34 Neb. 559 | Neb. | 1892

Maxwell, Ch. J.

This is an action of ejectment brought in the district court of Lancaster county by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover possession of lots 7, 8, and 9 in block 38, in Dawson’s addition to Lincoln. The answer of the defendant below is in substance a judgment in the United States circuit court. On the trial of the cause the jury returned a verdict in favor of Rundle, and for $100 damages, and a motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was entered on the verdict.

*560Rundle claims title through a conveyance from Editha J. Dawson, who derived title to the lots through the will of her husband, Jacob Dawson. A copy of the will is set out in the case of Little v. Giles, 25 Neb., 313. After the widow had conveyed all the lots in question and received the consideration therefor, she married again, whereupon the children assumed that the real estate reverted to them and they made a conveyance to Burr and Wheeler, who afterwards conveyed to Giles, the father-in-law of Burr, and a non-resident of the state, who brought a number of actions in the federal court to recover the possession. Thereupon all, or nearly all of the purchasers of lots joined and brought an action in the district court of Lancaster county for an injunction to quiet their title and prevent a multiplicity of suits. The prayer of that petition is as follows:

“Wherefore these plaintiffs pray that the judgment and decree of this court that the said defendants, and each and all of them, all persons claiming through and under them, or any of them, or acting or assuming to act by the authority or with the connivance of the defendants, or any of them, be restrained and enjoined during the pendency of this action from in any suit, action, or proceeding at law, or in equity, on the courts of this state, or any other courts, assailing, traducing, or questioning the title or possession or right of possession of these plaintiffs, or any of them, in or to said lots, tract, or parcels of land, or any of them, or by such suit or proceedings, or in any. other manner, to interfere with or question the possession of these plaintiffs, or any of them, or their tenants or other persons holding under them, or any of them, to any of said lots or parcels of lands, or to the rents, issues, profits, use, or occupation of the same, or any of the same, and that the said defendants, and each and all of them, be likewise restrained during the pendency of this action, each and all of them, from executing, acknowledging, or delivering, or authorizing, advising, or conniving at the execution, ac*561knowledgment, and delivery of, or the recording or filing for record of any deed or pretended deed, or instrument of writing, conveying or incumbering, or pretending or assuming to convey or incumber, or in any manner affect tlie title, occupancy, or possession or right of possession of said lots or parcels of land, or any of them, or interfering with the same in any manner whatever. That on the final hearing of this cause said injunction be made perpetual.
“Second — And the plaintiffs further pray that a certain pretended deed of conveyance bearing the date about September 15, 1879, executed by the defendants William R. Dawson, M. C. Dawson, and M. S. Dawson as grantors, purporting to convey said lands to the defendant Lionel C. Burr and Hiland H. Wheeler, and now of record in the clerk’s office of Lancaster county, Nebraska; and also a certain pretended deed bearing the date about the 27th day of April, 1880, executed by the defendant Melita G. D. Tillman as grantor, and purporting to convey said lands to the defendant Giles, and now of record in said clerk’s office; and also a certain pretended deed of conveyance executed by defendants Albert L. Dawson and A. A. Knicely as grantors, and purporting to convey said lands to the defendants Burr and Wheeler; and also a certain pretended deed of conveyance executed by said defendants Hiland H. Wheeler and Lionel C. Burr, and purporting to convey said lands to the defendant Giles, and now of record in said clerk’s office, be each and all of them canceled, set aside, and held for naught. .
“Third — That each and all of said plaintiffs be adjudged and decreed to have a good and valid and indefeasible title in fee simple of the several lots, tracts, pieces, and parcels of land so held and owned by them as aforesaid, free and clear of all claims, liens, demands,, interest, title, or incumbrances of the said defendants, or any of them, or of any person claiming through or under them, or any of *562them, and for such other or different judgment, order, decree, or relief as in equity and good conscience ought to be rendered herein.”

This action was brought on the 27th of January, 1882,. and a temporary injunction allowed as prayed, which injunction seems to have continued in force until final judgment and alleged in substance that the title had been collusively transferred to Giles; that it was not a bona fide transfer, but made for the purpose of removing (because to the federal courts; that Burr and Wheeler were the real owners of the land, and that the federal court had no jurisdiction. This action was removed by Giles into the circuit court of the United States. Issues were joined and proof taken which showed beyond question that Giles was-not a bona fide purchaser but merely clothed with apparent ownership for the purpose of removing the cause. After the decision in the circuit court the case was taken to the United States supreme court, where, on the 1st day of November, 1886, the judgment of the circuit court was reversed, the court holding that the United States circuit court had no jurisdiction and it was remanded to the state court for further proceedings. Soon after this decision was rendered Giles transferred all the lots in controversy to one Miles, a relation of Burr, who at once commenced a number of actions in ejectment in the federal court, which court had been directed to remand the cause for a number of the very same lots which were in litigation in the cause to be remanded. The cases seem to have been pressed to a speedy determination in that court before the action in equity in regard to the same lots could be heard in the state court. Judgments were rendered in favor of Miles in the ejectment cases. Soon afterwards a hearing was had in the district court of Lancaster county. This matter is distinctly put in issue by the 20th paragraph of the supplemental answer of Giles et al. in the case of Little et al. v. Giles, which is as follows:

