181 N.E. 26 | Ohio | 1932
The sole question presented by the present record is whether or not, under the allegations of the petition, the action is one in chancery or at law. The right to the forfeiture of the life estate is based upon the terms of the will of Martha Seiver Oglesbee, and the trial court by its conclusion found that there was a violation of the terms of the will, entitling the executor to the relief sought.
The executor also claims the benefit of Section 8593, General Code, which reads as follows: "A tenant for life in real property, who commits or suffers waste thereto, shall forfeit that part of the real property of which such waste is committed or suffered, to the person having the immediate estate in reversion or remainder. Such tenant also will be liable in damages to the person having the immediate estate in reversion or remainder for the waste committed or suffered thereto."
We are of opinion that the executor, averring that he "brings this suit as such executor on behalf of said estate and the persons interested therein," stands in the stead of the "person having the immediate estate in reversion or remainder," and therefore the executor may claim the benefit of this section of the Code.
The rule as to whether or not an action is "a chancery case" was announced in Wagner v. Armstrong,
The inquiry, then, is whether or not an action of the nature declared on in the petition was a chancery case before the adoption of the Code.
The theory upon which recovery is sought is that the life estate has terminated by its very terms as set forth in the will, because of the violation of certain conditions by the life tenant; also, that the commission of waste by the life tenant gives the executor a right of forfeiture under Section 8593, General Code. The executor, in effect, seeks a judicial determination of these questions of fact, upon which the legal title to the premises will depend, and a recovery of the specific property in order that he may sell it pursuant to the will.
In the final analysis this is a case involving the determination of a legal title and for the recovery of specific real property. If the case can be said to have any of the characteristics of a suit in chancery, these are merely incidental to the principal relief prayed for.
Attention may be called to the case of Raymond v. Toledo, St.L. K. C. R. R. Co.,
The statute, Section 8593, providing for forfeiture of the estate of a life tenant committing waste, did not define a pre-existing common-law right, but created a new right in the remainderman to recover possession of the property in the event of waste. The newly created right is legal, not equitable, in character. In an early case in this court, Crockett v.Crockett,
We are cited to the case of Gearhart v. Richardson,
The Gearhart case relates to the question of whether or not a will which creates a charitable trust presents a question of chancery character, which justifies an appeal from an order of the trial court in construing the trust. It was there held that such action was appealable, and with that conclusion we are content, charitable trusts being especially subjects of chancery jurisdiction. Clark v. Clark, supra, denies the right of one defendant, by filing against another defendant a cross-petition which states a chancery case, to convert the whole proceeding into a chancery case where *229 the plaintiff has declared upon a law action in his petition. Neither of these cases is applicable to the question presented by the present record.
The case of Jenks v. Langdon,
In so far as that case involved an action to recover land, there was no judgment in the court below; hence, the case ofJenks v. Langdon, supra, would not seem to be an authority in the present instance. Further, the statute as to forfeiture for waste was not in existence when the Jenks case was decided, nor was any will involved therein.
The holding of this court in Crowley, Admr., v. Crowley,
The will involved in the present inquiry was before the court upon a previous occasion. Oglesbee v. Miller, Exr.,
Our conclusion is that this action is legal in nature and not equitable, and therefore the Court of Appeals was right in dismissing the appeal, such action not being a chancery case. The judgment of the court below will therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MARSHALL, C.J., JONES, MATTHIAS, ALLEN, KINKADE and STEPHENSON, JJ., concur.