3 Ohio 541 | Ohio | 1828
Opinion of the court, by
The complainants, the heirs at law of Israel Ludlow, deceased in 1811, being then infants,'filed their bill against Kidd and Williams, to obtain the legal title to a-lot in the city of Cincinnati. In 1817, the Supreme Court, upon the hearing, dismissed the bill upon the merits, the plaintiffs still continuing minors. In 1825, and within the time allowed them by statute, alter attaining full ager
1. That the purchases were made lis pendens, and consequently ..are affected with notice.
2. That as to the leasehold estate, a lessee for years can not protect himself against the right owner, by showing he was a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice.
The principle that the purchaser of the subject matter of a suit pendente lite acquires no interest as against the plaintiff’s title, whether legal or equitable, is too well established to be now questioned. Such sale as against the plaintiff is considered a nullity, and he is not bound to take any notice of it. The decree of the ■ court binds the property in the hands of such purchaser, although he is no party to the suit, and paid a full price for it, and had, in fact, no notice of the pendency of the suit, or the claim of the plaintiff. He is chargable with constructive notice of the pendency ■of such suit, so as to render his interest in the subject of it liable ;to its event. This rule may sometimes produce individual hardship in its application to a purchaser, for a full consideration, and without actual notice; but if it were not adopted aud adhered to, * there would be no end to any suit. The justice of the court would ,be wholly evaded by alienating the lands after snbpena served,
As all the purchases were made after the decree of the Supreme Oourt in 1817, dismissing the original bill of the complainants, and before the filing of the bill of review, in 1825, it becomes important to inquire whether there was, during that interval of time, such a •Zis pendens as to charge the defendants with constructive notice? Eor if there was, their pleas must be overruled, and their interests abide the event of the suit between the original parties.
The complainants contend, that the decree of dismissal, in 1817, whatever were its terms, can not be considered as final, it being against infants. But as conditional, and subject to re-examination and correction, after they attained their age; and if this is not so, that the bill of review afterward filed, is so connected with the original suit that it will, by relation, be considered as pending from the filing of the original bill, so as to affect intermediate purchasers with constructive notice.
By provision of our statute, bills of review must be filed within ■five years after making the decree complained of, except in certain specified cases, of which infancy is one. A minor being allowed five years after he attains full age, to bring such bill. But a decree which puts an end to the suit, has not heretofore been considered
The master of the rolls, in the case of Bishop of Winchester v. Beaver, 3 Ves. 314, in speaking of the infant heir of a mortgagor, observes, he may be foreclosed; that a decree can be rendered against him and he can do nothing but show error; that the person in whose favor the decree is, can “ go to market with the mortgaged lands, and the purchaser is only liable to be overhauled in the-account.”
It is, however, said that when the decree upon the original bill ispened or reversed, upon a bill of review, the cause proceeds upon the original pleadings, and is to be considered as pending from the service of subpena in the original suit, so as to affect all persons with notice. No judicial decision has been cited by the counsel; and the court have not, in their examination, been able to find anys where precisely this question has been determined. The complain
If the case, as reported in 1 Ch. Cas., is correct, and the facts were as they are therein stated, the question supposed by Lord Nottingham to have been decided, that a purchaser for a valuable consideration, made after the abatement of the suit, and before the bill of survivor, will, after survivor, by relation, be deemed as madepewdmte lite, could not have arisen. The plaintiff, William Style, never could, under any circumstances, have claimed the protection of the court as an innocent purchaser for valuable consideration; for his title was as devisee under the will of Sir Humphrey Style, the defendant in the original suit. It appears, also, that the suit was in full prosecution at the time the title of William Style accrued, and the civil war, and the infancy of some of the parties, are stated by the lord keeper as a sufficient excuse for the subsequent delay and procrastination; and the purchaser, William Style (if a devisee can at all be considered as a purchaser in equity, entitled to protection as such), was not a pa'rty to the sun cited from Lord Nottingham. The doctrine supposed to have been holden in that case,
