Overspeck v. Thiemann
Overspeck v. Thiemann
Opinion of the Court
This was a proceeding in equity, to enforce the specific execution of a contract for the purchase of certain real estate, mentioned in the petition, the land in question being a certain five-acre tract, lying, being,
The amended petition, on which the cause was tried, was filed January 21, 1884, and is to the effect following: That plaintiffs were husband and wife ; that on March 1, 1874, the defendant was the owner in fee of said real estate; that the plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, on the day last aforesaid, entered into a contract with defendant, for the absolute purchase of all of defendant’s estate in the said land, for the price and sum of four hundred dollars; that defendant agreed to accept said sum as the consideration for his estate in said land, and then and there agreed to make, execute, and deliver to plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, a good and sufficient deed, conveying to said Martha the fee-simple estate in said land, upon the payment to him of said sum of four hundred dollars; and thereupon the plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, paid defendant the said four hundred dollars, and fully performed, all and regular, on her part, said contract; and the defendant thereupon delivered to said plaintiff, Martha, the possession of said land, who is, and ever since has been, in the possession thereof, and has also erected thereon a good and substantial dwelling-house, stable, and other improvements, to the value of six hundred dollars. The plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, further states that she has often demanded of defendant a good and sufficient deed to and for said land, according to the terms of said contract, but that he has wholly failed and refused, and still fails and refuses, to perform his contract aforesaid, whereupon plaintiff prays that said defendant may be decreed to specifically perform his said contract, and to make, execute, and deliver to plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, a good and sufficient deed, conveying to, and vesting in, said Martha Overspeck, the fee-simple estate in and to said land, and for such other relief as may be just and proper.
The reply was a general denial of the new matter-set up in the answer. Upon a trial before the court, upon the pleadings and the evidence, there was a finding-of the issues for the plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, and a. decree of specific execution of the contract, accordingly, from which the defendant, after an unsuccessful motion for a rehearing, appeals to this court.
From the pleadings, it will be observed that the only controverted question between plaintiff and defendant-was, whether the contract in question was for the abso
As to the main and controlling question in the case, presented by the pleadings, there is no dispute, as to the fact that the plaintiff, Martha, paid the defendant, at the time of making the contract, the purchase price of four hundred dollars; that defendant, thereujDon, delivered her the possession of said land; and that she, thereupon, made various valuable and permanent improvements thereon, consisting, among others, of a dwelling-house, stable, cistern, and the like, at a cost of about six hundred dollars, and has, ever since, held and occupied the same, under claim of title, and that she had repeatedly demanded of defendant a deed therefor, as claimed by her, and that he had refused to make and deliver such a deed, but had tendered a deed in conformity to his view of the contract, or a return of the purchase money, at her election, which she declined to accept.
It also appeared in evidence that the defendant, a few days before said contract, had bought the forty-acre tract, of which the five-acre lot in question was a part, at and for the price of seventy-five dollars per acre; and that the plaintiff, Martha, paid him for the five acres at the rate of eighty dollars per acre, making four hundred dollars, and, thereupon, on the faith thereof, had made and erected valuable and lasting improve
At the trial it further appeared that it was agreed, among other things, that the evidence of Joseph Over-speck, the husband and co-plaintiff, on behalf of defendant, if competent, was to the effect, among other things, that her claim to the property in question was acquired without his knowledge or consent, as was this suit instituted, and that he never consented to being made a party plaintiff thereto, but has always been opposed to her recovery herein, as it only encouraged her in her abandonment of his bed and board. On this point, also, it was agreed, that the plaintiff, Martha, would state, that she did not ask him (the husband) to join in the suit with her; nor did he have any knowledge of the suit, or in any way consent thereto. There was other unimportant testimony in the case not necessary to notice.
Upon this state of the record, a reversal is here insisted on by defendant’s counsel, for two reasons. (1) There was no authority, in law or equity, in the court to retain and force Joseph Overspeck to be and remain a party plaintiff therein. (2) The finding of the court, upon the law and the evidence, should have been for the appellant. As to the first point, it is, perhaps, sufficient to say that the co-plaintiff husband did not appeal from the judgment below, nor except to the rulings of the
On the other point, which is the only real question presented by the record, it is to be observed that, while the direct testimony of the plaintiff, Martha Overspeck, and the defendant, Thiemann, as to the terms of the contract, or whether it was for the fee, or a life estate only, conditioned, as alleged by defendant, are in direct conflict with each other, yet the undisputed facts and circumstances accompanying the transaction show, we think, with reasonable certainty, if not to a demonstration, that the contract in question was for the “fee of the land,” as charged by the plaintiff, Martha. In this behalf it is shown that defendant, a day or two before the contract in question, bought the forty-acre tract, of which that in controversy is a part, for the price and sum of seventy-five dollars per acre, and that plaintiff, Martha, paid him at the rate of eighty dollars per acre for that portion she purchased. There is nothing in the evidence tending to show that the five-acre tract was of more than an average value to the entire tract. It also appears that, immediately thereafter, the. plaintiff, Martha, on the faith of said contract, took possession, and expended six hundred dollars more, in the making and erection of valuable and lasting improvements thereon, and has continued to occupy and claim the fee, in the same, besides paying the taxes thereon. It is a little strange and unlikely, to say the least of it, that she should have paid in cash the full value of the fee, in the property, and then expended, in addition thereto,, largely more than the full value, in permanent and valuable improvements thereon, for the uncertain and inadequate consideration of a life estate only, coupled with the promised conditioned return of the purchase money only at her death, or earlier, if she chose to abandon the same to defendant.
Taking the whole case, in all its aspects, and examining its testimony, facts, and circumstances, in all their bearings, we have not been able to agree with defendant’s counsel, that “the finding of the court, upon the law and the evidence, should have been for the appellant.” On the contrary, we are of opinion that the finding and judgment of the court were for the right party, and ought to be affirmed, and it is accordingly so ordered. Neff v. Redman, 76 Mo. 195, and cas. cit.; Bishop on Married Women, secs. 39, 250; Chamberlain v. Robertson, 31 Iowa, 408.
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