*563“And these defendants further say that on the-day of December, 1886, the said Giles made, executed, and delivered to one Frank M. Miles a warranty deed of all the lots claimed in said petition by the said Elizabeth and Josiah Paden, lot 5 in block 31; and A. J. Sawyer, lots 5 and 6 in block 30; and John A. Buck staff, lots 5 and 6 in block 29, lots 7, 8, and 9 in block 32, lots 5, 6, 7 and' 8 in block 35, lots 1 and 2 in block 36; and Elizabeth Chase, lots 10,11, and 12 in block 30; and William Rundle, lots 7, 8, 9,10, and 12 in block 38 ; and Helen Weber, lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,10,11, and 12 in block 43; and the said Frank M. Miles duly commenced his action in ejectment in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Nebraska, and such proceedings were had and done in said several actions in said court that on the 3d day of July, 1887, after a due regular trial, a judgment was rendered in said several actions against all the said last named persons and in favor of Frank M. Miles, grantee of the defendant Giles, and among other things said judgment is that the said Miles was seized in fee of all the said premises and the said persons herein last named did unlawfully keep the said Miles out of the possession thereof, which said judgment is now in full force and effect, unreversed and unappealed from, and a complete bar to any pretended claim of title or cause of action herein.”

The trial was had in the state court on the 14th day of December, 1887, and a decree rendered for plaintiffs, that part in favor of Rundle being lots 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 in block 38, in Dawson’s addition to South Lincoln, “and all lots or parcels of land hereinbefore mentioned.” The case was thereupon brought into this court, where the judgment of the district court was affirmed. Afterwards a further application was made to this court, which is reported in 27 Neb., 179, the title of Rundle to the lots in question being confirmed.

Section 85 of the Code as it existed when the action of *564Little v. Giles et al. was brought is as follows: “When the «ummons has been served, or publication made, the action is pending, so as to charge third persons with notice of its pendency, and while pending, no interest can be acquired by third persons in the subject-matter thereof as against the plaintiff’s title.” Miles, therefore, merely stepped in •the shoes of Giles. He acquired no greater rights. The rule as to purchasers pendente lite is thus stated by Black •on Judgments: “It is a general rule that a purchaser of property (except negotiable paper before maturity) who buys pending' a litigation concerning it, comes into privity with his vendor, so as to be bound by the judgment in that suit the same as if made a party of record. We apprehend it is well settled that he who purchases property pending a suit in which the title to it is involved, takes it subject to the judgment or decree that may be passed in such suit against the person from whom he purchases. That he purchased bona fide and paid a full consideration for it will not avail against such judgment or decree. Nor will he be permitted to prove that he had no notice of the .suit. The law infers that all persons have notice of the proceedings of courts of record. The law is that he who intermeddles with property in litigation does it at his peril, and is as conclusively bound by the results of the ¡litigation, whatever they may be, as if he had been a party to it from the outset. It is on this principle that the purchaser of mortgaged premises, taking title after the institution of a foreclosure suit, is bound by the judgment of foreclosure rendered against the mortgagor, although such purchaser is not made a party to the suit. So one who becomes the purchaser and assignee of a mortgage pending a suit to set the same aside as void for fraud, thereby comes into the same position as if he were a co-defendant of record and hence, in subsequent proceedings between such purchaser and any of the actual defendants, the judgments in that suit is conclusive as to the same question of fraud *565again arising. The plaintiff in the action need not make such purchaser a party or otherwise notice his purchase. If the latter desires to defend the suit he must make himself a party to it in some proper manner, as, in equity, by supplemental bill, before it terminates. In a late case it is said that the purpose of the rule is to keep subject-matter of the litigation within the power of the court until the judgment or decree shall be entered, since otherwise, by successive alienations pending the suit, the judgment or decree could be rendered abortive and impossible of execution.” (2 Black on Judgments, sec. 550.)

