Lawrence v. Lawrence

The Springfield Court of Appeals certifies this cause, because title to real estate is involved. The petition is an ordinary petition in partition. It charges that the parties plaintiff and defendant are tenants in common, and that plaintiff owns a two-thirds interest in the land and the defendant a one-third interest. The petition further charges that the land cannot be divided in kind without grievous injustice to the parties to the action, and prays for a sale of the property, which is averred to be worth $5,000.

Defendant answered by averring a partition between the parties by an oral agreement in 1909, and that since said time the parties have been in possession of *Page 654 their respective shares, under such oral agreement. The reply denied an effective oral partition, but avers that no deeds fixing the boundaries of the respective interests of the parties had ever been made or interchanged, or the boundary lines otherwise fixed. The prayer of the reply prayed for partition as in the petition asked. Details are left to the opinion.

No judgment is found in the abstract of record, but the short transcript, to which we may go, shows that the trial court adjudged partition, finding that plaintiff had a two-thirds interest in the lands, and the defendant a one-third interest. The lands were ordered sold, and the net proceeds ordered divided, in proportion to the interests found, as above stated. Defendant has appealed.

I. The record is rather scant, but is improved by an additional abstract of record, filed by respondent. There was owned by the father of plaintiff and defendant, 182 acres of land, irregular in point of value. Upon the death of the father, there were left the parties to this action, the son of their sister (Jim Nave) and their mother. The mother of course had homestead and dower, which were never assigned. During the lifetime of the mother, the two brothers (plaintiff and defendant) and the nephew agreed orally upon a division of the land, by which the defendant was to get thirty acres of bottom land, and the plaintiff and the nephew the improvements and the remainder of the land. A part of this agreement was to the effect that the parties were to make deeds to each other, thus fixing the boundary lines. The plaintiff and nephew were to hold their part jointly. Later the mother died, and the nephew deeded his one-third interest to plaintiff, so that it is not denied that plaintiff had a two-thirds interest in the land, and the defendant a one-third interest. This alleged oral partition was in 1909, while the mother held both unassigned homestead and dower. That the oral agreement called for deeds, is not seriously disputed — plaintiff and the nephew testifying to the fact, and defendant does not *Page 655 seriously deny it. Plaintiff tendered a deed to defendant, and defendant failed and refused to deed to plaintiff. The trial court could not avoid finding the foregoing facts. This in addition to our outline of the case, must be considered in the disposition of the appeal here.

II. The abstract of the evidence is a scant one, as such is presented here by appellant, the defendant. Plaintiff (respondent) presents an additional abstract of the evidence, and it stands here without objection. In such situation it practically becomes the abstract in the case. There was an oral agreement to partition in 1909, at which time the mother (the widow of Dick Lawrence, the father) was alive. She had both homestead and dower, if the value exceeded the homestead. She was dead at the institution of this suit. The contract or agreement to partition is of importance. It is thoroughly shown that by the terms of this contract, the parties agreed upon the acreage that each should take, but the metes and bounds were not detailed. The oral agreement had the additional provision that the parties were to make and exchange deeds, properly conveying the lands to each other, and thus fix the metes and bounds of each party's interest. Plaintiff and the nephew made their deeds, but did not deliver, because defendant refused to make a deed, alleging as a reason that his wife demanded $50 to sign such deed. It is stipulated in the record, however, that the wife, if present, would testify that she made no such demand. Defendant himself does not deny that the making of these deeds was a part and parcel of the oral agreement to partition. In this situation the trial court was right in finding that there had been no partition of the lands. The court was likewise right in ordering a sale. Taking the evidence upon this point, the most that can be said is that there was a conflict. The weight would appear to be with the finding of the court. We have just been over this question. [See Groes v. Brockman, decided at this term, by this Division of the court, and reported at page 644 of this Report.] *Page 656

The oral contract for partition having failed, by reason of defendant's refusal to keep its terms, and the court's action in ordering a sale being proper, it follows that the judgment nisi should be affirmed. It is so ordered. All concur; Ragland,P.J., in the result.