Parker v. Siple

76 Ind. 345
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 Ind. 345 (Parker v. Siple) 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
Parker v. Siple, 76 Ind. 345 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Franklin, C.

Appellant filed a claim against appellee, as administrator of the estate of James Chadwick, deceased, in the Pike Circuit Court, February 11th, 1878. The claim was refused to be admitted by the administrator, and went upon the issue docket at the October term, 1878. The administrator appeared and demurred to the complaint, which demurrer was overruled. No other pleadings filed in the ■cause; trial by the court; finding for appellee ; motion for a new trial overruled and excepted to, and judgment on the finding.

The only assignment of error in this court is the overruling of the motion for a new trial. The reasons assigned in the motion are, that the finding was not sustained by the evidence, was contraiy to the evidence and contrary to the law. Under these reasons three questions are presented by counsel: 1st. Was the claim proven? 2d. Was it barred by the statute' of limitations? 3d. Was it within the statute1 of frauds ?

[346]*346It is agreed by the parties, that, on the 18th day of October, 1867, appellant sold to the deceased a farm in Hendricks county, Indiana, for the sum of $4,800, at the rate of $40 per acre; that a deed for the same was then executed, and that amount settled between them by appellant, taking a tract of land in Iowa, at $3,500, and $1,300 in notes on persons in Iowa, near the Iowa land conveyed to appellant; that deceased sold the Hendricks county land on the 19th day of September, 1870, to Martha Edwards for the sum of $5,400. And appellant claims that it was also a part of the agreement and contract between the parties, that, if the deceased should, within five years thereafter, sell the Hendricks county farm for more than $40 per acre, he should pay the excess, whatever he should get, to appellant.

The proof was all written, and in the shape of depositions, of witnesses and documentary evidence. Chadwick had moved to Pike county and died there. At the time Chadwick sold the Hendricks county land to Martha Edwards, he gave a bond for a deed. On the 12th day of March, 1872, he conveyed the land to Mrs. Edwards and her assignees, and received $1,800 of the consideration money; that the last of the consideration, to wit, $300, was received by Chadwick in 1876. The evidence, uncontradicted, shows clearly that the plaintiff’s claim was embraced in, and was a part, of, the contract for the sale and exchange of the Hendricks county farm; that, in the negotiations, appellant asked $45 per acre, and deceased offered him $40 per acre. But they finally agreed that deceased should pay then $40 per acre, and that, if he could sell the land for more than $40 per acre, at any time within five years, he would pay to appellant such excess.

The only testimony in the case, that has been suggested as not explicit upon this question, is that contained in the deposition of Robert P. Parker, which reads as follows : “I had a conversation with James Chadwick, in his lifetime, in the [347]*347fall of 1870, in regard to the farm he had bought from the plaintiff ; heard Chadwick say then that he had nothing else to do with the $5,400 he had got for the land he had bought from the plaintiff, but to loan it, with the exception, perhaps, that the plaintiff had a claim upon him, Chadwick, for $5 per acre, and that he hardly thought, under the circumstances, he ought to demand it. Chadwick further said, that, by the terms of the trade between him and the plaintiff, in regard to the land he had bought of the plaintiff,, the plaintiff was to have $5 more, extra, per acre, if he,. Chadwick, could sell it for that.” We do not think this-testimony is the least uncertain, or in conflict with appellant’s claim.

It is insisted by appellee’s counsel, that the testimony contained in the deposition of William Carter, of Wayne county, State of Iowa, tends to prove payment of the claim. Appellant moved onto the Iowa land which he got of deceased in the fall of 1867 ; lived there, within five miles of witness’ residence, one year; then moved to the State of Kansas,, where he resided some eight years, when he returned to Hendricks county, Indiana. Carter in his deposition testifies as-to what took place in 1867 and 1868, the year appellant was-in Iowa. Omitting the questions, the answers in the deposition read as follows : ‘ ‘I did not hear any land trade made-at all; I paid money; it was boot-money, as I understood it, between farms which they traded; I do not recollect exactly, but it must have been in 1865 or 1866, or somewhere-about then ; I was authorized by Chadwick to pay Henry K. Parker fifteen hundred dollars for him, Chadwick, as he-agreed to give Parker that much to boot between the farms-in Indiana and the farm down here in Appanoose county,, Iowa; the time stated is not right, I know; I was agent for Chadwick in paying the money; I was collecting Chadwick’s, money here, and attending to his business, and he authorized me to pay it here to Parker, instead of sending it to* [348]*348'Chadwick, who was then in Indiana; part of it was paid at Parker’s house, in Appanoose county, and part of it at my •own house, in Wayne county; it was paid in payments as I collected Chadwick’s money; I don’t remember how many payments were made; the size of the payments run from one hundred to three hundred dollars, and perhaps five hun■dred dollars, at one time, especially; I know I took receipts from Parker for the money I paid him; I remember that at one time we added the amount of the small receipts together, and I took one from him at that time for all the money I had paid him at former times, and destroyed the small receipts by tearing them up; at that time .they aggregated somewhere between eight hundred and one thousand dollars ; I paid him altogether fifteen hundred dollars, the sum Chadwick authorized me to pay him ; Parker lived in Indiana (at the time of the trade) ; I saw Parker, I think, at least once every ten days while he lived here; he never claimed afterward that Chadwick owed him any more on the land; he said their contract was that Uncle Jim, meaning Chadwick, who was his uncle, agreed that he should be paid, in payments as I could collect it fox’. Chadwick, just as Chadwick had written to me; he came to my house when he first moved, for the money, and I told him I did not have that much on haxxd for Chadwick, axxd he said he was not in íxeed •of the money, axxd it was to be paid in payments as before •stated ; he said nothing about Chadwick’s putting the land ■oxx the market; the amount I paid him was all I ever heard claimed; if there was anything more, neither party ever mentioned it ixx my presence; knew of no other facts material iix the case.”

The testimoixy in this deposition states xxothing about the terms of the coxxtract, further than the paying of the boot-money that was thexx due. Neither does it texxd to show a paymexxt of appellant’s subsequeixt claim for the excess in ■the subsequeixt sale of the laxxd. At that time appellant had [349]*349no such absolute claim. Chadwick had not jet sold the land, and until that was sold for* more than $40 per acre, there could be no claim for the excess. Chadwick did not direct his agent (Carter) to pay it, and appellant did not, to him, claim it. The only apparent conflict that we see is in the amount that Carter states he paid to appellant out of the claims in his hands for collection for Chadwick.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Ind. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-siple-ind-1881.