Michener v. Bengel

34 N.E. 664, 135 Ind. 188, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 206
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1893
DocketNo. 16,309
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 N.E. 664 (Michener v. Bengel) 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
Michener v. Bengel, 34 N.E. 664, 135 Ind. 188, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 206 (Ind. 1893).

Opinions

Howard, J.

William B. Eshleman, Orris P. Eshleman, and their sister, the appellee VandelenaE. Bengel, inherited from their parents, Jeremiah Eshleman and his wife Catharine, eighty acres of land in Tipton county, Indiana.

On August 15, 1885, the three children agreed upon [189]*189a division of said land. William B. and Orris P. took a deed from Vandelena E. for fifty acres on the north side of the eighty acres, and Vandelena E. took a deed from them for the remaining thirty acres. The deed given by Vandelena E. was signed by her under the name of Elizabeth M. Bengel, and was also signed by her husband, the appellee George O. Bengel. The deed to Vandelena E. Bengel was delivered to her, but was never placed on record.

On August 29, 1885, William B. and Orris P. Eshleman executed and delivered to the appellee, George O. Bengel, a quitclaim deed for an undivided two-thirds of said thirty acres, and this latter deed was placed on record.

On June 14, 1887, George C. Bengel and his wife, Vandelena E. Bengel, mortgaged said thirty acres to the appellant, to secure the payment of three promissory notes, given to appellant by said George C. Bengel for certain machinery purchased of appellant by said Bengel.

After the maturity of the notes the appellant brought suit to collect the debt and foreclose the mortgage on ■two-thirds of said real estate.

To appellant’s complaint the appellee Vandelena E. Bengel filed her answer in four paragraphs, and also filed her cross-complaint in three paragraphs, setting up that all the land so mortgaged was her own separate estate; that she was the wife of George C. Bengel; that the debt secured was the individual debt of her said husband; that she executed said mortgage solely to secure said debt, and praying that the title to the land be quieted in her.

In the third paragraph of said appellee’s answer, she alleged that, on August 15,1885, she and her said brothers met and agreed upon partition of the said eighty acres inherited from their parents; that for the purposes [190]*190of partition and to divide the land amongst themselves, and upon no other consideration, she, her husband uniting with her, conveyed fifty acres off the north side of said land to her said brothers, “and on the same day at the same time and place, to carry out the partition agreed upon and as consideration for said deed,” her said brothers conveyed to her the said remaining thirty acres; that afterwards, without her knowledge or consent, the said deed to her was torn up and destroyed, and on the 29th day of August, 1885, her said brothers conveyed to her husband the undivided two-thirds of said thirty acres, which last deed was placed upon record.

The cause was submitted to a jury, who rendered a general verdict for the appellant against the appellee George C. Bengel for the amount of the debt due appellant, and a general verdict for the appellee, Vandelena E. Bengel, on her cross-complaint, quieting her title to all of said thirty acres.

The only error assigned by appellant is the overruling of his motion for a new trial. The first reason given, in support of the motion for a new trial, is that the verdict is not sustained by sufficient evidence.

The appellee Vandelena E. Bengel. testified that she did not know that the deed given to her in partition was destroyed, and a deed made to her husband in its stead, until after the execution of appellant’s mortgage.

At the time that the appellee George C. Bengel made the contract with appellant to purchase the machinery, he represented to appellant that the thirty acres was his own property, and agreed to secure the debt by ajnortgage on the land.

Appellant testified that he did not know at or before the time of the execution of the mortgage that the appellee Vandelena E. Bengel was the owner of any part of said land, until after examining the record of deeds, [191]*191when he discovered that George C. Bengel was the owner of only two-thirds of it, as shown by the deed received by him from William B. and Orris P. Eshleman.

Section 2931, R. S’. 1881, provides that: “Every conveyance or mortgage of lands or of any interest therein, and every lease for more than three years shall be recorded in the recorder’s office of the- county where such lands shall be situated; and every conveyance or lease, not so recorded in forty-five days from the execution thereof, shall be fraudulent and void as against any subsequent purchaser, lessee or mortgagee in good faith and for a valuable, consideration.” The appellee Yandelena E. Bengel did not put her deed upon record within the time required by law, nor before the time of the making of said mortgage.

By section 5117 of the same statutes, while a married woman may take, acquire, and hold real or personal property, as if she were unmarried, yet it is provided, “That she shall be bound by an estoppel in pais, like any other person.”

That appellant was a mortgagee in godd faith and for a valuable consideration, we have no doubt; although this is denied by appellees, who contend that as the notes were given April 15, 1887, while the mortgage was executed June 14, thereafter, therefore the mortgage was one to secure a preexisting debt.

Such a case was that of Busenbarke, Exec., v. Ramey, 53 Ind. 499. But in this case, at the time of purchase of machinery by George C. Bengel from appellant,.it was a part of the agreement that such mortgage should be given to secure the debt created by such purchase. The contract of purchase, notes, and mortgage were all parts of one transaction.

Appellant had no actual notice of the partition deed to appellee Yandelena E. Bengel; it remains to be consid[192]*192ered whether he had constructive notice of the existence of such deed.

The only evidence before the jury from which such constructive notice could be drawn, was the partition deed from George C. Bengel and Elizabeth M. Bengel to William B. and Orris P. Eshleman, for one-third of fifty acres on the north side of the thirty acre tract in suit; and the deed from William B. and Orris P. Eshleman to George C. Bengel for two-thirds of said thirty acres. Both of these deeds trace title through Jeremiah Eshleman; the first conveying the interest of Elizabeth M. Bengel in said fifty acres, as heir of said Jeremiah Eshleman, and the second conveying the interests of William B. and Orris P. Eshleman in said thirty acres, also as heirs of said Jeremiah Eshleman. The mortgage on the thirty acres was made in the names of "George C. Bengel and V. E. Bengel, his wife.”

Appellees contend that the deeds so in evidence were constructive notice to appellant of the existence of the partition deed to Vandelena E. Bengel.

The jury answered several interrogatories; the following bear upon this issue:

"Did the records of Tipton county show, at the time the real estate mortgage sued upon was executed, that George O. Bengel owned two-thirds of the mortgaged real estate? Yes. J. N. Richards, Foreman.
"Did James B. Michener know at the time he accepted said mortgage 'that Vandelena E. Bengel owned, or claimed to own, said land? We suppose he did.
"J. N. Richards, Foreman.
"Did said George C.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.E. 664, 135 Ind. 188, 1893 Ind. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michener-v-bengel-ind-1893.