. Mr. Freeman, in his valuable work on Judgments, sec. 191, has stated the rule and some of the reasons therefor with great force and clearness as follows: “ Besides the-nominal parties to a judgment or decree, many others are brought within its influence and made to respect its commands and to abide by its settlements. Prominent among these parties are all those persons who have brought themselves within the principles involved in the law of lis pen-dens. The rules applied to third persons becoming interested in the subject-matter in litigation by acquiring the title of one of the panties to the controversy, pendente li'eT have been explained and justified upon the assumption that those rules were based upon notice, actual or constructive. It has been said that all people are supposed to be attentive to what passes in courts of justice/ and that, from being attentive, they must be informed of the various-matters in process of litigation in those courts. But the more reasonable view is that the law of lis pendens is not based upon presumptions of notice, but upon a public policy imperatively demanded by a necessity which can be met and overcome in no other manner. ‘ it is a careless use of language which has led judges to speak of it (lis pendens) as notice because it happens to have, in some instances, a similar effect with notice.’ The justice of the court would be wholly evaded by aliening the lands after subpoena. *566served, and the suitor subject to great delay, expense, and inconvenience without any certainty of at last securing his interest. In fact, the doctrine of lis pendens, as understood and enforced at common law, does not seem to have required even such constructive notice as would in all cases put a man of ordinary sagacity on his guard, or as would have enabled him to ascertain whether the property in which he desired to acquire an interest was involved in litigation. The commencement of lis pendens dated from the service of the subpoena, though it was not returnable until the next term. No lis pendens existed until the bill was filed, yet the filing being made, the lis pendens, by relation, was considered as in force from the service of the subpoena. Under such a system it might frequently happen that a man would be bound by a suit, whose object he could only conjecture, no means of information being accessible; that every man should be presumed to be present in the courts and attentive to their proceedings, is a most unnatural presumption — a fiction not merely improbable, but impossible, since by no human power can one man be at all times in attendance upon the'several tribunals of his country, in which claims to specific property are determined. But the necessity of the rules of lis pendens is so apparent and so unavoidable, that the early existence and continued application of these rules were indispensable to a wise public policy. If, during the pendency of any action, at law or in equity, the claim to the property in controversy could be transferred from the parties to the suit so as to pass to a third party unaffected either by the prior proceedings or the subsequent result of the litigation, then all transactions in our courts of justice would, as against men of ordinary forethought, prove mere idle ceremonies. A series of alienations protracted into the boundless future would forever preclude the prevailing party from obtaining that to which he had vindicated his claim. The necessity of Us pendens and the perils which *567it was designed to avert were thus forcibly stated by •Chancellor Kent in a case which is regarded as a pioneer in the United States on the subject on which it treats and which enjoys the distinction of being quoted and approved in every part of our country (Murray v. Ballou, 1 Johns. Ch., 566): ‘The counsel for the defendants have made loud complaints of the injustice of the rule, but the comjplaints were not properly addressed to me, for if it is a well settled rule I am bound to apply it, and it is not in my power to dispense with it. I have no doubt the rule will sometimes operate with hardship upon a purchaser without actual notice, but this seems to be one of the cases in which private mischief must yield to general convenience, and most probably the necessity of such a hard application of the rule will not arise in one out of a thousand instances; •on the other hand we may be assured the rule would not have existed and have been supported for centuries if it had not been founded in great public utility. Without it, as has been observed in some of the cases, a man upon the service of a subpoena might alienate his land and prevent the justice of the court. Its decrees might be wholly •evaded. • In this very case the trustee had been charged with a gross breach of his trust and has been enjoined by the process of the court six months before the sale in question from any further sales. If his subsequent. sales are to be held valid, what temptation is held out to waste the trust property and destroy all the hopes and interests •of the eestuique trust ? A suit in chancery is in such cases necessarily tedious and expensive, and years may elapse, as in this case, before the suit can be brought to a final conclusion. If the property is to remain all this time subject to his disposition, in spite of the efforts of the court to prevent it, the rights of that helpless portion of the community whose property is most frequently held in trust will be put in extreme jeopardy. To bring home to every purchaser the charge of actual notice of the suit must from *568the very nature of the case be in a great degree impracticable/ ”

The transfer to Miles was made during the continuance of and in violation of an order of injunction of the district court. Under our Code, Miles was charged with notice of the action and took the conveyance subject to the decision in the state court of the case of Little v. Giles, and as that was decided adversely to him he is bound by that decree. The plaintiffs in error have no greater rights than were possessed by Miles, and have no title to the property in controversy. The judgment of the district court is right and is

Affirmed.

The other judges concur.
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