6 Or. 31 | Or. | 1876
This is a suit in equity brought by complaint in the nature of a cross-bill torestrain the respondent from prosecuting an action at law, commenced by him in the circuit court for Linn county, for the recovery of the possession of the one undivided ninth interest in fee-simple of the north half of the donation land of Jarvis Briggs and wife, the same being claim number 83, and notification number 1779, situate in said county, together with one thousand dollars damages for alleged wrongful withholding thereof. Appellant prays the court to declare the title to said premises to be in him, but in case the court does not find the title to be in him, then he prays a decree that he recover from respondent the amount of the purchase price paid for said
The case was referred to N. B. Humphrey, esq., who took the testimony, and among other facts found the following: That on March 7, 1866, the county court of Linn county, on the petition of Ann E. Yaughn, who was at that time owner of one undivided ninth of said premises, as tenant in common with said respondent and others, made and entered of record an order directing said premises to be partitioned among said tenants in common, if the same could be so partitioned, and appointed three commissioners to make partition. That said commissioners afterwards reported to said county court that said premises could not be partitioned conveniently and satisfactorily, and thereupon said county court on May 8, 1866, made and entered of record an order directing said commissioners to sell said real estate, and said commissioners did, in accordance with said order, on June 30, 1866, at public auction, sell said premises, and the appellant became the purchaser thereof, for the sum of two thousand seven hundred and twenty-five dollars in gold coin of the United States, which was the full value of said premises. That appellant took immediate possession of the premises, and has, up to the commencement of the said action at law been in the peaceable and quiet possession of the same. That appellant paid said two thousand seven hundred and twenty-five dollars, in gold coin, into the county court for the use and benefit of the defendant with the other tenants in common of said premises, and received a deed from said commissioners for said premises on July 3,' 1866, in due form of law. That appellant at the time of the purchase had just arrived in this state. That immediately before said purchase he took the advice of two attorneys, N. H. Cranor, esq., and E. F. Bussell, esq., as to the title of said premises, and that both of said attorneys advised him that he would get good title if he purchased at said sale. That appellant never
The first question to be considered is one of pleading and practice. Section 377 of the code is intended to secure several objects. The abolition of bills of revivor, bills of review, and exceptions for insufficiency, impertinence or irrelevancy, and the authorization of an original suit to impeach, set aside, suspend, avoid, or enforce a decree. It also abolishes cross-bills, but provides that in an action at law when the defendant is entitled to relief arising out of facts requiring the interposition of a court of equity, and material to his defense, he may, upon filing his answer therein, also as plaintiff, file a complaint in equity in the nature of a cross-bill, which shall stay the proceedings at law. The action at lawr, if thereafter proceeded with, must follow the requirements of the decree, and a judgment, if rendered, must be rendered upon the conditions contained in the decree.
In virtue of the provisions of this section it is contended that the complaint does not allege any equities of which the court can take cognizance for the reason, that under the principles of pleading and practice, as recognized and adopted by courts of equity, the matters alleged could not be made the subject of an original bill, but could only be submitted to the consideration of the chancellor by way of answer, and much stress is laid upon the words “in the
We do not think that the use of the words “ in the nature of a cross-bill” justifies to the extent claimed by counsel, the application of the rules as they existed under the old equity practice to the complaint which the defendant is permitted to file by the provisions of the section under consideration. If he is entitled to relief arising out of facts requiring the interposition of a court of equity, and such facts are material to his defense of the action at law, he may file his complaint in which he must follow the general rules of pleading under the code, which requires simply a plain concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of suit, without unnecessary repetition, and may set forth any facts and circumstances forming a defense) either entire or partial, to the action at law, but they must be such facts and circumstances as show that he has no plain, adequate and complete remedy at law. If an injury has been done or is threatened, and there is no plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, the case must be one of equitable cognizance under our system of practice (Civ. Code, sec. 376), and where a complaint in the nature of a cross-bill is filed the plaintiff therein is not restricted to the allegation of merely defensive matter, but may set forth any facts entitling him to affirmative relief.