*The other case relied on by the complainants, as analogous in principle to the present, is the case of Stack pole v. Gore et al., in the House of Lords, 1 Dows. 19. It appears by the report of that case that a decree was obtained in 1733, by fraud and collusion, between a tenant for life and others, without making the remainder-man a party, for the sale of certain mortgaged lands. In 1796, immediately after the tenant in tail became entitled to the possession of the promises, he filed a bill to set aside the decree and the sales under it. In 1801 the bill was dismissed by the chancellor of Ireland, and an appeal taken to the House of Lords. After the decree of the chancellor dismissing the bill, part of the property was incumbor.ed with portions and jointures by a marriage settlement. Upon the appeal the decree of dismissal was reversed and a decree given in favor of the plaintiff, the tenant in tail, against the purchaser, under the decree of 1733, on the ground that he not only knew of, but largely participated in practicing the fraud by which the decree for a sale was obtained. Lord Redesdale, in giving his opinion in the House of Lords, and it is the only part of the case at all applicable to this, observes : “ One of the cases was, however, rather stronger than the rest; it was a marriage settlement made after the dismissal of the bill by Lord Clare, but still it was a transaction pendente lite, since it was still a question for their lordships’ consideration whether the bill was rightly dismissed, and the party thus having notice must take the settlement,subject to all its legal and equitable consequences; such a circumstance would not be allowed to intercept the course of justice.”
Appeals, in chancery proceedings, from an. inferior to a( superior tribunal, have been long established in our system of jurisprudence, and one of familiar and daily occurrence in our practico, and it has never been supposed that the appeal was anything other than a proceeding in the original cause, and that a purchaser, after a decree in the common pleas, was nevertheless liable to bo affected by subsequent proceedings, upon appeal to the Supreme Court, should the decree be there reversed or altered. The appeal has the effect of continuing the cause and suspending or vacating the decree of the inferior tribunal until the cause is heard *in the appellate court. The appellate jurisdiction of the House of
The decree dismissing a bill generally puts an end to that suit; the parties are no longer in court, nor is the cause any further under the control or subject to the direction of the court, and the circumstance that the decree was against infants, who have a right, by statute, to have that decree re-examined after they attain their age, nor the fact that .the decree is afterward reversed, upon a bill of review, will not have the effect of continuing the original suit, so.as to ovorreach intermediate purchasers and subject them to the operation of the rule, that he who purchases a right then under litigation is chargeable with notice, and bound by the decree that may be rendered against the person from whom he derived title.
The case of Kittleby v. Lamb, 2 Chan. 404, quoted and recognized by Lord Eedesdale in Bennet v. Hammill, 2 Sho. & Laf. 566, although it involved no question of notice, *is an authority to show that á bill of review can not, by relation, be so connected with the original suit as to affect intermediate acts done in good faith. That was a bill praying that a certain sum of money, in
I have not noticed the argument presented by the defendant’s counsel, that the original bill having been dismissed, generally is to be considered as equivalent to a decree establishing the equitable as well as legal title of Kidd and Williams to the lot in dispute, at least as against the complainants, and that the defendants may be considered as purchasers, under a decree, because I have deemed it unnecessary, and that the question did not properly arise in this case. The general principle that a purchaser under a decree shall not be affected by error in the decree, and that he has a right to presume the court has properly investigated and decreed the rights of the parties, is readily admitted as correct, but it only applies to sales made under and by the decree of the court. In this case there was no decree for a sale, nor any conveyance directed, or other act ordered to bo done to perfect the legal title, The defendants in the original suit, having the legal title to the lands in dispute, and the court find the complainants had no equitable rights superior, made the only decree which in such a case could be made, that is, dismissing the bill. A purchaser from those defendants, in tracing the title from the first patentee to them, would find nothing to direct his attention to that decree, as their title was independent of it, and he could not, therefore, be presumed to have advanced his money on the faith due to a decree of the highest judicial tribunal. Nor have I conceived it at all necessary to consider whether, when a decree, directing the title of an infant to lands to be conveyed, *which by our laws has the effect and operation of a.conveyance, shall be afterward reversed by a bill of review by the infant, an intermediate purchaser who must necessarily trace his title through such decree, can be charged with notice of the rights of the infant, so as to deprive him of the protection given to an innocent purchaser.
