English v. Stillwell
English v. Stillwell
Opinion of the Court
I. The defendant H. H. Stillwell claims title to the properly in controversy under a warranty deed purporting to have been executed -by plaintiff, by the name of Margaret E. Thompson, by her attorney in fact, <3. O. Thompson. The plaintiff alleges that she did not execute the power of •attorney, that it is a forgery, and that the title of defendant based thereon
The plaintiff testifies that she left Waukon in June, before the power of attorney was executed, and did not return until the following spring. She introduces the testimony of other witnesses tending to corroborate her statements in regard to her absence. On the other hand, the defendant shows by many witnesses that she was in Waukon, at or about the time the power purports to have been executed. Upon the question of her absence (the alibi, as it is aptly called by counsel) the testimony is conflicting.
The plaintiff and- C. O. Thompson were, when the power of attorney was executed, husband and wife, and were living together as such. They subsequently separated and were divorced. There seems to have been disagreement between them about the time the instrument was executed, and they did not long live together afterwards. Plaintiff went to Illinois, and her husband to Kansas, after having sold and conveyed the property under the power of attorney. Plaintiff returned to Waukon a few months after the conveyance of the property by her husband. After remaining a short time she left, and for ten years gave no care or thought for the property, making no claim for rents or possession,, though a house was situated thereon which had been her homestead. We think this is a remarkable fact if plaintiff’s story be correct. We are clearly of the opinion that the testimony does not authorize the conclusion that the power of attorney is a forgery. The evidence introduced by plaintiff is utterly insufficient to overcome the certificate of acknowledgement, and the positive testimony of the notary and Thompson. We will not undertake to discuss the testimony further. The nature of the case does not demand it.
II. When the power of attorney was executed, the property was occupied by Thompson and his wife as their homestead. Plaintiff insists that it was so occupied when Thompson executed the deed by virtue of the power of attorney, and that the conveyance is void under the statute in force at that time, Revision, section 2279, on the ground that the husband did not join in the deed. But this objectiou to defendant’s title is disposed of upon the consideration that when the deed was executed the property had been abandoned as a homestead. The testimony very satisfactorily sustains this conclusion.
No other questions are presented by the case for our consideration. The decree of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.