Notwithstanding the equitable and legal jurisdictions are not so entirely blended and unified in this state as in some others, where what has been appropriately styled the
American system ” of procedure obtains, yet we- regard section 377 as providing for no more nor less than the equitable answers and cross-petitions allowed by the codes of those states where the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity is abolished. Hence the eases in which rules have been laid down in relation to equitable answers, defenses and cross-petitions under codes of procedure, may without impropriety be regarded as authority here. The general doctrine resulting from the best considered cases is
Thereafter the purchaser went into possession of the land with the knowledge, assent and understanding of the minor and guardian, and made valuable improvements. He had exclusive possession, and claimed the property as his own. Afterwards the ward, within five years after she came of age, brought an action of disseisin, which was pending when the plaintiff filed his bill in equity, which, in addition to the facts just stated, alleged that the deed was defective, and prayed that the defects might be cured, that the action at law be enjoiued and that defendant be decreed to convey. The jurisdiction of the court seems not to have been questioned, and the case was heard upon its merits. On the authority of Watson v. Watson, 10 Conn. 77, the deed
From the principles stated, and the authorities referred to, we can reach no other conclusion than that the facts stated in Hatcher’s complaint in the nature of a cross-bill, are sufficient to give him a standing in a court of equity.
Having disposed of the question of jurisdiction and the sufficiency of the complaint, we pass to the consideration of the other questions presented. The sale made by the commissioners was void, as were also all the orders of the county court in the partition proceedings. That tribunal proceeded in accordance with the provisions of chapter 9 of an act to establish a probate court, and define its duties, passed December 14, 1853, statutes of 1855, p. 383, and which took immediate effect. That act was repealed October 17, 1862, the repealing act taking effect June 1,1863, (Laws of 1861, pamphlet ed. p. 127). Thus fell the jurisdiction of the county courts in matters of partition.
There can be no doubt that Hatcher purchased in good
The price paid was the full cash value of the premises, and the proper proportion thereof was duly paid over to B. W. Calloway, who was the guardian of Jarvis Briggs, then a minor. After entering into possession of the premises, Hatcher proceeded to put things in order, and erected valuable, useful and necessary improvements thereon. The testimony shows that Briggs knew of the purchase by Hatcher, and also of the erection of the permanent improvements. After he attained his majority he had a settlement with his guardian, which eventuated in the guardian paying him his proportion of the money derived from the
“ Albany,. Oreson, July 10, 1875.
“Received of W. R. Calloway, my guardian, on settlement made by me with said guardian on this tenth day of July, 1875, the sum of five hundred and eleven dollars in United States gold coin, the same being the proceeds of my undivided interest in and to the north half of the donation land claim of Jarvis Briggs, deceased, it being claim No. 83 and notification No. 1779, in Linn county, Oregon, sold by John Smith, "Walter Monteith and G. H. Hughes, as referees to John L. Hatcher for the sum of two thousand seven hundred and twenty-five dollars in gold coin, and the same being also the proceeds of my interest in the estate of Aurelia Vaughn, my mother, now deceased, after paying the expenses of said sale and the expense of settling said estate, and the expense of said guardianship of the (said) W. R. Calloway, and after further paying the sum of forty-five dollars for me for certain undivided interest in eighty acres of land in the state of Indiana to Mary J. Reedham, Aurelia H. Vaughn and Ann E. Vaughn. The said interest in eighty acres of land aforesaid having been deeded to me by said Mary J. Needham, Aurelia H. Vaughn and Ann E. Vaughn, and I now receive the sum of five hundred and eleven dollars, in gold coin, of my said guardian, in full satisfaction and settlement of all my claims against my said guardian [and of all my interest in and to the estate of which he is guardian], and I hereby satisfy and confirm the purchase for me of said real estate in Indiana.
“[Signed.] JARVIS BRIGGS.”
Standing alone, this receipt raises a strong presumption of knowledge and ratification; but when we take into consideration the evidence-in relation to his conduct and utterances at or about the time the receipt was executed, we think his full knowledge is fully proved. Just before that time, July 10, 1875, he called on his guardian’s attorney and inquired if he or Mr. Calloway was ready to settle for his interest in the estate, and intimated that he would get his attorney. Subsequently, he and his attorney, and O.
