Henson v. Federal Land Bank of Columbia

Per Curiam.

Mrs. Emma Bash Henson applied for a year’s support from the estate of W. E. Bash, deceased, whose wife she was at the time of his death. Appraisers appointed by the ordinary made their report setting apart to the applicant certain lands from the estate of the applicant’s former husband. Citation was duly issued. Before the report of the appraisers was recorded or made the judgment of the court of ordinary, the Federal Land Bank of Columbia brought a petition seeking to enjoin the prosecution of the application for a year’s support. In this petition the plaintiff alleged that it was the owner in fee simple of the *841lands out of -which, the applicant sought to have a year’s support set apart; that the applicant had resided on the property and received a support therefrom for two or three years or more; that she had remarried and moved away from the property and left the same to the only son of W. E. Eash and the applicant, and relinquished the property to him; that thereafter W. T. Eash, with the knowledge and consent of the applicant, executed a bond for title to the lands in question to one Fuller, who went into possession thereunder, and. subsequently to the execution of the bond for title W. T. Eash conveyed by deed the same lands to Fuller, Mrs. Henson permitting him to do so, knowing of his possession, etc.; that five years later Fuller, with the knowledge of the defendant, procured a loan on the property from petitioner, and defendant knew of this loan and the steps taken to procure it, without disclosing to petitioner that she claimed any equity or right in the property; and that the defendant is now estopped from urging a claim for a year’s support out of the property.

Defendant demurred to and answered the petition, and, while the case was pending, filed a cross-petition, setting up and alleging facts to show that the plaintiff is not entitled to the injunction; that when she moved off of the property' she did not relinquish the land to W. T. Eash, her son, but was merely giving him the temporary use of it; denying that she knew of any intention on the part of her son to borrow money on said land; setting up reasons why the deeds from Eash to Fuller were void because of collusion and fraud; that there was no bona fide contract of sale whereby Fuller was to purchase the lands from her son; that “if in fact any contract in writing was ever made, it was a sham trade, and W. T. Eash was to hold and own said lands, and not Fuller; . . that never at any time did W. T. Eash have any title to the lands, but that he had conceived the idea of borrowing money thereon, and used said Fuller to assist him in so doing; . . that W. T. Eash had no title or deed to said lands, his possession thereof was under her permission, and could not work or ripen into a prescriptive title prior to September 29, 1922.” The defendant prayed in the cross-petition that W. T. Eash be made a party defendant; and that the deed and bond for title from Eash be canceled as a cloud on the title of defendant. The petition in the cross-action was duly served upon W. T. Eash. The Federal *842Land Bank demurred to the cross-action; and thereupon the court “passed an order sustaining said demurrer and dismissed said cross-action and refused to make W. T. Bash a party.” Exceptions pendente lite were filed by the defendant to this order, and to the judgment overruling-defendant's demurrer to the petition. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled. To this judgment she excepted and brought the case to this court for review, naming as the only defendant to the bill of exceptions the Federal Land Bank of Columbia. W. T. Bash was not made a party, nor was he served.

The headnotes need not be elaborated.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concur.