Tice v. Derby
This text of 13 N.W. 301 (Tice v. Derby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[314]*314She insists that the plaintiff was divested of his interest by his mother’s deed. ' Her position is based upon certain allegations, said to be supported by the evidence; that the plaintiff in disappearing and remaining unheard from so long, and under the circumstances shown, allowed his mother’s grantee to purchase and pay for the lot in good faith, and under the just supposition that he was dead, and that he ought not now to be heard to aver to the contrary.
But we are all agreed upon a separate reading of the evidence, that while it appears clearly enough that Mrs. Burk-hart’s grantee purchased and paid for the lot in good faith, expecting to get a clear title to the whole of it, the plaintiff’s conduct was not such as to create an estoppel against him. Mrs. Burkhart’s deed, then, did not have the effect to convey the plaintiff’s interest, and Caroline Derby became a tenant .in common with the plaintiff, and was such at the time she obtained her tax deed.
We come now to consider the questions raised on the plaintiff’s appeal. He insists that the defendant, Laura, is not entitled to be allowed for improvements. Whether she might not be if the pleadings justified it, we need not determine. The defendant does not appear to have made such claim. She does, it is true, in the sixth division of her answer set out among other things that Caroline Derby built a house on the lot„ at an expense of $1,100. But the matters set up in this division were pleaded by way of estoppel. It is abundantly manifest that they were relied upon simply to defeat the plaintiff’s title. It will be time enough, we think, to consider whether the defendant can be allowed for improvements when she makes a claim for improvements.
The plaintiff contends, also, that the court erred in decreeing that the defendant was entitled to an allowance for taxes; and we have to say that we think that the plaintiff’s position in this respect must be sustained. Whatever averments she has made concerning the payment of taxes, do not appear to have been made with the view of claiming an allowance, but solely with the view of defeating the plaintiff’s title. She not only does not pray specifically to be allowed for such payments, but she makes no averment of the payment of any [316]*316specific amounts. Wliat, if anything, the defendant should be allowed under a proper condition of the pleadings, we do not determine.
The decree below was not intended to be final. The case must be reversed upon both appeals, and remanded for such further jn-oceedings as the parties may see fit to ask and the court deem it proper to grant.. Each party must pay half of the costs of this appeal.
Beversed.
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13 N.W. 301, 59 Iowa 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tice-v-derby-iowa-1882.