Bachscheider v. Bachscheider

23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 521
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedApril 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 521 (Bachscheider v. Bachscheider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bachscheider v. Bachscheider, 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 521 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Matthews, J.

This is an action in partition. The plaintiff alleges that she is the owner of an undivided one-third interest for her life time in the premises described.

The defendants own the entire fee simple title, subject only to the plaintiff’s life estate. They have demurred to the plaintiff’s petition on the ground that the owner of a life estate in an undivided interest is not entitled to maintain an action in partition.

Section 12026, General Code, provides that,

“Tenants in common and coparceners, of any estate in lands, tenements, etc., may be compelled to mafee or suffer partition.”

It seems to the court clear from this language that if the plaintiff and the defendants are cotenants, and the plaintiff has a present right to possession, right to partition exists. Tabler v. Wiseman, 2 Ohio St., 208, at 211. The statute does not limit the right of partition to tenants in common who. own- the .fee simple titles, nor does it limit it to tenants in common whose estates are of the same duration. The only condition imposed by the statute, as construed in Tabler v. Wiseman, which was [522]*522approved and followed in Eberle v. Gaier, 89 Ohio St., 118, is, that the plaintiff and defendants shall be cotcnan'ts, and the plaintiff entitled to possession so that the decree might operate upon the present-possession.

In Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, Vol. 5, 2 ed., Section 2131, at page 4799, it is said:

“A tenant for life or for years may, either at law or in equity, enforce partition of the particular estate, and in equity may make the owners of the future estate parties, and have such a decree as will fairly adjust all the interests in the estate.”

It seems to have been uniformly held that a co-tenant of an estate for years, for life, or of any other estate in lands, might compel partition, and the language of our own statute expressly authorizes it.

A question of somewhat more difficult determination is as to the extent of the title to be partitioned, in the event that the plaintiff owns less than the entire fee simple. The question stated concretely, is, can the plaintiff, owning a life estate in an undivided one-third of the property, compel a partition of the entire fee simple title? Assuming' that. the plaintiff has a right to compel partition of the estate to the extent that she holds the title in common with-the defendants, has she the right to cut the title beyond her own estate and to the limit of the fee simple estate in remainder held by the defendants? It is clear that if an actual partition were made, its effect would be only to give to the plaintiff a life estate in severalty in one-third of the property, and would not affect the title beyond the life estate. Has she a right to compel a sale of the entire fee simple estate and secure the estimated value of her life estate in an undivided one-third, out of the proceeds of sale?

In the case of Baring v. Nash, 1 Vesey and Beames’s Reports, 550, the plaintiff alleged in his bill that he was a lessee in possession of an undivided one-tenth part of certain premises for the remainder of a term of five hundred years, and that the defendants were seized in fee simple-, or “ otherwise yell entitled to'nine other tenth parts of the same property.” [523]*523The defendants demurred to the bill on the ground that their title was not set out -with sufficient certainty, and it was argued that it did not appear that the parties owned the fee simple estate and that partition could not be ordered. The court at page 552, says:

“The other ground of demurrer, alleged ore tenus, brings forward a much more important question,' whether a bill for partition can be maintained by a person, having only a limited interest, by a term of five hundred years in one-tenth part. * * * It is said, that without the owner of the inheritance of this tenth part, in which the defendant has the term, the court has not before it all the parties interested in the subject; and therefore can not make an effectual decree for a complete partition of the whole estate, binding all parties interested in the estate.”

And on page 553, the court says:

“It is clear, the absolute owner of a tenth part may compel the owners of the other nine to concur with him; and there would be no objection from the minuteness of this interest, the inconvenience, or the reluctance of the other tenants in common, if no objection could be taken to the plaintiff’s title: partition being matter of right: whatever may be the inconvenience and difficulty * * * and the habit of the court is not to give costs to the hearing, and to divide the expense of the conveyance and partition in proportion to the interests.
“The question is, wdiether the lessee for years of one-tenth part has the same right and equity against the owner of the inheritance of that tenth; and clearly the lessee has not the same right to compel that owner to concur. As between the lessee and the remainder-man in fee they are not as tenants in common. They between them represent the absolute interest in that tenth part; -but each has a separate, independent interest; and the proceeding of the one can neither avail, nor bind, the other. As the owner of the inheritance therefore can not be compelled to join at the instance of the lessee, a permanent partition can not take place, if the owner of that tenth part will not concur. If therefore he was a party no relief could be prayed against him; nor would he be bound by the partition: or any right of his precluded to consider the freehold as undivided notwithstanding any division of the temporary interest. For that purpose the owner of the inheritance of this share is not a necessary party,
[524]*524“Still, however, the question remains, whether the owner of the inheritance not being a party, a court of equity will grant a partition at the instance of the lessee for years. * * *
“Therefore -both upon principle and authority this plaintiff’s title to the term being clear, and liable to no objection, he is under no necessity of making the owner of the inheritance of this tenth share a party; nor would it be proper to do so; against whom no relief could be had, and the discovery would be useless. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to the same partition here to which he would clearly under the statute be entitled at law.”

In Jameson v. Hayward, 106 Cal., 682; also reported in 46 American Rep., 268, it was held, as stated in the syllabus:

“Where there is an estate- for years in real property held in cotenancy by the parties to the action and a reversion held by one of them only, the partition must be limited to the estate for years, and, though partition can not be made otherwise than by sale, it can not include the reversionary estate.”

On page 270 the court says:

“The power of the court, in case a sale becomes necessary, is not greater, nor its discretion to be exercised different, than in cases where a partition is made.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bachscheider-v-bachscheider-ohctcomplhamilt-1921.