53 F. 895 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio | 1892
(after stating the facts.) The persons who may have the benefit of the occupying claimant law are pointed out in section 5780 of the Kevised Statutes of Ohio, which reads as follows:
“See. 5786. A person in the quiet possession of hinds or tenements, and claiming to own the same, who has obtained title thereto, and is in possession of the same, without fraud or collusion on his part, shall not be evicted or turned out of possession by any person who sets up and proves an adverse and better title, until the occupying claimant or his heirs are fully paid the value of all the lasting and valuable improvements made on the land by him, or by the person under whom he holds, previous (o receiving actual notice by the commencement of suit on said adverse claim, whereby such eviction may be effected, unless such occupying claimant refuse to pay to the person so setting up and proving an adverse or better title the value of the land without improvements made thereon as aforesaid, upon demand of the successful claimant or his heirs, as hereinafter provided, when (1) such occupying claimant holds a plain and connected title, in law or equity, derived from the records of a public office; or (2) holds the same by deed, devise, descent, contract, bond or agreement, from and under a person claiming title as aforesaid derived from the records of a public office, or by deed duly authenticated and recorded; 'or (3) under sale on execution, against a person claiming title as aforesaid derived from the records of a public office, or by deed duly authenticated and recorded; or (4) under a sale for taxes authorized by the laws of this state, or the laws of the territory northwest of the Ohio river; or (5) under a sale or conveyance made by executors, administrators, or guardians, or by any other person or persons, in pursuance of an order of court or decree in chancery, where lands are or have been directed to be sold.”
It is clear that the county commissioners in this case do not come within the section just quoted unless, in accordance with subdivision 2, they have been in quiet possession of the courthouse lot, “by deed * * * from and under a person claiming title as aforesaid * * * by deed duly authenticated and recorded.” It has been held by the supreme court of Ohio in Beardsley v. Chapman, 1 Ohio St. 118, that the words “by deed duly authenticated and recorded” mean a deed to a person under whom the occupant claims, and not a deed to the occupant himself; and in the same case it was held that the deed to the occupant and Che deed to the grantor of the occupant must both apparently convey an estate which would justify the holder of it in making permanent and lasting improvements. It was held as a corollary that an occupying claimant will not he presumed to know any defects or recitals that appear in deeds prior to that under which his grantor holds. It follows that the county commissioners must show a title in them by a deed in fee to them from a grantor whose title was also by a deed in fee; and the question here to be decided is whether the deeds introduced in evidence comply with, this requisite of the statute.
Counsel for Youug contend that the commissioners did not come within section 5786, for the following reasons: (1) Because the deed from the city to the building committee was not properly executed to the city, so as to pass any title whatever to the committee. (2) Because the deed, not containing the word of limitation, “heirs,” in the granting or habendum clause, conveys only a life estate, which un
First. We think the deed from the city to the building committee was properly executed. The mayor did not act as an attorney in fact for the city in the making of the deed. The deed was the deed of the city, which must be executed by some agent or representative of the city designated to act as such. The deed was not in the name of the mayor, but of the city.
It is contended that in order to operate as the deed of the city it should be signed in the name of the city by William M. Osborn, mayor, to comply with that section of the statute in force at the time this deed was executed, and embodied in section 4106 of the Bevised Statutes of 1880, (Swan & C. St. p. 459, § 1,) which requires that every deed shall be signed and sealed by the grantor or maker. It has been held by the supreme court of Ohio that section 4106 of the Bevised Statutes of 1880, upon which counsel for Young rely, has no application to the execution of deeds by corporations, and that therefore deeds by corporations do not need to be signed; that the' mode of executing a deed by a corporation prevailing at common law is sufficient to pass the title of a corporation to land in Ohio. Sheehan v. Davis, 17 Ohio St. 571. In the same case it is said that, at common law, corporations aggregate execute deeds by affixing thereto their corporate seal. The supreme court there held that a deed of conveyance by a banking corporation was properly executed when the cashier, on behalf of the bank and on its authority, affixed thereto, the corporate seal, and subscribed his name as cashier, and that in such case the cashier was the proper person to acknowledge the deed. The deed was in the name of the banking corporation. The testatum clause read as follows: “In witness whereof the said party of the first part have caused their corporate seal to be hereto affixed, and these presents to be signed by the cashier, on the day and year first above written. H. H. Martin, Cashier,” — and in the acknowledgment he acknowledged the same as the free act and deed of the bank. The case is on all fours with the case at bar, and leaves no question as to the sufficiency, so far as concerns its execution, of the deed from the city to the building committee. The case of Tiffin v. Shawhan, 43 Ohio St. 178, 1 N. E. Rep. 581, does not modify in any way the ruling in Sheehan v. Davis. In the Tiffin Case the clerk of the city was ordered to make a proper conveyance of the land of the city. The deed was in his name as clerk, and the seal attached was not the seal of the city, but the official seal of the clerk. The court held that
