Dunlap v. Green

60 F. 242, 8 C.C.A. 600, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2074
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 30, 1894
DocketNo. 118
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 60 F. 242 (Dunlap v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunlap v. Green, 60 F. 242, 8 C.C.A. 600, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2074 (5th Cir. 1894).

Opinion

PARDEE,. Circuit Judge,

(after stating the facts as above.) The plaintiffs in error have brought to this court for review the whole case, — pleadings, evidence, rulings, and findings, — as if the case were on appeal instead of writ of error; but, as the action in the court below is one at law, and was tried by the court under the [246]*246-statute permitting a waiver of tlie jury, we can only inquire whether the facts found in the special findings, considered in connection with the pleadings, are sufficient to sustain the judgment, and whether any error was committed upon the rulings on matters of law properly preserved by the bills of exception. Rev. St. § 70Ó.’ The bill of exceptions recites all the evidence adduced in the case, but does not show any request to find any specific fact, nor any objection to any or all the facts as found by the court, save an exception to a ruling, upon all the evidence in the case, that the plaintiff has shown a superior title to the land in controversy, and, accordingly, gave judgment for the plaintiff therefor, and for $625 damage for use and occupation; and the only ruling on matter of law shown to have been duly excepted to is the ruling admitting the deed from Peebles to Darcy & Wheeler in evidence.

1. The bill of exceptions shows that the land in controversy was granted to Robert Peebles by the government of Coahuila and Texas; that Peebles executed'a conveyance, January 31, 1870, to Darcy & Wheeler, of the city of New Orleans, state of Louisiana; that thereafter, on October 10, 1878, J. O. Garthwaite and H. C. Darcy, of the city of Newark, N. J., and W. D. Wheeler, of the city of New Orleans, La., composing the firm of Darcy & Wheeler, conveyed said land to Pierpont'Phillips, of East Woodstock, Conn.; and that Pierpont Phillips, who died in 1882, bequeathed the land to Marquis Green, plaintiff in the court below, defendant in error here. The heirs of William Dunlap, in their pleadings and by evidence, asserted' title under an unrecorded conveyance from Robert Peebles to William Dunlap, October 12, 1858, which conveyance expressly retained a lien or mortgage for the unpaid purchase money. The objection to the admission of the deed to Darcy & Wheeler was because it was to a firm, and did not give the full name of either of the parties, and was not to a person or corporate entity, and therefore did not pass legal title, but only an equitable title, which could not be set up in this common-law suit of. trespass to try title. 'While á conveyance to a partnership in the partnership name is insufficient to convey the legal title, a partnership not being a legal person, either natural or artificial, it is valid as a contract to convey, and vests such an equitable title in the partnership as will defeat an after-acquired title; and where the firm name consists of the name of one partner, with the addition of Co./ or some other partnership designation, the title is vested in the partner whose name is used, clothed with a trust for the benefit of the partnership.” 17 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 559, 560, and cases there cited. “It is also necessary that the parties, grantor and grantee, should be sufficiently described in the deed. A deed is void which does not in some way point out the grantor and grantee. The usual method of describing a person is by giving his name in full; but this is not the only method. Any other description would suffice which would distinguish him from others; as, for example, where one is described by his office or by his relation to other persons.” 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 432, and cases there cited. In the present case the deed was to two individuals who composed a firm by [247]*247their proper surnames, describing them as residents of the city of New Orleans, state of Louisiana. The grantees were as effectually and certainly designated as: in many other cases in which, on good authority, the grantee has been held to be sufficiently named. See Hogan v. Page, 2 Wall. 607; Shaw v. Lowd, 12 Mass. 447; Den v. Hay, 21 N. J. Law, 174; Morse v. Carpenter, 19 Vt. 613. The office of a name at common law is merely to identify, and for that purpose the description in the deed objected to seems to be sufficient. If evidence should develop that there was more than one .Darcy, or more than one Wheeler, in the city of New Orleans, state of Louisiana, or more than one firm of Darcy & Wheeler in said city, it would be merely a case of latent ambiguity, arising from extraneous evidence capable of being removed, and in every such case of doubt the true party may be shown by parol. Games v. Dunn, 14 Pet. 322. The general rule is that, where a deed to a firm or a partnership is not sufficiently definite in a description of the persons grantees, it is not void, but good in equity as conveying a full equitable title. “It may be conceded that, at law, a deed made to or by a partnership in the firm name, the full name of neither partner being given, would not pass title to the land, but such is not the rule in equity.” Frost v. Wolf, 77 Tex. 455-460, 14 S. W. 440, citing numerous authorities. And it would seem clear enough on principle that a deed to a firm, being good in equity, vests in the members of the firm, by implication, the power to convey; and, in this view of the case, the deed of Peebles to Darcy & Wheeler, treated as a power of attorney only, under which a deed conveying the full equitable and legal title to Phillips was made, was admissible in evidence as a muniment of title.

2. The first conclusion of fact found by the court is as follows:

‘‘The balance of the purchase money, amounting to §3,500, mentioned in the deed from Bobert Peebles to William Dunlap, dated October 12, .1858, was never paid, but about the year 1808 the administrator of the estate of the said William Dnnlap, deceased, abandoned all claim to the land in controversy, and never paid taxes or asserted ownership of the land thereafter, ho having' been previously informed of the existence of a lien on the land in favor of said Peebles.”

The fifth finding of fact was to the effect that in January, 1887, the tenant placed on the land by the agent of Pierpont Phillips and Marquis Green was ordered off by the defendant W. L. Dunlap, who, from that time until January, 1892, remained in possession of the land, through tenants placed on the same by him, and appropriated its fruits and revenues during said period from January, 1887, to January, 1892, to his own use and benefit, the same being of the reasonable value of $125 per annum. The other “findings of fact show a regular chain of title from Bobert .Peebles, who conveyed to Darcy & Wheeler in 1870, down to Marquis Green, the plaintiff in the court below. The question raised on these findings as being sufficient to warrant a judgment in favor of Marquis Green, plaintiff, for the land in controversy, and for the sum of $625, the fruits and revenues, is whether, under the facts, the superior title to the land in controversy is in the heirs of Dunlap [248]*248or in Marquis Green; and the answer to that question depends upon whether, under the peculiar conveyance made by Robert Peebles to William Dunlap, Robert Peebles had the right to rescind the said contract without notice, on the ground of nonpayment of the vendor’s lien expressly reserved, and of abandonment. The rale in regard to such cases is declared in the case of Kennedy v. Embry, 72 Tex. 890, 10 S. W. 88, as follows:

“Under such contract, upon, total failure of performance on the part of the vendee, thfe vendor has the right to either sue for the purchase money and foreclose his mortgage, or he may rescind the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 F. 242, 8 C.C.A. 600, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlap-v-green-ca5-1894.