Quick v. Goodwin

19 Ind. 438
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 19 Ind. 438 (Quick v. Goodwin) 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
Quick v. Goodwin, 19 Ind. 438 (Ind. 1862).

Opinion

Hanna, J.

Prior to 1851, James Goodwin died testate, leaving seven children, and one set of grand-children, as well as a widow. Several specific bequests were made, after which the will provides as follows:

“I also order and direct, that all the real and personal estate of which I shall die seized or possessed, (except the bequests heretofore named,) shall be sold by my executors, for the highest and best price for cash, or on such credit, and the amount secured in such manner, as is usual in like cases, to insure the full and punctual payment thereof, and I direct and ordain that the amount of money raised by the disposal of real and personal estate hereinbefore ordered by me to be sold or otherwise disposed of, to be divided in the following manner, to-wit: To Thomas Goodwin, Harrison Goodwin, John W. Goodwin, Abner Goodwin, the heirs of the body of Elizabeth Quick, deceased, Indiana Clark and Martha Lyons, each, one equal share and share alike, among the sons and daughters of my body, and the amount devised, or share bequeathed, to the heirs of the body of Elizabeth Quick, deceased, shall be paid by my executors to them as they "become of age. The share bequeathed to Martha Lyons, and the heirs of her body, is, by my executors, to be laid out in [440]*440lands for their use and benefit.” James and John W., sons, and Clark, a son-in-law, were appointed executors.

Such proceedings were had by said executors, that, on the 20th day of May, 1851, said lands, to the amount of about twenty-eight hundred acres, were sold at public sale and bid in by the adult heirs of said decedent, for about ten dollars per acre, in parcels of near three hundred acres, and upward, to each one, except John W. That the executors purchased, altogether, about eleven hundred acres of said land, at said sale.

Afterward, at the May term, 1854, of said Court, said executors filed a complaint against the balance of said heirs, showing the above facts, and alleged that they had made improvements, etc., and praying the Court, as doubts had arisen, etc., to confirm their purchase, or, that said property might be again offered for sale, and if it would not bring any more than they were to pay for the same, and the value of the improvements, that it might be confirmed to them, etc. It appears that the Court found the value of the improvements, and ordered the property to be offered in the parcels in which it was then held by said executors, one of them holding seven hundred acres, etc. Afterward they reported that it had been offered and no bid received, and, thereupon, on the — day of July, 1854, said purchases were confirmed to said original purchasers.

On the 20th day of December, 1859, the appellant, John W. Quick, one of said grand-children, brought suit against said executors for an alleged balance due him of his-distributive share, averring that they had used the said legacy, etc., and closing interest and profits, etc. A demurrer was sustained to the complaint, at the January term of said Court, for the year 1860, and, thereupon, an amendment was filed, which, among other things, charged fraud in the sale of said lands. The complaint was several times further amended, until it ultimately set forth the facts above set out, and charged that said [441]*441executors, and the other sons and daughters of said decedent, had fraudulently combined, etc., among themselves, to each bid off certain parcels ,of said lands, and not bid against each other; and that they also confederated together to prevent other persons from bidding on said lands, by representing that they would get into litigation, etc., and by bribery, etc. That by said agreement, said executors offered said lands in large parcels, to suit each of said heirs, and required cash down at said sale; that, in consequence of these various acts, said lands, purchased by said persons, were so purchased for twenty-eight thousand dollars, when, in fact, they were worth fifty thousand, and would have brought that much if offered in small lots, and on reasonable time, and clear of the appliances used, etc.; that at the re-offer of said lands, purchased by the executors, in 1854, said frauds were again resorted to, and, in addition to said lands being offered in such large parcels, it was given out that purchasers would get into litigation,9 and B and M were paid one hundred dollars if they would not bid, when they had intended and otherwise would have run said lands up to fifteen dollars per acre, etc.; that said appellant was a minor at said sale in 1851, and arrived at full age during the pending of the application of said executors to procure the confirmation of the sales made to themselves; and that he has been but lately, during the winter of 1859-60, apprised of the fraud perpetrated against his rights; praying that the sale may be set aside, and the lands again sold by a disinterested commissioner, “or that, inasmuch as lands, since the time of said sale, have, from fortuitous causes, become depreciated in value, said executors may be decreed to pay the difference between the actual value of said lands, when so pretended to be sold, and the price,” etc.

There was a demurrer overruled to this complaint, and by cross errors assigned, and brief filed, the appellees press this as the only point upon which they rely; urging that it [442]*442is shown that the remedy of the appellant, if any he ever had, is barred by the statute of limitations.

Waiving any discussion of the manner in which it was thus attempted to raise the point, for it was afterward raised by answer, we will proceed to examine it.

By the appellant it is urged that this case falls under the fourth subdivision of sec. 210, p. 75, 2 R. S., to-wit: “The following actions shall be commenced within six years after the cause of action has accrued, and not afterward: * * * Fourth, for relief against frauds.” And that, as this form of action was adopted immediately upon the discovery of the fraud, it is in time, within the meaning of sec. 219, Id.

To this it is answered, in argument: first, that the section first quoted has no application, because it has reference only to suits to obtain judgments, not to proceedings to be relieved from judgments after they have been obtained; that such proceedings are governed by other statutes, namely: those governing applications for new trials, and to review judgments, under neither of which was this suit in time; and that the application must be in conformity with some statute; to which proposition is quoted Woolly v. Woolly, 12 Ind. 663, and McQuigg v. McQuigg, 13 Id. 296. And, second, if they are wrong in this, that still the plaintiff does not make a case of concealment, entitling him to relief.

As to the first point made by appellees: There being sufficient facts' alleged in the complaint, it is clear that the plaintiff, even under sec. 210, quoted, was entitled to proceed to obtain relief, having commenced within six years, unless the order of the Court, made in 1854, confirming said sales, should be considered as interposing a bar in the way, by which he was compelled to seek his remedy under some other law. We do not find from the record, that the property had been, in 1851, sold by order of the Court; nor was such sale then confirmed. In 1854, upon the application of the executors, heretofore noticed, the sales to persons, other [443]

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ind. 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quick-v-goodwin-ind-1862.