Thornburg v. Wiggins

Decision Date19 October 1893
Docket Number14,272
Citation34 N.E. 999,135 Ind. 178
PartiesThornburg et al. v. Wiggins et al
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

From the Randolph Circuit Court.

Judgment reversed, with instructions to the circuit court to sustain the demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint.

W. A Thompson, A. O. Marsh and J. W. Thompson, for appellants.

E. L Watson, J. E. Watson and J. S. Engle, for appellees.

OPINION

Dailey, J.

This was an action instituted in the court below, in two paragraphs, in the first of which appellees allege, in substance, that on and before December 15, 1884, one Lemuel Wiggins was the owner of a certain tract of real estate therein described, containing eighty acres; that on said day said Lemuel and his wife, Mary, executed and delivered to the appellees a warranty deed, conveying to them the fee-simple of said real estate; that at the time of said conveyance the appellees were, ever since have been, and now are, husband and wife; that said deed conveyed to the appellees the title to said real estate which they took and accepted, ever since have held, and now hold by entireties and not otherwise; that appellees hold their title to said real estate by said deed of Lemuel Wiggins, and not otherwise; that on the 24th "day of April 1877, Isaac R. Howard and Isaac N. Gaston who were defendants below, recovered a judgment in the Randolph Circuit Court for the sum of $ 403.70 and costs, against one John T. Burroughs and the appellee, Daniel S. Wiggins, as partners, doing business under the firm name of Burroughs and Wiggins; that on May 12, 1886, said Howard and Gaston caused an execution to be issued on said judgment and placed in the hands of the appellant, Thornburg, as sheriff of said county, and directed him to levy the same on said real estate, and that said sheriff did, on the 25th day of May, 1886, levy said execution on said real estate, or on the one-half interest in value thereof, taken as the property of said appellant, Daniel S. Wiggins, to satisfy said writ; that pursuant to the levy thereof said sheriff proceeded by the direction of said Howard and Gaston to advertise said real estate for sale under said execution and levy to make said debt, and did, on the 8th day of June, advertise the same for sale on the 3d day of July, 1886, and will, on said day, sell the same, unless restrained and enjoined from so doing by the court; that said Daniel S. Wiggins has no interest in said premises, subject to sale thereon; that the appellees hold the title thereto as tenants by entireties, and not otherwise; that the sale of said tract on said execution would cast a cloud on the appellee's title," etc.

The second paragraph is the same as the first, in substantial averments, except that in this paragraph the appellees set out as a part thereof a copy of the deed under which they claim title to said real estate as such tenants by entireties.

The granting clause of the deed is as follows: "This indenture witnesseth, that Lemuel Wiggins and Mary Wiggins, his wife of Randolph county, in the State of Indiana, convey and warrant to Daniel S. Wiggins and Laura Belle Wiggins, his wife, in joint tenancy," etc.

Appellants separately and severally demurred to each paragraph of the complaint, and their demurrers were overruled by the court, to which the appellants excepted, and, refusing to answer the complaint, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees on said demurrers.

Appellants appeal, assigning as errors the overruling of said demurrers, and urge that the appellees under the deed took as joint tenants, and hence that the husband's interest is subject to levy and sale upon execution. A joint tenancy is an estate held by two or more persons jointly, so that during the lives of all they are equally entitled to the enjoyment of the land, or its equivalent in rents and profits, but, upon the death of one his share vests in the survivor or survivors until there be but one survivor, when the estate becomes one in severalty in him and descends to his heirs upon his death. It must always arise by purchase, and can not be created by descent. Such estates may be created in fee, for life, for years, or even in remainder. But the estate held by each tenant must be alike. Joint tenancy may be destroyed by anything which destroys the unity of title. Our law aims to prevent their creation and they can not arise, except by the instrument providing for such tenancy. Griffin v. Lynch, 16 Ind. 396.

The 9th Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 850, says: "Husband and wife are, at common law, one person, so that when realty or personalty vests in them both equally * * * they take as one person, they take but one estate as a corporation would take. In the case of realty, they are seized not per my et per tout, as joint tenants are, but simply per tout; both are seized of the whole, and each being seized of the entirety, they are called tenants by the entirety, and the estate is an estate by entireties. * * * Estates by entireties may be created by will, by instrument of gift or purchase, and even by inheritance. Each tenant is seized of the whole, the estate is inseverable--can not be partitioned; neither husband nor wife can alone affect the inheritance, the survivor's right to the whole."

