Nutter v. Fouch

86 Ind. 451
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
DocketNo. 9873
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 Ind. 451 (Nutter v. Fouch) 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
Nutter v. Fouch, 86 Ind. 451 (Ind. 1882).

Opinion

Black, C.

The appellee sued the appellant, the complaint being in two paragraphs. In the first, partition was sought of certain land in Tipton county, of which, it was alleged, appellant and appellee were the owners in fee simple as tenants in common, the share of appellee being the undivided one-third. In the second paragraph it was sought, in the usual form, to quiet appellee’s title to the undivided one-third of said land against appellant’s claim to some adverse interest therein. Appellant answered by a general denial, and filed also three other paragraphs numbered second, third and fourth. Demurrers to these three paragraphs were sustained. The general denial was then withdrawn, and j udgment was rendered upon demurrer for the appellee. The rulings upon the demurrers are assigned as errors, but the only questions argued by counsel for appellant arise upon the demurrer to the second paragraph. The other specifications in the assignment of errors will therefore not be further noticed. The second paragraph purported to be pleaded as for answer and cross [453]*453complaint,” and it was demurred to as an answer and also as a cross complaint.

It alleged, in substance, that in the year 1854 appellant was the owner in fee of certain land described, in said county, including the land described in the complaint; that in that year he sold the land so owned by him to one Daniel Foueh, who-was then the husband of appellee, and who died in 1866, leaving appellee his widow, for- $2,500, taking two notes therefor from said Daniel, each for $1,250; that no security for said-notes or either of them was taken by appellant from said Daniel ; that he afterward paid to appellant one of said notes in. full and a small portion on the other, and, said Daniel failing- and refusing to pay further on the latter note the balance due-appellant for purchase-money of said real estate, appellant, on the 9th of August, 1855, conveyed said real estate to said Daniel by deed of general warranty, signed by appellant and his-wife, and on or about that day brought suit on said last mentioned note, in the Tipton Circuit Court, and, on the 25th of September, 1855, a judgment was rendered thereon against said Daniel and in favor of appellant for $1,052.30, which was the balance due from said Daniel to appellant for the unpaid purchase-money of said real estate; that said Daniel failing to pay or replevy said judgment, or in any way secure the payment thereof, appellant, on the 11th of September, 1856,, caused execution thereon to be issued by the clerk, directed to the sheriff, which went duly into his hands and was by him, on the 19th of December, 1856, by and with the knowledge, advice and consent of said Daniel “and this plaintiff, being as defendant was, at the time, without personal property subject to execution, levied upon ” certain land described, being a portion (two-thirds) of the land so conveyed by appellant to said Daniel, and including the land described in the-complaint; that said sheriff thereafter duly advertised the land-levied on for sale, as required by law, and, on the 17th of January, 1857, sold it at public sale to appellant, who bid [454]*454■therefor $l,026.66-f, the full amount of said judgment and -costs, and that being the highest and best price bid therefor, and he being the highest and best bidder, the land was properly struck off to him by said sheriff for that price; that said sheriff on the same day executed to appellant a deed for said real estate, which he, on the same day, caused to be recorded, etc. The pleading then states that appellant having purchased in said real estate on a judgment for unpaid purchase-money, which was paramount to appellee's claim, she ought mot to recover in this action. It is then prayed that, upon a final hearing of this cause, appellant's title to said land be quieted, and that appellee be barred from ever setting up any claim or demand to the same, and that appellant have other proper relief. Copies of the final entry of said judgment and said sheriff’s deed are made exhibits, and it is alleged that the papers in said action against Daniel Fouch and the execution having been lost, they therefore can not be exhibited.

The undivided share claimed by the appellee in her complaint was one-eighteenth of the land alleged by appellant in his pleading to have been sold to appellee’s husband, and one-twelfth of that alleged to have been bought by appellant at said sheriff's sale.

By the provisions of sections 27 and 35 of the statute of descent, 1 R. S. 1876, pp. 413, 414, the husband of appellee Shaving during their marriage been seized in fee simple of the ¡real estate described in the complaint, and she not having joined in a conveyance thereof in due form of law, but the land having been sold by virtue of an execution to which she was not a party, she, having survived her said husband, was «entitled to the share claimed by her, and had a right to have partition, unless the other facts stated in appellant's pleading precluded her.

A woman’s right in land in virtue of her marriage, while at remains inchoate, or after it has become consummate by the death of her husband, is subject to the lien of his vendor for the purchase-money of the land. Crane v. Palmer, 8 [455]*455Blackf. 120; Fisher v. Johnson, 5 Ind. 492; Talbott v. Armstrong, 14 Ind. 254; Carver v. Grove, 68 Ind. 371. What may be her right to redeem need not be decided here.

Under the statute in force at the date of the sheriff’s sale mentioned in appellant’s pleading, upon a sale of the husband’s land on execution under an ordinary judgment against him alone, the wife’s inchoate "interest, was not affected; the purchaser took the land free from any claim of the wife during the husband’s lifetime, and forever freed therefrom upon her death, leaving the husband surviving, but subject to her right to one-third thereof if she should survive her husband.

Whatever may have been the proper mode of proceeding under the old practice, the vendor of land having an equitable lien thereon for purchase-money may, under the modern procedure, seek his legal remedy upon his money demand, together with the enforcement of his lien, in one action. But he may, as formerly, first pursue his remedy upon his legal claim alone, without thereby waiving his right to afterward resort, if necessary, to the equitable remedy by enforcement ox the lien. Turner v. Horner, 29 Ark. 440; Clark v. Hunt, 3 J. J. Marsh. 553; Ball v. Hill, 48 Tex. 634; Dibblee v. Mitchell, 15 Ind. 435; Crowfoot v. Zink, 30 Ind. 446; Humphrey v. Thorn, 63 Ind. 296.

A vendor’s lien on land for unpaid purchase-money is not .an original and absolute charge on the land, but only an equitable right to resort to it if there be not sufficient personal assets. Martin v. Cauble, 72 Ind. 67, 75, and authorities there cited. It is not an equitable estate in the land. It is a right to have a lien established by decree of a court in the particular case. Sugden Vend., Perkins ed., 671, n (d1).

In an action to enforce a vendor’s lien on land, if the complaint do not allege and the evidence show that the vendee has no other property subject to execution, the judgment should not direct the sale of the land in the first instance, but should be for the amount of the debt established, with a proper entry ■that it is for purchase-money, and that the land is subject to [456]

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Bluebook (online)
86 Ind. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutter-v-fouch-ind-1882.