70 Md. 1 | Md. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the Court.
We shall the better understand the questions in this appeal, by referring to the facts out of which this protracted litigation has arisen. The heirs of Nicholas C. Carroll, and the City of Baltimore, were tenants in common of an undivided fourth part of a tract of land containing lOf acres. Besides its interest in this one-fourth, the City of Baltimore was also the owner of one-half of said tract, the remaining one-fourth belonging to George Presstman.
In 1814 a hill was filed by the Carroll heirs, to which the City of Baltimore was the sole defendant, alleging that the plaintiffs and the defendant were tenants in common of one undivided fourth part of the land in question, and that it was not susceptible of partition, and praying that it might he sold and the proceeds of sale divided among the parties according to their respective interests. Under a decree passed in this case, the one-fourth interest of the parties was sold, and N. Carroll Spence became the purchaser. Some time afterwards, George Presstman died, and his one-fourth
In 1881 a hill was filed hy Emma Presstman, hy her nest friend, for a partition or sale of the entire tract, and to this hill all the parties in interest were made defendants. On the 31st of July, 1882, an interlocutory decree for partition was passed, directing one-half of the land to he allotted to the City of Baltimore, one-fourth to N. Carroll Spence, and the other one-fourth to the Presstman heirs, and commissioners were appointed to make said partition.
In the meantime, the City of Baltimore had erected a large marble pump house with various attachments and pipes used in connection with the water supply of the city. These improvements the commissioners valued at $43,000, and the 10-| acres of land at $93,000, making the entire valuation $136,000. The City of Baltimore being entitled to one-half interest, the commissioners allotted to it two acres and three roods of' land valued at $25,000, and the improvements made hythe city valued at $43,000, making $68,000, and the remainder of the land they divided between the Presstmans and Spence. This return having heen set aside for certain irregularities, new commissioners were appointed, and in their return they valued the improvements at $48,000, and the land at $92,000, making the entire valuation $140,000. And in making partition they allotted to the City of Baltimore the improvements valued at.$48,000, and three acres and two-thirds of an acre of land valued at $22,000, making $10,000, and the remaining one-half they allotted to the Presstmans, who in the mean time had acquired Spence’s interest. The commissioners in making this partition acted, upon the theory that all the tenants in common were entitled to share in the improvements
Erom the pro forma decree ratifying the partition thus made, appeals were taken by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, and by Cumberland Dugan and Dwight E. Lyman, Trustees under the will of George Presstman, and by Mary E. Presstman..
1st. The appeal of the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore.
By the interlocutory decree passed July 31st, 1882, it was adjudged that the City of Baltimore was entitled to one-half of the 10-f acres of land, its interest in the one-fourth having been sold under the decree in the suit by the Carroll heirs. Now it is argued that the city’s interest in this undivided one-fourth is in no manner affected by the sale under the decree in the Carroll suit, because the Court, it is said, had no jurisdiction either to decree a partition or a sale of the property. In other words, the Court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter. Now the bill in that case was filed under sec. 99, Article 16, old Code, which provides:
“The Court may decree a partition of any lands or tenements, or any right, interest or estate therein, either legal or equitable, on the bill or petition of any joint tenant, tenant in common, or any parcener or any concurrent owner; or if it appears that the said*6 lands or tenements, or right, interest or estate therein cannot he divided without loss or injury to the parties interested, the Court may decree a sale thereof;” and we quite agree the Court erred in its construction of this statute, and- that it ought not to have decreed the sale of the one-fourth interest belonging to the Carroll heirs and the City of Baltimore. The object of partition is a division of the property between the several co-tenants so as to put an end to the co-tenancy, and to vest in each person a sole estate in a specific-part or allotment of the property. And if so, there cannot he a partition of an undivided one-fourth interest in a tract of land, so as to vest in each co-tenant a separate estate, for the reason that after such partition the parties would still he tenants in common with the owners of the remaining three-fourths. Besides, a tenant in common is not seized of any particular part of the property. His interest is an undivided interest in the entire land, and an allotment of a specific part to him, would not hind the other co-tenants who were not parties to the proceedings. A partial partition cannot therefore he made, nor can a partition of any kind he made without making all the co-tenants parties. It is so laid down by Lord Coke, and so far as we know, has never been questioned. Colee Littleton, 1800-
