Carter v. Grossnickle

11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 465, 22 Ohio Dec. 680, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 75
CourtClermont County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 31, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 465 (Carter v. Grossnickle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clermont County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Grossnickle, 11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 465, 22 Ohio Dec. 680, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 75 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Bambach, J.

The case is submitted upon the pleadings, an agreed statement of facts, certain exhibits, namely, the several deeds from the children of Hannah Carter, deceased, and elaborate arguments and briefs of the several attorneys interested.

The controversy relates to the estate, if any, which the heirs of the body of Hannah Carter have in certain lands which were devised -by John D. Randall, the grandfather of said -heirs, to his daughter, Plannah Carter, and the heirs of her body.

The last will -of John D. Randall was admitted to probate in said county October 8, 1849. It devised to Hannah Carter, and. the heirs of her body, 110 acres of land, of which the premises in question are a part.

Hannah Carter died August 13, 1898, having previously, on September 3,1851, conveyed said land by a deed containing covenants of general warranty to one Joseph O. Randall, who is spoken -of as a brother, and he by a general warranty deed on January 8, 1856, to W. S. B. Randall, said to be another brother, and from him the title which he had thus acquired passed by a series of intermediate conveyances, containing covenants of general warranty to the defendants, Grossniekle.

The plaintiff and the defendants, other than David Grossniekle, Samuel Conover and T. P. Breeding, are children, the issue of ...plannah Carter, the donee in tail. They each, during the.life of their- mother, said Plannah, did “remise, release and forever quit..-claim ” the premises in question for the consideration of one dollar, describing the same by metes and .bounds at the following vdates, viz: March 13, 1857, Elizabeth Carter Gillette to Joseph Ó, Randall; November 23, 1869, Armina I. Carter Cutler to W. S. B. Randall; February 8,1878, the plaintiff, Warren C. Carterto same: February 8, 1878, .Mary E. Carter Wood to’.sameApril 4, 1878, .Caroline Carter Sullivan to same; June 17, 1879. Milton P, Carter to -same..

[467]*467Following the habendum clause in the several quit-claim deeds, excepting the one from Elizabeth Carter Gillette, is this recital:

“The foregoing is intended to convey to the said W. S: B. Randall all my right, title, interest and estate in .and to the foregoing described real estate, whether vested or contingent, and which I now have or may hereafter have or derive from the will of my late grandfather, John Randall, giving and bequeathing said real estate to my mother, Hannah Carter, and the heirs of her body.”

The deed from Elizabeth Carter Gillette to Joseph O. Randall contains the same recital, excepting that instead of the words “the foregoing is intended,” the words “meaning hereby” are used.

The answers contain a general denial. In another defense they plead this recital as an estoppel, and in another separate defense they set up the deeds as contracts to convey the premises and ask to have the title quieted.

Three propositions thus seem to be presented:

1. What estate, if any, had the children of Hannah Carter in said premises, prior to the execution by them of the quit-claim deeds? .

2. What interest in or right to the land, if any,' passed to the grantees from said children by operation of said deeds ?

3. If no title passed by the deeds, then (a) are the grantors in said deeds estopped by the same, or by the recitals contained therein, from asserting a subsequently acquired title; and (b) can said grantors now be required or compelled to convey (the •title which accrued to them since, the execution of said deeds by the death of their mother? ’

The first proposition is conclusively settléd by the decision of the Supreme Court in Dungan v. Kline, 81 O. S., 371.

The donee in tail was living at the time said children, the 'issue, executed the deeds involved in the case, and under Section 4200. Revised Statutes, .the issue “of a donee in tail during the life of-such donee has no estate or interest in the lands entailed, which he can alienate.” ■

Nevertheless it is contended that the interest of the issue of the donee in tail,.during'the-life of such donee, is more than a “naked-expectancy.”

[468]*468,A due regard for the arguments presented with so much earnestness and vigor justifies a brief review of this now almost extinct species of land tenures, in connection with the term “expectancy” or naked “possibility” involved in the third proposition.

The argument is, that the elements of uncertainty which distinguish the naked expectancy of an heir apparent are wanting in the case of an estate tail during the life of the donee in tail after the title has vested in the donee.

The determining element of uncertainty which applies to the prospect of the issue of a donee in tail as well as to an heir apparent is that the word “heir” in the description of an estate tail has the same meaning as when applied to an estate in fee simple; it is a word of limitation, and the “issue” takes by descent as heir from the donor. Pollock v. Speidel, 17 O. S., 439 (4th syl.), 449; same v. same, 27 O. S., 94.

The essential distinction between a conditional fee and a fee tail is well illustrated by comparing Jeffers v. Sampson, 10 O. S., 101, 104, with Needles v. Needles, 7 O. S., 432.

There is no mistaking the meaning and scope of the doctrine announced in Dungan v. Kline in view of that part of the opinion of Crew, J., where he says:

“What estate, then, had the issue of the first donee in tail during his life ? My answer is, none. The plaintiff could, therefore, convey none. Such issue is only an heir apparent or presumptive. His title is the bare possibility,' or mere chance of becoming eventually the heir in tail; for, the maxim is nemo esl haeres viventis. And it is well settled rule that a mere possibility can not be released or conveyed; and the reason thereof is that a release supposes a right in being. ’ ’

See Touchstone, 319; Bacon Abr. Title Release H; see also Darkness v. Corning, 24 O. S., 427; quotation from Dart v. Dart, 7 Conn., 250.

2. Though the several grantors in the quit-claim deeds, at the time of their execution, had no estate or interest in the land described therein, which they could alienate, yet it is said that the deeds purport to convey and the grantees expected to become invested with an estate of a particular description or quality, which ■now since it has become a vested interest in said grantors should [469]*469be held to have passed to tbeir grantees by virtue and operation of the deeds.

This doctrine is urged principally on tbe authority of the United .States Supreme Court. (Van Ransselaer v. Kearney, 11 How., 297; 13 L. Ed. 703.)

At page 325 (11 How.), the court clearly states the reason for the doctrine advanced, as follows:

“The principle dedueible from these authorities seems to be that whatever may be the form or nature of the conveyance used to pass real property, if the grantor sets forth .on the face of the instrument by way of recital or averment that he is seized or possessed of a particular estate in the premises, and which estate the deed purports to convey; or, what is the same thing, if the

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 465, 22 Ohio Dec. 680, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-grossnickle-ohctcomplclermo-1911.