Carter v. Munson
Carter v. Munson
Opinion of the Court
Defendant in error instituted her action in the district court of Adams county against plaintiff in error, by which it was sought to recover the sum of $1,500, as damages claimed by her, by reason of the alleged conversion by plaintiff in error of certain personal property named in her petition. This pleading was in the usual form and need not be further noticed at this time.
To the petition plaintiff in error filed his answer, consisting of a general denial of each and every allegation contained therein, and alleging that in the year 1873 defendant in error and her then husband, being in feeble health and advanced age, desiring to make some arrangement for their support in their declining years, entered into contract with plaintiff in error, by virtue of which it was then agreed between the parties that plaintiff in error should support defendant in error and her husband for and during the remainder of their lives, and that in consideration thereof defendant in error “conveyed the sum of $1,500 for the purchase of the S. W. J of Sec. 30, Tp. 5 north, R. 11 west, of the 6th P. M., and which said real estate was purchased and deeded to this plaintiff” ; that
To this answer defendant in error replied, denying each and every allegation therein contained as her first defense, and second, alleging that the defense set up in the answer of plaintiff in error was the same identical answer or plea made by him in the suit brought and tried in the district court of Adams county, wherein defendant in error was plaintiff and he was the defendant. A portion of the answer in the other suit was copied in the reply, and it was alleged that after the issues had been formed a trial was had before the district court which resulted in favor of defendant in error, and which, upon appeal, was affirmed in the supreme court. (Referring to Munson v. Carter, 19 Neb., 293; S. C., 27 N. W. Rep., 208.) It was also alleged that a bill of sale for the mules mentioned in the petition was given on the 23d day of June, 1885, at the same time and place, and by reason of the same fraud, force, duress, and other influence, by which the deed for the land, mentioned in the former suit, was obtained; that defendant in error never made any agreement with plaintiff in error as to the purchase of them except the bill of sale, which was obtained without consideration and by fraud, force, intimidation, etc., on the part of plaintiff in error, and was, therefore, not the free, voluntary act of defendant in error.
While the action above referred to was pending in the district court, plaintiff in error instituted his action against defendant in error for the sum of $5,410 damages alleged to be due him from defendant in error for the items named in the petition. It is not deemed necessary to copy this petition in full, nor indeed to set out at any great length its contents. It may be sufficient to say that it consisted of alleged demands in favor of 'plaintiff in error, and against defendant in error, growing out of the occupation, cultivation, and management of the farm during the life-time of the husband of defendant-' in error, and, after his death, at
These two causes were consolidated and tried to the court without a jury, as one case. The trial resulted in a finding in favor of defendant in error and the assessment of damages due her from plaintiff in error in the sum of $1,000, for which judgment was rendered against him. A motion for a new trial was filed, consisting of three grounds, to-wit :
“First — That the finding and judgment were contrary to the evidence.
“Second — The finding is not sustained by sufficient evidence.
“Third, — The finding is contrary to law.”
This motion was overruled. From this finding and judgment plaintiff in error prosecutes error to this court, the only contention being that the finding of the district court is not supported by sufficient evidence. It is insisted by defendant in error that as the facts stated and averments made in plaintiff’s answer to her petition in the suit
The contest is over a long series of transactions between the father and mother upon one side, and the sou upon the other. The father having deceased, the suit is between the mother and son. The dealings referred to began in another state prior to the year 1874, and include money alleged to have been advanced to the son, who is plaintiff in error, at or about the time of his removal to this state in that year, followed soon after by his parents, when a farm was opened in Adams county, on which the three resided together; although plaintiff in error, in connection with his care of the farm, took and improved a homestead some miles distant. From perhaps some degree of contention between the father and son, prior to the death of the father, which was produced by a lingering and painful illness, the differences culminated in an unfortunate and rather unnatural estrangement between the mother and son, resulting in this suit over the personal property on the farm' at the time of the marriage of the son and his removal therefrom. A portion of the property in dispute
In addition to this we find that plaintiff in error should be charged with the value of one corn sheller, worth $10, two cows with their calves, worth $40 each, and two hundred bushels of corn, worth twenty cents a bushel, making a total of $530, to which should be added interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum for four years, making a total of $678, for which defendant in error was entitled to judgment. Considering all the circumstances of the case, as shown by the evidence, we are impressed with the belief that the other items charged in the petition of defendant in error, and which need not be enumerated here, are not sustained by the proof, and should not be allowed against plaintiff in error. Many of them, while apparently purchased with the money of defendant in error, were doubtless accumulated in a great degree by the labor of plaintiff in error upon the farm, and had lie obtained them under other circumstances, no difficulty would likely have resulted therefrom. The finding against plaintiff in error, upon the claim as set up in his petition, was right and need not be discussed here. The judgment of the district court will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings unless defendant in error files with the clerk of this court a remittitur of the sum of $332. In case such remittitur is filed within sixty days of the filing of this opinion, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed for the sum of $678, the same to draw lawful interest from the date of its rendition in the disti-ict court,
Judgment accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas W. Carter v. Phoebe Ann Munson
- Status
- Published