This tenancy has been spoken of as "that peculiar estate which arises upon the conveyance of lands to two persons who are, at the time, husband and wife, commonly called estates by entirety." As to the general features of estates by entireties there is little room for controversy, and there is none between counsel. Our statute reenacts the common law. Arnold v. Arnold, 30 Ind. 305; Davis v. Clark, 26 Ind. 424.

Strictly speaking, estates by entireties are not joint tenancies, Chandler v. Cheney, 37 Ind. 391; Hulett v. Inlow, 57 Ind. 412; the husband and wife being seized not of moieties, but both seized of the entirety per tout and not per my. Jones v. Chandler, 40 Ind. 588; Davis v. Clark, supra; Arnold v. Arnold, supra.

It has been said by this court in some of the earlier decisions that no particular words are necessary. A conveyance which would make two persons joint tenants will make a husband and wife tenants by the entirety. It is not even necessary that they be described as such or their marital relation referred to. Morrison v. Seybold, 92 Ind. 298; Hadlock v. Gray, 104 Ind. 596, 4 N.E. 167; Dodge v. Kinzy, 101 Ind. 102; Hulett v. Inlow, supra; Chandler v. Cheney, supra.

But the court has said that the general rule may be defeated by the expression of conditions, limitations and stipulations, in the conveyance, which clearly indicate the creation of a different estate. Hadlock v. Gray, supra; Edwards v. Beall, 75 Ind. 401.

Having its origin in the fiction or common law unity of husband and wife, the courts of some States have held that married women's acts, extending their rights, destroyed estates by entirety, but this court holds otherwise. Carver v. Smith, 90 Ind. 222.

And the greater weight of authority is in its favor. Our decisions hold that neither, alone, can alienate such estate. Jones v. Chandler, supra; Morrison v. Seybold, supra.

There can be no partition. Chandler v. Cheney, supra.

A mortgage executed by the husband alone is void. Jones v. Chandler, supra.

And the same is true of a mortgage executed by both to secure a debt of the husband. Dodge v. Kinzy, supra.

And the wife can not validate it by agreement with the purchaser to indemnify in case of loss arising on account of it. State, ex rel., v. Kennett, 114 Ind. 160, 16 N.E. 173.

A judgment against one of them is no lien upon it. Barren Creek Ditching Co. v. Beck, 99 Ind. 247; McConnell v. Martin, 52 Ind. 434; Orthwein v. Thomas, 13 N.E. 564.

Upon the death of one, the survivor takes the whole in fee. Arnold v. Arnold, supra.

The deceased leaves no estate to pay debts. Simpson v. Pearson, Admr., 31 Ind. 1.

And, during their joint lives, there can be no sale of any part on execution against either. Carver v. Smith, supra; Dodge v. Kinzy, supra; Hulett v. Inlow, supra; Chandler v. Cheney, supra; Davis v. Clark, supra; McConnell v. Martin, supra; Cox's Admr. v. Wood, 20 Ind. 54.

The statutes extending the rights of married women have no effect whatever upon estates by entirety. Carver v. Smith, supra.

Such estate is, in no sense, either the husband's or the wife's separate property. The husband may make a valid conveyance of his interest to his wife, because it is with her consent. Enyeart v. Kepler, 118 Ind. 34, 20 N.E. 539.

The rule that husband and wife take by entireties was enacted in this territory in 1807, nine years before Indiana was vested with statehood, and has been repeated in each succeeding revision of our statutes. It has thus been the law of real property, with us, for eighty-six years.

Section 2922, R. S. 1881, provides that "All conveyances and devises of lands, or of any interest therein, made to two or more persons, except as provided in the next following section, shall be construed to create estates in common, and not in joint tenancy, unless it shall be expressed therein that the grantees or devisees shall hold the same in joint tenancy and to the survivor of them, or it shall manifestly appear, from the tenor of the instrument, that it was intended to create an estate in joint tenancy."

Section 2923 provides that the preceding section shall not apply to conveyances made to husband and wife.

Under a statute of the State of Michigan, similar in all its essential qualities to our own, the court held that "Where lands are conveyed, in fee, to husband and wife, they do not take as tenants in common." Fisher v. Provin, 25 Mich. 347.

They take by entireties; whatever would defeat the title of one would defeat the title of...

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