128 F. 833 | 5th Cir. | 1904
This is an action for partition of lands. It was filed by the plaintiff, R. I. Lee, in the district court of Harris county, Tex., against the unknown heirs of John R. Marshall. Cited by publication, the defendants made appearance, whereupon the plaintiff amended his petition, and the case proceeded against them. Plaintiff is a citizen of Kansas, the defendants are citizens of New York, and the cause was duly removed to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Texas, and entered upon the law docket. Simultaneously with the removal the defendants filed their original answer, which presented a general demurrer and a general denial of plaintiff’s title. Thereafter the defendants also filed a special plea denying that the plaintiff had any title to or interest in the land siied for, and alleged that the defendants were the sole owners of all the lands, and prayed judgment to that effect. When the cause came on to be heard, a stipulation in writing was made by opposing counsel waiving a jury, and submitting the case, upon the law and facts, to the court. *
It appeared from the evidence that the title to this land had originally vested in one A. M. Gentry. This he took as the assignee of certain patents to Jones, to Menifee, to Sanders, and to Jeffries. There is no
The defendants then put in the same deeds from Gentry to Marshall & James which had been previously introduced by the plaintiff. They then offered a copy of a notarial act of sale passed June 14, 1853, before Theodore Guyal, a notary public for the parish of Orleans, state of Louisiana. This instrument was duly exemplified in accordance with the statutes of the United States. From this it appears that A. B. James, for the consideration of $£05,000 paid to him by John R. Marshall, and said Marshall’s assumption of and agreement to pay all of said James’ liabilities as a member of three several firms of Marshall & James, therein described, and to hold him harmless and indemnified from and against all debts, obligations, and liabilities of whatsoever na
“Unto .Toiin R. Marshall, present and accepting, and purchasing for himself, •his heirs and assigns, all and singular the'rights, title, interest, property, claim and demand of every kind and nature whatsoever of him, the said Andrew B. James, as a copartner in the two firms formerly existing and the one now existing in this city, and in the City of New York, under the name and style of Marshall & James, and composed of the said John R. Marshall and Andrew B. James, of, in and to, the property, effects and assets of the said firms, wheresoever situate and in whose possession and keeping soever the same may be, and consisting of the stock in trade, book debts, accounts, bills receivable, claims, real estate taken by the said firms from their debtors in settlement of their debts and situate in the States of Mississippi and Texas, and generally every other thing belonging to said firms and accruing to them in any manner or form, without any reservation whatsoever, and also any and all capital and balances this day standing to the credit of the said Andrew B. James on the books of the said several firms.”
The act of sale recites the periods of the three firms, all styled Marshall & James, and composed of John R. Adarshall and A. B. James. The first commenced July i, 1845, and terminated July 1, 1848, and ■in this the partners held equal interests. The second commenced July 1, 1848, and terminated July 1, 1850, and in this James’ interest was seven-sixteenths, and Marshall’s was nine-sixteenths. The third commenced July 1, 1850, and was existing when the act of sale passed, June 14, 1853, and ⅛ this James’ interest was 38¾ per cent., and. Marshall’s was 61 ⅝ per cent. It appears that an exemplified copy of this act of sale had been filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Harris county on January 6, 1902, and recorded February 3d of the same year; but the defendants did not offer it for that reason, which, it was agreed, added nothing to its validity. To this copy act of sale the plaintiff objected because it was not admissible without proof of execution of the original; again, because it.purported to dispose of the partnership assets of Marshall & James, and .there was no evidence that the lands in dispute were a part of those assets; and for the further reason that it contained no description of the lands in controversy; also since, even if op-perative, it conveyed only an equitable title, and, in the absence of evidence that he had notice of such equitable title at the time he purchased the lands described in his petition, or in the absence of evidence that he did not pay a valuable consideration therefor, could not affect the rights of plaintiff, holding the legal title. The court overruled these objections, and admitted the exemplified copy in evidence, and to this the plaintiff excepted. The defendants then put in evidence a duly examined copy of said act of sale, made and proved by a witness who tested the accuracy of the copy of the original in the archives and records of the custodian of notarial records in New Orleans, and who testified that it wag a true copy of the original. The contents of the examined copy are the same as those of the exemplified copy hereinbefore mentioned. The defendants then proved that the firm of Marshall & James paid taxes for the year 1853 on the lands sued for, and all back taxes which had accrued and remained unpaid from 1850 to 1853, and further that John R. Marshall, individually, as long as he lived, and after his death his estate, paid all taxes on
The proceeding for partition, by which it is attempted to try questions of title before the court, was treated by opposing counsel — all accomplished members of the Texas bar — as unquestionably appropriate under the law of. Texas. We have the authority of Chancellor Kent for stating that the writ of partition, as enacted by St. 31 & 32 Henry VIII, has been gradually re-enacted and adopted, with probably enlarged facilities for partition, in the United States. .Further, it does not appear that the question of possession entered into this controversy; otherwise a disseisin or adverse possession might, under the general rule, bar a suit for partition so long as the ouster continued. 4 Commentaries, p. 364, footnote. For a discussion of the subject, see Bearden v. Benner (C. C.) 120 Fed. 690. We assume, then, that it is competent to adjudicate the conflicting titles upon the proceeding before the court. The cause, when removed, proceeded without objection on the law side in the circuit court. The issues presented and passed upon were legal issues, the case submitted here presents only issues at law, and it follows that, on this writ of error, we are restricted to considerations depending upon the legal title. This, it appears, must be resolved in favor of the plaintiff in the court below, who'is the plaintiff in error here. All the conveyances of the land described in the petition, from Gentry, who had succeeded by assignment to the title of the original patentees, placed the title, not in the partnership firm, Marshall & James, but in John R. Marshall and A. B. James. About this there can be no question. The deeds are explicit; the
From this summary it appears that the plaintiff had purchased the legal title to the undivided half interest which formerly belonged to A. B. James. It follows that this title must prevail, unless it appears that, conformably to law, by legal and sufficient conveyance, it has been diverted to the defendants, or to some other person or persons. It is attempted to show this first by the contention that these lands were partnership property of Marshall & James. The evidence, however, is not at all clear or satisfactory to justify this conclusion. The conveyance from Gentry to J. R. Marshall and A. B. James, while made to them jointly, was not made to them as partners. It would probably have created a joint tenancy at common law. This, by the same law, even though such real estate might have been held by the joint tenants as partners, would have been subject to the right of survivorship. The right of survivorship among joint tenants has, however, been abolished in many states, except as to estates held in trust. In most of the United States the presumption is that all tenants who hold jointly hold as tenants in common, unless a clear intention to the contrary be shown. A tenancy in common is defined to be an estate held in joint possession by two or more persons at the same time, by several and distinct titles, 1 Washburn’s Real Property, p. 415; 2 Blackstone, p. 191. There is in common tenancy a unity of possession, but no unity of title. It cannot, we think, be presumed that, because Marshall & James were members of the partnership of that irame, a conveyance of real estate .to John R. Marshall and. A. B. James deposited the title among the partnership assets. . There is,, as before stated, no ambiguity about the deeds. The c0nve)iance to the grantees was to them as individuals. It will, of course,, he presumed that each took an undivided half interest. It is
For these reasons, we are of opinion that the Circuit Court was in error in admittihg the act of sale, and in excluding the evidence of O’Donnell and McMorrow to show that the plaintiff had no notice of the existence of the act of sale at the time that he purchased the disputed interest, and that he was a purchaser in good faith for a valuable consideration, and in giving judgment for the defendants. Judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, and the cause will be remanded to. the Circuit Court for its suitable action pursuant to this decision.