McElhaney v. McElhaney
This text of 101 N.W. 90 (McElhaney v. McElhaney) 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
Section 3155 of the Code provides as follows: “ Should the husband or wife obtain possession or control of property belonging to the other before or .after marriage, the owner of the property may maintain an action therefor, or for any right growing out of the same, in the same manner and extent as if they were unmarried.”
The money which the plaintiff loaned the defendant was clearly her separate estate, and it-cannot be questioned that as a matter of law she could have maintained an action therefor. Had the defendant secured the debt by mortgage on personal or real property, there would be no contention that the wife could not avail herself of such security by a suit to foreclose the same. Doyle v. McGuire, 38 Iowa, 410; Wright v. Wright, 16 Iowa, 496; Payne v. Wilson, 76 Iowa, 377. The statute expressly says that an action may be maintained for the property, “ or for any right growing out of the same.” Any contract relating to the return of the borrowed money, or providing compensation .therefor, is valid and enforceable, because an action therefor is clearly within the provisions of the statutes. The fact that the compensation may be to a certain extent uncertain, or that it is not to be paid in distinct and separate property, can [282]*282make no difference. Hanson & Myer v. Manley, 72 Iowa, 48. In Heacock v. Heacock, 108 Iowa, 540, the wife sued on an ordinary promissory note. A demurrer to the petition was overruled, and the defendant refusing to plead further, judgment was rendered against him. There was no- showing in the petition that the note was given for or concerned her separate property, or any right growing out of the same, and it was held that no cause of action was pleaded.
Furthermore, it will be observed that the contract does not provide for .a conveyance of the interest at any'particular time, and the rule is well settled that title to pre-empted land may be legally conveyed after the patent has issued. In any view of the casei, we arq clear that there is no merit in the defendant’s contention, and that the appellant is the legal owner of an undivided, onerhalf interest in the land.
The plaintiff only asks an accounting for the personal property on hand March 1, 1901, and acquired thereafter.
On the plaintiff’s appeal the case is reversed, and on the defendant’s appeal it is affirmed. It will be remanded for an accounting in accordance with this opinion.— Reversed on plaintiff’s appeal, and affirmed on defendant’s appeal.
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101 N.W. 90, 125 Iowa 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelhaney-v-mcelhaney-iowa-1904.