43 A. 121 | N.H. | 1898
The plaintiff, tenant for her life of one half of the premises described in her bill and of which life estate the defendant owns the remaining half, asks for a division of the estate by a decree giving to each owner alternate exclusive occupation of the whole estate. If she is not entitled to such a decree, she asks that the premises may be divided. The defendant admits the ownership alleged, objects to the apportionment of alternate occupation prayed for, but joins in the prayer that the premises may be divided. The defendant also "moves that a committee be now appointed and such proceedings had for a division or sale as is provided in P. S., c. 243." The defendant's motion was allowed upon the ground "that it is the legal right of the defendant to compel partition agreeably to his motion." The only question reserved arises upon the plaintiff's exception to this ruling. The case is as if the defendant had demurred to the plaintiff's bill for want of jurisdiction in equity and had filed his own petition under the statute. The present proceeding is in equity, while a "proceeding by petition under the statute is in substance and effect a proceeding at law." Crowell v. Woodbury,
"Long before any court having general chancery powers was established in this state, the concurrent jurisdiction of equity in making partition of land held in common by coparceners and tenants in common had become perfectly established, — Hargrave's *412
note to Co. Lit. 169 a; Sto. Eq. Jur., s. 646, et seq.; and there can be no doubt but that this branch of equity jurisdiction was fully conferred upon the court, with other equity powers, by the act of 1832." Crowell v. Woodbury,
The jurisdiction of a court of equity is expressly recognized in the statute (P. S., c. 243, s. 26) by the provision that upon and in reference to a sale under the statute the court may make all such orders as a court of equity may do in like cases. The parties upon the admitted title are entitled to partition as of right. Barney v. Leeds,
Prior to the General Laws (1878), no authority existed in a proceeding under the statute for any remedy, in case the estate could not be divided without great prejudice or inconvenience, which could be enforced without the consent of the parties. The statute was said to be imperfect, and "therefore, that many cases must arise where full and complete justice can be done only by a resort to the concurrent jurisdiction exercised by courts of equity *413
in the matter of partition. Crowell v. Woodbury,
Exception sustained.
BLODGETT, C. J., and CHASE and YOUNG, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred. *414