Havens v. Drake
Havens v. Drake
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in the court below, instituted by C. F. Drake against J. D. Havens, to quiet title to lot No. 9, in block No. 103, in the city of Fort Scott. Subsequently, upon her own application, Hattie Ida Cheney was made a defendant. C. F. Drake alleged in his petition that he was the owner of and in the possession of the lot described in his petition. J. D. Havens answered that he was the owner of an undivided one-half of the lot, as the grantee of John E. Himoe, the heir of John E. Himoe sr., deceased. Hattie Ida Cheney answered that she was the owner of an
Drake has been, for some years, in possession of the lot, and has made lasting and valuable improvements thereon, of the value of $6,000. The answers admitted Drake’s possession. Prior to 1864, John E. Himoe sr. and A. P. Clark were the joint owners of the lot. Sometime in 1864 Himoe died, leaving his widow, Ida Himoe, and John Himoe, an infant, his only heirs. On July 28, 1866, A. P. Clark commenced proceedings against Ida Himoe and John Himoe, infant, for partition of the lot in controversy, and also lot 11, in block 103. On the day that A. P. Clark filed his petition for partition, the clerk of the court issued a notice to the defendants, Ida Himoe and her infant child, John Himoe, setting forth the substance of the petition. This was directed to the sheriff. The sheriff’s return of service upon the notice is as follows:
“Received July 28, 1866, and on the 4th day of August, 1866, I served this notice by delivering to Ida Himoe a copy of the same duly certified, with all the indorsements thereon, and on John Himoe, infant, by delivering to Ida Himoe in the presence of the infant, John Himoe, a duly-certified copy of this notice, and also a duly-certified copy to Ida Himoe, as natural guardian of the said John Himoe, infant, all in Bourbon county, Kansas.
Fees: Service.... ._.....$1.25 D. C. KNOWLES, Sheriff.
Travel 28 miles .. -gy g_ WHEATON, Deput.05
$4.05
This was filed in the court by the clerk on August 6, 1866. W. W. Martin was appointed by the court guardian ad litem for John Himoe, infant. On the 1st day of the October term of the court for 1866, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and partition ordered as prayed for. On the 4th day of October, 1866, the commissioners appointed to divide the property reported it was impracticable to do so, and returned its
If the judgment in the partition action of A. P. Clark divested the defendants of all title to the lot in controversy, it is conceded that the judgment of the district court in this case must be affirmed, but the defendants contest the validity of the proceedings in that case. The errors complained of are as follows: First, the admission in evidence of the record in the case of partition of A. P. Clark v. Ida Himoe and John Himoe; and second, the admission of the deposition of Clark, in which he testified he paid Ida Himoe and R. C. Anderson, guardian of John Himoe, infant, their proportion of the appraised value of the lots described in the partition action. The contention is that under the provisions of chapter 162, Comp. Laws of 1862, Clark should have presented his petition to the district court of Bourbon county in term-time, and that the service of notice was insufficient because the defendants had only thirty-eight days in which to plead, and therefore that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter or the parties; and further, it is contended that there was no service upon John Himoe, infant, and for that reason all the proceedings are void. The portion of the statute relating to the filing of the petition and the giving of notice was as follows:
“Sec. 2. That any person or persons entitled to partition of his, her or their estate or estates, under this act, may file his, her or their petition in the district court, praying that partition of such estate or estates may be .made, which petition shall set forth the nature of the title of the demandant, the tract or tracts of land, the tenements or hereditaments of which partition is demanded, and also the name or names and place of residence of each joint tenant, coparcener or tenant in common, with such demandant, if they shall be known to*489 such demandant; and if, on examination, it shall appear to the court that the demandant hath a legal right to any part of such estate or estates, the court shall proceed, in the term in which such petition may be filed, to order a partition to be made in the manner prescribed by the provisions of this act.
“Sec. 3. That the demandant in any petition shall give notice, in some newspaper in general circulation in each county where the land lies, or shall give personal notice, in writing, to each and every person concerned, their agent or attorney, at least forty days previously to the term of the court next after the filing his petition, setting forth the pendency and demand thereof.
“Sec. 4. That, whenever it shall appear to the court that due notice hath been given as aforesaid, and no sufficient reason shall appear why partition should not be made, the court shall proceed to order the partition in favor of such demand-ant, or all parties in interest, and shall issue their writ, directed to the sheriff of their county; or, in case the estate or estates of which partition is sought shall be situate in more than one county, then to the sheriff of either of the counties in which the estates may be, commanding him, that, by the oaths of three judicious and disinterested freeholders of the vicinity, to be named by said court, he cause to be set off and divided to the demandant, or each party in interest in said petition, such part and proportion of such estate or estates as the court shall have ordered.”
As to the service made upon John Himoe, infant, it appears that at the date of such service he was only two years of age. The boy’s father was dead, and his mother was his natural custodian and guardian. Two duly-certified copies were delivered to the mother by the sheriff in the presence of the infant. One copy was for John Himoe, the infant, and the other copy was for Ida Himoe, as his natural guardian. Section 3 of chapter 162 provided that personal notice, in writing, should be given “to each and every person concerned, their agent or attorney.” Section 14 of chapter 162 further provided:
“That the guardian or guardians of any minor heir or heirs shall be empowered, on behalf of their ward or wards, to do and perform any act, matter or thing respecting the partition of any estate or estates under this act, and to elect, on behalf of such ward or wards, to take said estate or estates, when the same cannot be divided without injury, as mentioned in the eighth section of this act, and make payments therefor on behalf of said ward or wards; and such acts and things, done by said guardian or guardians, shall be as valid in law as if the same had been done by such ward or wards after his, her or their arrival at full age.”
The service upon John Himoe, infant, as stated, was followed up by the appointment in the court of a guardian ad litem for him. The appearance docket also shows that the duly appointed and qualified guardian of John Himoe, on February 15, 1868, paid to the clerk of the district court $4.05 as Himoe’s share of the costs in the case.
It is immaterial whether the deposition of Clark was competent as testimony or not. The deposition tended to prove that Ida Himoe and the guardian of John Himoe were paid their portion of the appraised value of the lots in accordance with the judgment. The judgment, as rendered, gave to A. P. Clark the fee-simple title of lot nine. If in this form it was irregular, it certainly was not void. The court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, and as that judgment is not here for review or reversal, for all the purposes of this case it must be considered valid and binding. After the judgment of the 11th of October, 1866, Ida Himoe, afterward Ida Anderson, had no title to the lot in controversy. As Mrs. Cheney, the daughter of Mrs. Himoe, was not born until 1869, of course she cannot claim any title or interest in the property.
The point made that no title passed to Clark, because the sheriff had not made him a deed, is not tenable. He certainly obtained the equitable title to the property by the j udgment, if nothing more. (Head v. Daniels, 38 Kas. 1.)
The court committed no error in admitting as testimony the record in the case of Clark v. Ida Himoe et al., and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff below.
Under the authority of the case of Havens v. Drake, just decided, the judgment of the Bourbon district court in Cheney v. Richards, No. 5223, will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.