Mathewson v. Kilburn
Mathewson v. Kilburn
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment to recover the southeast quarter of section 11, township 59, range 23, in Livingston county. The petition is in the usual form. The answer is a general denial, coupled with a special plea of estoppel. The circuit court entered judgment for the defendant and the plaintiff appealed.
The case was tried by the court without a jury, and no instructions were asked, given or refused. The only questions, therefore, which are open to review in this court, are errors apparent on the face of the record, if any; whether there is any substantial evidence to support the judgment, and the rulings of the court made in the course of the trial, which were objected to and exceptions properly saved.
The chief contention of the plaintiff is that the land in controversy was his homestead, and, therefore, was not subject to sale under execution upon a judgment •against him. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the premises_were never the homestead of the defendant, and, if they were, that he abandoned the same as a homestead prior to the sale. It is plain, therefore, that this is purely a question of fact, in the state of this record, and as this court does not review the finding of fact by the trial court, the inquiry here is limited to an investigation as to whether there was any substantial evidence adduced to support the finding. The showing made by the plaintiff is this: In 1895», the plaintiff’s father owned sixty acres of land in Montgomery county, Kansas, on which there was a mortgage for $650; the plaintiff purchased it from his father, and in payment therefor assumed the mortgage for $650, and in addition gave the father a mortgage on the land for $800, which mortgage does not seem to have been recorded, however. The plaintiff then traded the Kansas land for the land in question. The other party, one Parthurst, assumed the $650 mortgage on the Kansas land, the plaintiff gave Parkhurst a mortgage on this land for $800, for the difference, and the plaintiff’s father destroyed the mortgage for $800 on the Kansas land. The land in question was unimproved and had only a fence around it. Thé plaintiff, his father, mother and sister then moved from Kansas to Missouri, and lived for a while in Ohula, a short distance from the land. The plaintiff says that he brought with him from Kansas five horses, and some farming implements, and his father brought with him two colts. In 1896, the plaintiff says, he built a house, barn, etc., upon the land, cleared some of it, constructed a levee, and moved onto the premises, with his father, mother and sister, and that he supported
On the twenty-eighth of October, 1898, Mrs. Richards began suit against the plaintiff and one Long, on said note for $100, before a justice of the peace. The summons was personally served upon the defendants, and on the return day they appeared in open court and confessed judgment for one hundred dollars, with eight per cent interest from October 1, 1898. In the fall of 1898 the plaintiff sold the personal property on the place, leased the premises and went to Kansas, as above stated. He returned to Missouri in 1899, for a few days, but says he made no inquiry about the land or about the judgment. When he brought his father’s remains to be buried on February 22,1900, he learned that the land had been sold under the Richards judgment, and he began this suit on April 1,1901. The plaintiff’s mother and married sister testified that the plaintiff supported the family, composed of himself, his mother, his father and, until her death in 1898, his sister. They and he all testified that he left the premises in the fall of 1898, on account of his mother’s health, the land being bottom land, and her health not being good there, but that he did not intend to abandon the place, and always in
On the other hand the defendant showed by the testimony of the grocer with whom the family dealt, that the father and mother did all the trading, and that the account was^ charged to the father, and that they paid all the bills except the last, which was for some ninety-seven dollars, which the plaintiff settled just about the time the family went away. The judgment referred to was not paid. The execution was returned nulla bona. Mrs. Richards procured a transcript to be filed in the circuit clerk’s office and had an execution issued upon it, and the land was sold thereunder and she became the purchaser. Thereafter the defendant purchased the land from Mrs. Richards at an agreed price of $1,800, out of which the $1,200 Kitt mortgage with interest, was paid, as were also the back taxes and penalties, and the balance was paid to Mrs. Richards. The defendant says he purchased the land upon the faith of plaintiff’s statement to him, that if he could not raise something on the land in addition to the Kitt mortgage, he would be compelled to abandon it, and upon the fact that the plaintiff was unable to raise any more money on the land, and that he sold out and moved away, and hence the defendant says the plaintiff is estopped to claim the land from him.
It is apparent from this statement of the facts that there is substantial testimony in the case to support a finding of the issues in favor of either of the parties. On the one side is the testimony of the plaintiff, and of his mother and sister, that he was the head of a family, in a legal sense, and that this was his homestead, and that he had never abandoned it, and always intended returning to it as soon as his mother’s health was restored, but was prevented from so doing by sickness in his family until after the land was sold. On the other side there are facts showing that his father was a man of property; that he conveyed the sixty acres
II.
It is next insisted that the sale is void because the execution under the Richards judgment was issued to the constable of Chillicothe township, while the defendant’s home was in Medicine township, and hence the nulla bona return of the constable will not support an execution issued out of the circuit court.
Section 4019, R. S. 1899, provides that no execution shall be issued from the circuit court upon a transcript of a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace, if the defendant is a resident of the county, until the execution has been issued by the justice of the peace to the constable of the township in which the defendant resides, and has been returned nulla bona. The judgment was rendered on November 9, 1898. The execution was issued by the justice on July 14, 1899, to the constable
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.