avers that he demanded each and every payment as aforesaid, but that the said Benjamin F. Hendrix wholly failed and neglected to pay the said several sums, or any of the same, or any part thereof, and suffered himself to become wholly insolvent and unable-to pay any part of said sum of money; wherefore plaintiff says that there is a breach of the conditions. And plaintiff avers that afterward, to wit, on the 20th. day of July, 1876, he entered upon said premises and took possession of the same and holds the same, a copy of which conveyance is filed herewith, and the plaintiff avers that the said Frances Hendrix is the lawful wife of said Benjamin F. Hendrix. The plaintiff further avers that Thomas L. Lucas claims.to have some interest in said land, and is made a defendant to answer to his interest, and on final hearing of this cause the plaintiff prays that said deed be cancelled and the title to said lands quieted in the plaintiff and all other relief to which, plaintiff is entitled in the.premises.”

A copy of the deed was filed with the complaint. It was a warranty deed in' the statutory form, the consideration expressed therein being $4,400. The reservation or conditions set out in the deed, following the description of the real estate, were as follows:

“This conveyance is made subject to the following conditions, to wit: The grantor retains an interest of $440 per annum for the term of five years, which it is stipulated the-grantee shall pay to said grantor, and in case of failure of the-annual payment of said sum at the end of each year for the-period of five years and five annual payments, then the said sum is to become due, and payment may be enforced for said sum, or-as much thereof as may be due, in any court of competent, jurisdiction, with interest at ten per cent, and attorney’s fees; and upon making of said five payments aforesaid of $440 each, then the grantee is to become the owner in fee of the above-[57]*57described premises, and the consideration mentioned in this deed, to wit, $4,400, is to be taken, counted, and considered as an advancement on the part of the said Isaac Hendrix to the said Benjamin F. Hendrix, and to be reckoned in the final settlement of his, Isaac Hendrix’s, estate.”

As the complaint averred that the grantor Isaac Hendrix, at the time of the execution of the deed, owned the land in fee simple, we are of opinion that the allegation that Thomas L. Lucas claims some interest in said land and is made a defendant to answer to his interest,” shows sufficiently that Lucas’ interest, whatever it may have been, was subordinate to the rights of the said grantor.

The reservation in the deed is not a condition subsequent; in legal effect it is simply a mortgage. In Carr v. Holbrook, 1 Mo. 240, it was held that a deed made for lands, to be absolute on the payment of certain notes, but in default of payment to be void, was to be considered a mortgage. Pugh v. Holt, 27 Miss. 461, decides in the same way. Jones, in his work on Mortgages, vol. 1, sections 228-9, says :

'' 228. An express reservation in a deed of a lien upon the land conveyed creates an equitable mortgage, and when the deed is recorded every one is bound to take notice of the incumbrance. * * * A stipulation in a deed, that the titles shall not vest in the grantee until the purchase-money is paid, amounts in equity to a mortgage. So does a deed providing that it shall be absolute on the payment of certain notes, but in default of payment shall be void.
“ 229. A lien reserved is a lien by contract. A lien for the purchase-money expressly reserved by a vendor in his deed of conveyance is a lien created by contract, and not by implication of law. * * * It is really a mortgage. * * * It is governed by the same rules that a mortgage is. It passes by an .assignment of the notes secured by it. It is foreclosed as a mortgage; and there is the same right, of redemption for a limited period after a foreclosure sale. 'The reservation of the vendors’ lien in the deed of conveyance,’ says Mr. Jus[58]*58tice Bradley, of the Supreme Court of the United States, x is equal to a mortgage taken for the purchase-money contemporaneously with the deed, and nothing more. The purchaser has the equity, of redemption precisely as if he had received a deed and given a mortgage for the purchase-money.’ The legal title passes to the purchaser subject to the lien, and the land is subject to attachment and execution as his property just as an equity of redemption is.”

The law as thus announced is in harmony with the decisions of this court. Davis v. Stonestreet, 4 Ind. 101; Heath v. Williams, 30 Ind. 495.

But regarding the reservation in the deed as amounting only to a mortgage, we are of the opinion that the complaint in the former case contained every necessary averment to authorize its foreclosure. It is true that the prayer of the complaint was not for a foreclosure, but for a cancellation of the deed. But it is well settled that the prayer for relief is only .a matter of form, and where the facts stated entitle the party to any remedy, a complaint will be held good on demurrer without reference to the demand for relief. A defective or improper prayer for relief is not reached by demurrer, but by motion to strike out or to make more specific. Lowry v. Dutton, 28 Ind. 473; Goodall v. Mopley, 45 Ind. 355; Baker v. Armstrong, 57 Ind. 189; 1 Works Pr., section 224.

We think that the complaint in the former case was good, ■especially as against an objection coming for the first time in a bill for review. We are now to consider whether any pai’agraph of the appellant’s answer to that complaint was sufficient.

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92 Ind. 54, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-hendrix-ind-1883.