16 Ind. 338 | Ind. | 1861
Suit on notes, and to foreclose a mortgage. The defendant answered that he purchased of plaintiff all
The plaintiff replied: First. A denial. Second. That the use of the 'two north lots for the purpose of a street, for more than eight years before the purchase by the defendant, was notorious and known to the defendant, and he purchased subject to the same.
The evidence is not all in the record. There was a general verdict for the plaintiff, and findings on special points. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment for the plaintiff.
The first point made in this Court is that the Common Pleas had no jurisdiction. This has been heretofore settled. Harvey v. Dakin, 12 Ind. 481; and Toner v. Mitchell. 13 Ind. 530.
The next question arises upon the construction which should be given to a deed which was in evidence, and'is presented by an instruction- of the Court, as follows: “ That said deed did not convey to Jenlcs the.fee simple to said two lots, but it conveyed merely a use to the public for a street; that there still remained in Bassenger a reversionary interest that he could convey to StuzaJcer, and Stuzalcer conveyed that interest to the defendant, and that was sufficient title to disprove the facts set up in defense, as to a total want of the title in Stuzalcer, and authorizes the recovery of the amount of the notes and mortgage for the purchase money.”
The deed of Bassenger quit claimed to one Jenks the two lots, “for the purpose of being used and occupied for Canal Street, altered, together with all and singular the heredita.ments, &c., and t,he reversion and remainder, rents, issues, and ■profits thereof, and all the estate, right, title, interest, claim-
Was the instruction right ? The intention of the grantor, Bassenger, was, so far as can be gathered from the deed, that the land conveyed to Jenks was so conveyed for a specific purpose, namely, to be used by the public as a street. If the said land had not been accepted for that purpose, the end intended to be accomplished would have been defeated, and the title would have remained in the grantor, unless controlled by other clauses of the deed. Westfall v. Hunt, 8 Ind. 174.
If, after accepting the grant for the purpose named, the land should not be used for that purpose, or the user thereof for that purpose should cease, the right of the grantor to re-enter is recognized by the case of Scott v. Stipe et al., 12 Ind. 74, in an instance where there was a grant for one purpose alone. But the question in this case is, whether, during the time the land was occupied under and in pursuance of the grant, the grantor had any such reversion, or expectant, or contingent interest, as he could convey to a grantee.
If the land over which a public highway passes, has been seized and appropriated to that purpose by the right of eminent domain, it is held that the freehold still remains in the owner of the soil. Rawle on Cov. 142; Whitbeck v. Cooke, 15 Johns. 483. It is also held that a covenant of seizin is not broken by the existence of such an encumbrance upon the property conveyed. Rawle on Cov. 83. Of course then, as the owner of the soil over which the easement passes is still, technically, seized of the freehold, he would have the right to convey it, where that right of passage, &c., had been established as before mentioned. We are not able to perceive why the fact that he granted the right of way, &c., for a highway, •or street, would place the owner of the soil in any worse position than he would occupy if, by the right of eminent domain, such way had been established by the proper authority. But in the case at bar, Bassenger, when he granted the land for "the purpose indicated, at the same time granted the reversion •and remainder to Jenks, his grantee. The effect of the latter
What we do decide is, that Bassenger, by the deed to Jenhs, divested himself of all such interest in the two lots as might be the subject of sale, or upon which a consideration could be based; therefore he passed no interest, by any subsequent deed, to his vendees in said lots. It follows that his remote vendee, the plaintiff in this case, had no title upon which a consideration could rest in the two lots named; and as the answer states that they were included in the sale, and were of the average value of the other lots included in the same sale, the instruction was consequently erroneous.
The judgment is reversed, with costs.