Hence we say that there can be no doubt that he had full knowledge of the character of the sale. Whether a minor is bound by his negligence or silence, after reaching an age at which all persons with unimpaired faculties are supposed to have reasonable discretion, comprehension and understanding, is a question which the authorities leave in doubt, but there can be no doubt of the binding force of a ratification after full age and in view of all the facts. Upon this point it has been held that where a party, after arriving at age, settles with his guardian, and receives moneys in the hands of the guardian belonging to him, and derived from a sale of his real estate, it will be presumed that he received the same with a knowledge of the source from whence it came, and that he did the act deliberately. (Corwin v. Shoup, 76 Ill. 247; and, further, that where minor heirs whose lands were sold on partition during their minority, after coming of age, with full knowledge of the facts, received their just porportion of the proceeds of the sale w'hen collected, it was held in Walker v. Mulvean, 76 Ill. 18,
We have no doubt that the decision in this case might well rest upon the doctrine of ratification, but we prefer to place it upon broader grounds, and to settle, as far as this state is concerned, a more important question, properly presented by the record. Though, of course, in considering the general equities of the case, we shall not fail to bear in.mind the testimony relating to the acts and to the knowledge of the respondent.
The most important question in this case is in relation to the character and extent of the relief to be afforded the appellant. And this leads to an examination of the principles of law governing industrial accessions in cases like .the present one. The statutes are silent; we must go to the cases.
As near as we can ascertain, the first case in which this question attracted the attention of the court was that of Bell’s heirs v. Barnett, 2 J. J. M. 516, decided in 1829. The answer was in the nature of a cross-bill, alleging that the defendant had in good faith made improvements of the value of two thousand dollars on the land which the plaintiff sought to recover, and the court, among other things, held that a person acquiring title to land, and entering on it bona fide, supposing it to be his own, must be paid for his improvements.
The next is Putnam, v. Ritchie, 6 Paige, 390, decided in 1837. That case was thus: The plaintiff had taken from the mother of the defendants a release of a lease in fee of the rent of the premises in controversy, of which the defendant’s father died seised. She acted upon the supposition that the lease was assets, and that it was for the interest of the children to be released from the payment of rent. After the plaintiff had obtained the release, he entered and made improvements. Subsequently the defendants
Subsequently it was ascertained that the administrator had not complied with the statute, and the sale was held void and no title passed. The devisee sued in ejectment and recovered upon the strength of his legal title. The purchaser and occupant brought his bill to compel the devisee, before he should be allowed to take possession under his judgment in ejectment, to pay for the improvements, and also for money advanced in buying up outstanding claims. Justice Story hesitated. In 1835, when his work on Equity Jurisprudence was first published, he had intimated that such cases were beyond the reach of the courts of equity, except when the party seeking to recover the estate called for aid from a court of equity, or unless there was some fraud, and that where the party could recover the estate at law a court of equity could not, unless there was fraud, relieve the purchaser. (2 Story Eq. J. 1238.) As
The next was Thomas v. Thomas's Ex., 16 B. Mon. 424, decided in 1855, in which the court followed and approved the ruling in Bell's Heirs v. Barnett, supra.
The next was Valle's Heirs v. Fleming's Heirs, 29 Mo. 152, decided in 1859. In this case the opinion in Bright v. Boyd, is largely quoted from and strongly sanctioned, and the court held the principle of that case Avas the same essential principle of equity upon which rests the doctrine of compensation, of subrogation and of substitution.
The most recent case is that of The Union Hall Association v. Morrison, 39 Md. 281, decided in ,1873. In that case A. purchased in good faith, for full value, Avithout notice of any defect in his title and believing it to be good,
Mr. Parsons (3 Con. 22), seems to regard the law as settled by the opinion of Judge Story, for, upon the strength of that opinion, he says that a court of equity will sustain against the actual owner, after recovery of the premises, a bill brought by a bona fide possessor for the value of his improvements.
After mature deliberation, we too have concluded to follow the principles announced in Bright v. Boyd, and the other cases sustaining the same views as more in consonance with equity and justice than the decisions in Putnam v. Ritchie.
It follows that Hatcher having purchased the land in good faith, and having good reason to regard himself as the owner thereof at the time he erected the improvements thereon, should not be ejected therefrom without compensation for those improvements.
As regards the purchase price paid by Hatcher for the land, there is no doubt that it was its full value. Neither is there any doubt that Briggs’ received his full share and proportion thereof from his guardian. We can perceive no equity in permitting him to retain his share of the purchase price, and also to recover the land. Therefore, in addition to the value of the improvements Hatcher should have his purchase-money and the taxes upon the land, and the improvements should also be refunded to him.
We further think that an equitable adjustment of his case demands that Hatcher should account to Briggs for his.proportion of the rental value of the premises in controversy, excluding the use of the permanent improvements during the entire time he has been in possession of the land. We do not think section 318 of the code restricts the power of a court of equity in a suit of this character.
It follows from the foregoing that the decree of the court should be reversed, and a decree entered in accordance herewith.