St. Clair v. Marquell

67 N.E. 693, 161 Ind. 56, 1903 Ind. LEXIS 135
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1903
DocketNo. 20,037
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 693 (St. Clair v. Marquell) 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
St. Clair v. Marquell, 67 N.E. 693, 161 Ind. 56, 1903 Ind. LEXIS 135 (Ind. 1903).

Opinion

Dowling, J.

— This is a suit for the partition of a tract of 240 acres pi land situated in Delaware county,. Indiana,of which one Samuel Marquell died seized in fee simple in 1899. A convenient description of the land, and one adopted by its former owner, was the east 120 acres and the west 120 acres of the northwest quarter and of the north half of the southwest quarter of section ten, township twenty-one north, of range eleven east. The suit was [58]*58brought by Henry Marquell, one of the appellees herein, and the appellants, Anna E. St. Clair and her husband, James, were made defendants. Henry Marquell, the plaintiff below, alleged in his complaint that the tract of 240 acres above described had been owned by Samuel Marquell, who died intestate, seized of the same in fee simple, leaving the said Henry Marquell and Anna E. St. Clair, his children, as his sole heirs at law; that the west 120 acres of the said tract had been conveyed by the said Samuel Marquell to the said Anna E. St. Clair by a deed placed in the hands of a stranger; that such conveyance was by way of an advancement; and that the said Henry Marquell was the owner in fee of the east 120 acres of said tract. Prayer for partition between the said parties. To this complaint the appellants filed answers in denial.

Anna E. St. Clair filed a cross-complaint in two paragraphs against the appellees, Henry Marquell, David Michael, Emma Zehner, Willetts Marquell, and Samuel Mar-quell, Jr. In the first paragraph, she claimed to be the owner in fee of the west 120 acres of said tract, and asked to have her title quieted against the claims of the said appellees. By the second paragraph, she alleged that Samuel Marquell, in his lifetime, was. the owner in fee of the whole tract of 240 acres; that she, the said Anna E., and Henry M. were his children and sole heirs at law; that the said Samuel Marquell conveyed the west 120 acres of said tract to her by deed, and died seized of the remaining east 120 acres; that the said Samuel Marquell advanced to the said Henry Marquell $1,500, and that the same should be charged to him. Prayer that the title to the west 120 acres be quieted in the said Anna E. St. Clair as against all of said appellees, that the advancement to the said Henry be taken into account, and that the east 120 acres be divided between the said Anna E. St. Clair and Henry Marquell.

David Michael and Emma Zehner, and the husband of the said Emma, filed an answer in three paragraphs, the [59]*59first being a denial; the second setting up title in the said David and Emma to the north fifty acres of the east 120 acres of the tract, and the third asserting title in the said David and Emma to the north fifty acres of the west 120 acres of said tract.

David Michael and Emma Zehner also filed a cross-complaint alleging that Samuel Marquell made a deed to the said David and Emma by which he intended to convey to. them the north fifty acres of the east 120 acres of said lands, but that by the mistake of the draftsman of the deed the real estate was erroneously described as the north fifty acres of the west 120 acres. Prayer that the deed be reformed. Answers by all parties in denial.

Henry Marquell filed an answer in two paragraphs to the cross-complaint of Anna E. St. Clair, admitting that he received $1,500 from his father, Samuel Marquell, but alleging that it was a gift, and not an advancement, charging that the 120 acres of land conveyed hy Samuel Marquell to his daughter, Anna E. St. Clair, was intended as an advancement, and alleging that other property also was received by her from her father as an advancement. Prayer that the said advancements be taken into account, that partition of said lands be made between the said Henry Mar-quell and Anna E. St. Clair, and that his title to the east 120 acres be quieted as against all the other parties.

The appellees, Willetts Márquell and Samuel Marquell, Jr., being minors, a guardian ad litem for them was appointed by the court, and such guardian filed an answer denying the matters stated in the cross-complaint of Anna E: St. Clair.

After the evidence was in, Henry Marquell, with the leave of the court, filed a second paragraph of complaint alleging that he and Anna E. St. Clair were the owners and were tenants in common of the east 120 acres of the tract described," and that each was entitled to one-half thereof. Prayer that the land he divided, and that the said [60]*60Henry Marquell be allowed by the court $300 for his attorney’s fees.

The cause was tried by the court and a general finding was made. Motions for a neiv trial were filed by all the parties and were overruled by the court. These decisions with the rulings on the demurrers to the third paragraph of the cross-complaint of Michael and Zehner are assigned for error.

The facts proved were substantially as follows: Samuél Marquell was the owner in fee simple of the northwest quarter and the north half of the southwest quarter of section ten, in township twenty-one north, of range eleven east, containing 240 acres of land situated in Delaware county, Indiana. In 1894 he was a widower and had two children, the appellant Anna E. St. Olair being one of them, and the appellee Henry M. Marquell the other. He also had two grandchildren, Willetts Marquell and Samuel Marquell, Jr., who were the'sons of the said Henry. David Micháel and Emma Zehner were stepchildren. Sometime in 1894, Samuel Marquell said to Albert Jones, who was one of his tenants, “Al, I have got some papers that I would like for you to hold.” Jones answered, “Sam, I would rather not do it.” Marquell repeated, “I want you to hold them.” A few weeks later, Samuel Marquell said to Jones, “Al, here is them papers I want you to hold — to hold, and deliver them as soon as possible after my death to Anna St. Clair and David Michael and Willetts Marquell and Sam Marquell and- Emma Zehner.” Marquell thereupon placed in Jones’ hands a lot of papers in a sealed envelope, which the latter took to his home and laid away in a trunk. About five years afterward, Samuel Marquell called at Jones’ residence and said to Jones, “Al, I want them papers.” Jones thereupon delivered them to him. Two or three weeks subsequently to this, Jones was at Marquell’s . house, when the latter said to him, “Al, here is them papers,” at the same'time handing Jones a package in a sealed [61]*61envelope. This envelope was. not the one which enclosed the papers when they were first delivered to Jones. It was indorsed, “Warranty deeds to David Michael, Emma Zehner, Anna St. Olair, Willetts Marquell, and Samuel Mar-quell.” These papers were kept by .Jones until after the death of Marquell, and on the day succeeding his funeral the envelope was opened by Jones in tlre/presence of Henry Marquell and the other parties, excepting the two minor children of Henry, and the deeds found therein, which corresponded with the indorsement of the envelope, were then and there delivered by Jones to the grantees named in them, respectively. The deeds so delivered were as follows: (1) A warranty deed conveying to Anna E. St. Olair, subject to a life estate of the grantor, the west half of the northwest quarter of section ten and off the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of said section, township twenty-one north, of range eleven east, in Delaware county, Indiana. The consideration expressed was $1,000 and love and affection. The date of the deed was April 11, 1894, and the certificate of acknowledgment bore the same date.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 693, 161 Ind. 56, 1903 Ind. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-clair-v-marquell-ind-1903.