There are many cases where courts of equity have protected Iona fide purchasers of leasehold estates, and of goods assigned, and indorsers of bonds, notes, bills of exchange, *bills of lading, etc., in the possession and legal right they have obtained, without notice of adversary claims. The cases of Sorrel v. Carpenter, 2 P. Wms. 482; Tolland v. Stanbridge, 3 Ves. 485; Nugent v. Gifford, 1 Atk. 463, were cases whore the defendants protected themselves as innocent purchasers of leasehold estates; and the same doctrine is recognized in Le Neve v. Le Neve, 3 Atk. 646,
The case of the Attorney General v. Backhouse, 17 Tos. 283, cited and relied on by the complainants’ counsel, furnishes an apt illustration of the doctrine of courts of equity upon this subject. In that case, it appeared that the trustees of a charity seized in fee, in that character, of some lands, demised them, in 1775, to J. Goad, for eighty years. Goad, in 1776, rented part of the promises to Gurney for sixty-four years. Goad died in 1699, and his executors sold the residue of the leasehold premises, by auction, to the defendant Backhouse. Gurney’s lease was sold by his representatives, and finally came to the defendant Shepherd, who claimed in his answer, that he was a purchaser for valuable consideration, without notice of any fraud, in the original lease from the trustees, and asserting that neither Gurney nor his assignees had notice of the lease under which Goad derived title. The chancellor, after laying down the rule, that to sustain a plea of purchase for valuable consideration without notice, there must be an averment that the party purchased from a person seized, or pretending to be seized in fee, goes on to show that the lease by the trustees to Goad may be such an abuse of the charity estate as to render it void, and observes that “if, therefore, the transaction between Goad and the charity, can be avoided, yet Gurney” (the under-lesseoj “having given a fair consideration, and held undisturbed possession from 1775 to 1803, sales and mortgages having taken place without question, for a period of thirty-five years, the interest of the charity itself, upon all reasonable and equitable principles, requires no more than that I should transfer to the charity the interest.acquired under that bargain.” And he refuses to set aside the in: terest which Gurney acquired by his lease, and protects the sub-lessees, who had given a fair ^consideration, in the interests they had acquired, merely directing them to pay the rent to other persons than those to whom they had contracted to pay it, if it should appear on the inquiry which he directed that the charity ought to receive it. In the late case of Nedfearn v. Forrier et al., 1 Dows. 50, upon appeal to the House of Lords, it was held that a latent equity in a third person should not defeat a bona fide assignee of aright, without notice; and the same doctrine is recognized by Chancellor Kent, in Murray v. Lylburn,2 Johns. Ch. 441. The cases of assignment by operation of law, as assignees of
Id this case it appears that Kidd, at the time he leased part of the lot to Smith and Loring, was seized, or pretended to be seized of a legal estate in fee to it; that neither Smith and Loring, nor the bank, at the time they respectively purchased, had notice of the claim of the complainants; that valuable improvements have been made by them, whereby the property is greatly enhanced in value, and that the bank paid a large-sum to Smith and Loring for the leasehold estate. Under such circumstances, a court of equity can not interfere and deprive them of their interest in the property, in favor of a latent equity, unknown to them when they purchased. The most the court could do, would he to follow the example of Lord Eldon, in the case of the Attorney General v. Backhouse, before cited, ordering these defendants to pay to the complainants, the annual accruing rent, instead of the person to whom they contracted to pay it, if, upon the final hearing of the cause against Kidd’s executors, the court should be of opinion the complainants were .entitled to it.
The complainants having asked leave to reply to the pleas and answer, if the court should be of opinion that the matter contained in them was a defense to the relief sought, and the court being satisfied that the complainants are not entitled to relief against the defendants, upon the pleadings, they will be permitted, under the circumstances, to file such replications as they may be advised.