163 Mich. 306 | Mich. | 1910
The bill of complaint in this case was filed for the purpose of removing a cloud upon, and quieting the title of complainant to, certain premises in Hume township, Huron county, Mich. Defendants demurred to this bill of complaint for the reason that, prior to the commencement of this suit, an action of ejectment was commenced in the circuit court for the county of Huron by Thomas Sinclair, in his lifetime, against Charles G. Learned, now deceased, and Jonas R. Learned, and alleging that said ejectment suit is now pending in the circuit court for Huron county, and that complainant has in said suit an adequate remedy at law.
It appears from the bill of complaint that the land in question was patented May 1, 1860, by the United States to one Charles N. Babbitt; that subsequently Babbitt gave a mortgage on said land to Frederick S. Ayres, which mortgage was subsequently foreclosed and the property bid in by the mortgagee, and a sheriff’s deed executed May 30, 1866, to the said Frederick S. Ayres, mortgagee, conveying the land in question; that on the 5th day of August, 1875, Frederick S. Ayres conveyed said land by
The death of the defendant Charles G. Learned abated the suit as to him, and his rights descended to his sole heir, Jonas R. Learned, against whom a new cause ofr action arose. Hoffman v. St. Clair Circuit Judge, 40 Mich. 351. The tas title, which constituted the sole claim of title on the part of Jonas R. Learned at the time the ejectment suit was instituted and down to the time of the death of Charles, was held by this court to be void for. reasons which a subsequent trial could not obviate. Sinclair v. Learned, supra. The only title, therefore, which Jonas could rely upon on a second trial of the ejectment suit, was that which he inherited from Charles, and as to this title there was no suit pending; it having abated as above stated.
Upon the abatement of the suit against Charles, under the circumstances of this case, the only remedy of the plaintiff in ejectment was provided by 3 Comp. Laws, § 9723. McKenzie v. A. P. Cook Co., 113 Mich. 452 (71 N. W. 868). The sole ground of the demurrer is:
“That said ejectment suit is now pending in the said circuit court for Huron county, and the question of the right to the possession of said property is involved in said ejectment suit, and said complainant has in said suit a complete, full, and adequate remedy at law for the enforcement of his rights in said property.”
The demurrer was not well founded, and the order overruling it is affirmed.