Now partition being a matter of right, the Court was hound to decree it without regard to whether it was beneficial or injurious to the parties. It had no power, under any circumstances, to decree a sale and distribute the proceeds among the parties according to their respective interests. It was to remedy this, that our statute provided, if a partition could not he made without loss or injury to the parties, the Court could decree a sale of the property. But the Court has no right to decree a sale, except under such circumstances
But while such is our construction of the statute we cannot agree that the Court in passing the decree of July 31st, had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that the purchaser acquired no title to the interest sold under it. The bill was filed for the partition or sale of an undivided fourth part of the property, in which the plaintiffs and defendants were tenants in common. It was filed under Art. 16, sec. 99, of the Code. The Court had a general jurisdiction to.decree a sale of property held by co-tenants, and it had the jurisdiction to determine whether, under the Code, it had the power to sell an undivided interest in the property. Jurisdiction is the power to hear and determine. If the judgment of the Court is erroneous, the remedy is by appeal, and until reversed on appeal the judgment is binding on the parties to the suit. The decree and sale under it could not of course affect in any manner the rights or interests of the owners of the remaining three-fourths of the property. The purchaser merely acquired the interest of the parties to the suit in the one undivided fourth, and as such, he is a tenant in common with the owners of the remaining three-fourths of the property. Then.again, the jurisdiction of the Court is denied on the ground that the City of Baltimore was not summoned. The subpoena was returned with the following endorsement, “summoned, George P. Kane, Sheriff,” “service of the within admitted, Albert Ritchie, City Solicitor.” In serving process on a corporation the Code provides that it shall be served on the president or director or manager or other officer of the corporation. 1 Code, Art. 75, sec. 99.
And this brings us to the questions in the appeals of Mary H. Presstman and the Trustees under the will of George Presstman. And here the first objection to the commissioners’ return, is on the ground that the commissioners allotted to the city, that portion of the property on which the improvements were located, without charging the city with the cost of such improvements. It does not seem to us, however, that the other co-tenants have any just ground to claim an interest in the improvements made by the city at its own cost. -cIn matters of partition” says Judge Stoky, “a Court founds itself upon its general jurisdiction as a Court of equity, and administers its relief, ex cequo et bono according to its own notions of general justice and equity between the parties. ” 1 Story’s Equity Juris., sec. 656 b.
And we take the law to be well settled, that where one tenant in common has made improvements on the common property, with or without the consent of his co-tenant, a Court of equity in decreeing partition will see that he shall have the benefit of his improvéments, by allotting to him, so far as can be done con
Besides, in this case the city was the owner of the land adjoining the property, and the improvements, it is clear, were made by the city in the belief that they Avere located on its own land, and the mistake was not discovered till the survey was made by the commissioners appointed to make partition of the common property. The city is not however claiming compensation for such improvements from the other co-tenants, and this view of the case is therefore quite immaterial. A good deal was said in the argument about the overvaluation of the property. This valuation was made by commissioners appointed by the Court, persons, Ave are bound to presume, of sound judgment, and from their experience, and knowledge of the property, capable of forming a correct opinion as to its value. And, besides, they had the benefit of the judgment of a number of persons living in the neighborhood, who Avere examined by them in regard to the value of the property, It is situate near the city, and is valuable mainly for building purposes, and we are not surprised to find the several Avitnesses differ as to its actual value. As suggested in the argument, the valuation by the commissioners seems to us to be a fair average betAveen the extremes of conservative and extravagant .opinions. We have no reason to suppose that another valuation by different commissioners would be more
Decree affirmed.