Second. The next objection by counsel for Young is that the deed from the city, not containing the word “heirs” as a word of limitation upon the estate conveyed, did not vest in the building committee a fee. It is true that in Ohio, as at common law, the omission of the word “heirs” in the granting and habendum clauses of deeds to natural persons vests in the grantee a life estate only; but there is an exception to this rule when, upon the face of the deed, it appears that the conveyance is made in trust for a use, the full performance of which requires the vesting of a fee in the trastee and grantee. In such a case the deed conveys a fee commensurate with the necessities of the trust imposed by the terms of the deed, and this, if so conveyed, is a legal estate, and is not cognizable alone in equity. In Neilson v. Lagow, 12 How. 98, the action was one of disseisin at law, and one question in the case was whether a deed of the land in controversy to trustees and their successors in trust to sell and convey in fee simple absolute, without the word “hens” in either the habendum or granting clause, conveyed to the trustees a fee simple. The supreme court held that it did. Said Mr. Justice Curtis, (page 110:)
“Now, in looking into tlie deed from the bánk to the'trustees, we find that the grant is to them and their successors in trust to sell, and convey a fee simple absolute. The legal estate, being in trust, must be commensurate therewith, and will be deemed to be so without the use of the usual words of limitation. Newhall v. Wheeler, 7 Mass. 189; Stearns v. Palmer, 10 Metc. (Mass.) 32; Gould v. Lamb, 11 Metc. (Mass.) 84; Fisher v. Fields, 10 Johns. 505; Welch v. Allen, 21 Wend. 147. As the execution of the trust required the trustee to have the fee simple in order to convey one, we are of opinion that the deed to them conveyed a fee, and consequently we cannot infer that the state court decided that only a life estate passed by the deed.”
This case is approved in Webster v. Cooper, 14 How. 498, and in Lessee of Poor v. Considine, 6 Wall. 471. The latter case came up from Ohio. The deed from the city to the trustees did not contain the word “heirs” as a word of limitation, but it expressly described the estate intended to be conveyed as one in fee simple, and it empowered them to sell the lots, and convey to the purchaser a fee simple; and also gave them power to exchange the lots for others, or to use them for the erection of a courthouse, and to donate them to the county commissioners. It is perfectly obvious that in the execution of any of these powers it was necessary that the trustees should have an estate in fee simple. It therefore follows, under the authority cited, that the deed to them conveyed a fee simple.
Third. The next objection is that the deed was void upon' its face for want of power in the city to make conveyance of the land. If the city could hold any land in such a way that they might convey it as this land was conveyed, then the deed was not void upon its face for the purposes of this discussion, because in the erection
Fourth. Another objection is that the deed to the building committee, and the deed .of the committee to the county commissioners, made up but one deed, the building committee being a mere conduit, so that under the occupying claimant law the county commissioners are charged in law with knowledge of the defect in the deed from Young to the city, already found to exist by this court. We cannot agree with this view of the two deeds. The lot was not conveyed through the building committee as a mere conduit of title to the county commissioners. The lot was conveyed to the building committee that they might sell it, or that they might erect a building upon it,- — that they might exercise the highest attributes of ownership over it. The fee vested in the committee absolutely, and it remained in them for more than a year. We are asked by counsel for Young whether the two deeds formerly necessary under the laws of Ohio to convey land from a husband to a wife, through a naked trustee as the conduit of a title, would bring the wife, on subsequent ouster by superior title, within the terms of the occupying claimant statute. It is not necessary for us to decide that question, for, as we have said, the committee is not a mere conduit, charged with the simple duty of conveying the lot to the county commissioners.
The building committee held under the deed of the city duly authenticated and recorded, and the county commissioners hold by deed of the building committee, and that literally brings the commissioners within the statute. The statute is an equitable one, and should be so construed. Said Judge Read, in Lessee of Davis v. Powell, 13 Ohio, 308 -320.:
*901 “The statute is to be so construed, whenever a case comes within its letter, that the person receiving the benefits and advantages of the improvements shall make compensation. It rests on the broadest equity, and in the language of the court in Longworth v. Wolfington, 6 Ohio, 10, ‘may justly claim a liberal construction.’ The court in that case say: ‘ The law of this state is framed to cover every case where a party is evicted from the possession of lands which he has improved in the faith that he was the owner.’ ”
See, also, Harrison v. Castner, 11 Ohio St. 339.
As the county commissioners do bring themselves within the letter of the statute, we see no reason why, by construction, they should he excluded from its benefits.
For the foregoing reasons the court will instruct the jury that the two deeds in evidence, in the absence of had faith, or collusion, entitle the county commissioners to the benefits of the occupying law, and that they should find the value, at the date of the entry of judgment of ouster herein, July 25, 1892, of the lands with the improvements and the lands without the improvements. The value of the improvements is not their cost, hut the added value which they give to the real estate for the use and enjoyment of such real estate by the lawful owner, Charles Young. This is expressly decited by Judge Jackson in Van Bibber v. Williamson, 37 Fed. Rep. 756, a case arising under the statute which we are now considering.
NOTE. The jury returned a verdict finding the land to he worth §10,500, and the land with the improvements §60,500, which verdict was confirmed by the court.