Miller v. Shields

55 Ind. 71
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 Ind. 71 (Miller v. Shields) 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
Miller v. Shields, 55 Ind. 71 (Ind. 1876).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

Complaint to restrain future waste, and to recover damages for that already committed.

Judgment below for the defendants.

This case is as follows :

Jesse Shields departed this life in 1847, leaving a will, the first item of which reads thus:

“I give and devise to my beloved wife, Catherine Shields, during her natural life, my home farm, upon which I now reside, being the north-east quarter,” etc., (giving the boundaries of the farm) “ containing about one hundred and sixty acres, together with all the household furniture, stock, and all other movable property on the same, to be held and enjoyed by her for her support, and that of my unmarried daughters, Rachel Shields, Lydia Helen Shields, Mary Pamilia Shields and Elizabeth Marsh, widow of Jesse C. Marsh, deceased, and her three children by said Marsh, during the time my said daughters may continue to live single; and if any of them should marry, it is my will that they shall receive, out of my estate, the sum of two .hundred and fifty dollars, each, that being the portion heretofore advanced to each of my children who have married; upon which they are to relinquish to their mother, and sisters who may remain single, all further benefit of said home farm, and property bequeathed with the same as above. And at the de: cease of my said wife, it is my wish that the said farm, together with the personal property and stock which may then be upon the same, be sold by my executor upon such terms as he, in his discretion, may deem most advantageous, the proceeds of which shall be equally divided among all my children, with the exception of Margaret [73]*73Bean and the daughter of my son, John Shields, neither of whom, are to receive any thing more of my estate.”

It is not material, in the decision of this cause, to notice any other of the provisions of the will.

The testator, Jesse Shields, as has been stated, died in 1847. It was admitted on the trial that Edward Miller, the plaintiff, “was, by purchase and conveyance from children of decedent, the owner in fee of the undivided three-sevenths part of said home farm, subject to the life-estate of said Catherine Shields.”

Catherine Shields, under the above provision of the will of Jesse Shields, became and was tenant for life, with the rights, perhaps a little restricted, of such a tenant, on the one hand, and subject to the duties and liabilities of such a tenant, on the other. One of those duties was to abstain from the commission of waste.

The acts constituting the waste charged in the complaint are the selling of walnut and poplar timber trees, and permitting them to he cut and removed from the farm, by the purchaser, her co-defendant, "Windell. The third paragraph of answer, in defence of the acts committed, follows:

And for further answer to so much of said complaint as seeks to recover damages, said defendant Catherine Shields, for herself alone, says,1 that it is true, as charged in said complaint, that she is the widow of Jesse Shields, deceased, and is the tenant for her own life of the lands in the plaintiff’s complaint described; hut she says, that, by natural causes, the houses, barns and other buildings on said farm became very much out of repair, so that, in the year-, it was necessary, for the benefit of the said plaintiff and the other owners of the inheritance, that large expenditures he made for such necessary repairs, and that, in order to save the timber growing on said farm, which, by law, she was entitled to use for such repairs, she purchased, with her own money, a large amount of lumber, timber, hoards, shingles and - other like mate[74]*74rial, for the repairing of said farm and the buildings and fences thereon, and for the erection of suitable and necessary new buildings and fences on said farm, amounting in value to three or four hundred dollars, all of which was used by her in the said necessary improvements and repairs of said farm, and for the benefit of said inheritance, and that, by reason of said expenditure, the timber on said farm was saved, and said inheritance was benefited, to the amount and value of five hundred dollars, which amount, she asks, may be recouped from any damages said plaintiff and the other owners may show themselves entitled to in said action.”

To this paragraph of answer a demurrer was overruled, and exception taken.

Reply in denial. Trial by the court. Judgment, as has been stated, for the defendants.

On the trial, the court permitted the defendant Catherine to prove that she built a new barn, out of the income derived from the farm.

William T; Shields, a witness, testified:

“ I know the defendant, my mother, built a new barn on the farm; would estimate it at five hundred dollars; old barn burned by lightning; the new barn was built at her expense, out of the proceeds of the farm; • she has re-roofed buildings at an expense of one hundred dollars, out of the proceeds of the farm; barn was built in 1854 or 1855, and was necessary * * * ; she has given the children, seven in number, two hundred dollars, each, out of the income and profits of the farm; Eli Miller owed her one hundred and fifty dollars, or more, of borrowed money, out of the profits and income of the farm, at the time she sold these trees to Windell;” (which was in 1873, eighteen years or more after the building of the barn;) “heard her say that Jonathan Hisey owed her borrowed money, also derived from the farm.”

There was other testimony touching the improvements' made and paid for out of the income of the farm. The [75]*75testimony in reference to the building of the barn was objected to.

The evidence is in the record.

The overruling of the demurrer to the third paragraph of answer is assigned for error, in this court, as is also the overruling of the motion for a new trial.

We will first consider the ruling on the demurrer to the third paragraph of the answer. That paragraph is bad for uncertainty. It consists of a statement of a series of conclusions, arrived at by the party, without giving the court the facts to enable it to judge as to the correctness of the conclusions pleaded. It is assumed that the court will take the conclusions of the pleader as correct. But the rule of law is, that pleadings must state facts, with reasonable definiteness and certainty, to enable the court to draw upon them the legal conclusions. That the paragraph is defective, in this particular, is manifest on perusal. No analysis of it is required.

Whether the paragraph is so defective, in this particular, as to render it bad on demurrer, we need not decide. It is bad, in substance, on another ground. It rests on an erroneous legal basis. It assumes two legal propositions, one of which is false, without exception, and the other of which is only true in exceptional cases, and the paragraph does not state facts bringing this case within the exceptions.

It assumes that a tenant for life may build new buildings in place of those destroyed by the act of God, and may commit waste by taking timber from the farm, with which to erect such new buildings; and that such tenant may exchange timber, growing on the farm, for lumber, with which to make repairs upon buildings, which it is the duty of the tenant to make.

We shall notice these propositions again, as we proceed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Ind. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-shields-ind-1876.