Fields v. Squires

9 F. Cas. 29, 1868 U.S. App. LEXIS 1413, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 398
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 15, 1868
DocketCase No. 4,776
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. Cas. 29 (Fields v. Squires) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fields v. Squires, 9 F. Cas. 29, 1868 U.S. App. LEXIS 1413, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 398 (circtdor 1868).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

By this suit the complainant seeks to have his title to the north half of block G in the city of Portland ascertained and declared, as against the defendant, and also to obtain a decree against such defendant for specific perform-[30]*30anee of the covenant of her ancestor for further assurance, in regard to said block.

From the bill it appears, that on June 25, 1850, Daniel H. Lownsdale, Stephen Coffin and W. W. Chapman, had surveyed and laid off divers lots and blocks in the town of Portland, and made a map thereof, designating the same by numbers .and letters, and being in possession, said Lownsdale, Coffin and Chapman by deed of that date, assumed and represented themselves to be the proprietors of the town of Portland, and ■“for a valuable' consideration, thereby released, quitclaimed and confirmed, unto the the said Chapman, to have and to hold to him and his assigns forever, a certain two acre block of land, situate in said town, and represented upon the map thereof by the letter ‘G,’ and then and there delivered to him the possession thereof. That 'the said grantors in and by said deed covenanted to and with the said Chapman, that the property aforesaid, unto him, his heirs and' assigns, they would warrant and defend against all claims, the United States excepted; and that if they should obtain the fee simple of said property from the United States, they would convey the same to the said Chapman by deed of general warranty.”

That on March 7, 1851, Chapman sold and conveyed the north half of said block.G to William Dobleblower, and gave him possession, and that on August 27, 1852, Doble-blower sold and conveyed said north half to complainant, and gave him possession, which possession he still retains. That on September 22, 1848, said Daniel H. being a widower and unmarried, settled on the tract of land embracing block G, and containing less than 320 acres, and continued such residence and settlement for more than four years thereafter, and thereby became the owner of the same under the donation act of September 27, 1850. That in the year 1850 or 1851, Daniel H. intermarried with Nancy Gillihan, the widow of William Gillihan, and in April, 1854. said Nancy died intestate. In the year 1802, Daniel H. died intestate. On October 17, 1800, a patent certificate issued from the U. S. land office, at Oregon City, for the land settled by Daniel H., to him and the heirs-at-law of his deceased wife, in which certificate, the west half of said tract of land embracing block G, was assigned to said heirs-at-law. That at the time of the marriage, between Daniel H. and said Nancy, the former was the father of three children by a former wife— namely:. James P. O., Mary E., and Sarah; and the said Nancy was the mother of two children by her former husband — William Gillihan — namely: Isabella Ellen and William. That in the year 1848, Nancy and her former husband — Gillihan — settled on a tract of land, situate on Sauvie’s Island, in Mult-nomah county, containing less than 640 acres, and continued to reside upon and cultivate the same, until some time in the year 1850, when said Gillihan died — having done and performed all things in and upon said land, as contemplated by the said act of September 27, 1850, up to the time of his death, by means whereof the widow of said Gillihan became and was entitled to one half of said tract, and is therefore not entitled to any part of the donation claim of said Daniel H. That, If notwithstanding the premises, the said Nancy was entitled to a part of the donation claim of the said Daniel H., she had notice, and good reason to be informed, that the said Daniel H. had sold and conveyed block G as aforesaid, “and that she took such part subject to the contract aforesaid of the said Daniel H.; and that her heirs and assigns are bound thereby.”

That on the death of Daniel H., he left as his heirs-at-law, the said James P. O., Mary E. (now wife of William E. -Cooper), and Ida Squires the defendant, and Emma Lamb, children of the said Sarah, deceased; and Millard O. and Ruth A., children of the said Daniel H. and Nancy; and that on the death of the said Nancy, she left as her heirs-at-law, the said William and Isabella Ellen Gillihan and the said Millard O. and Ruth A. Lownsdale. That in- the year 1860, Daniel H. purchased from the said Isabella Ellen (then intermarried with William Poti ter), and her husband, “all the right, title and interest of - the said Isabella in said tract of land as the heir of said Nancy;” and that by means of the death of said Nancy and the purchase aforesaid, the same Daniel H. became “the owner and holder of the title of .the government of the United States of two fifths of the lands alleged to be patented to the said heirs of Nancy,” including block G, and that thereupon “the said two fifths interest in the north half of said block' enured to the use and benefit of the complainant”

That in 1864, the said William Gillihan, Jr., by his guardian Martin Gillihan, commenced a suit in the circuit court for the county of Multnomah, state of Oregon, for a partition of the tract of land patented to the heirs-at-law of Nancy, claiming in such suit to be entitled to one undivided fifth thereof; and that the heirs-at-law of both Daniel H. and Nancy, as well as the grantees and assignees of the former were made parties to such suit; and that by the decree rendered therein, the said two fifths of said tract of land was recognized as having belonged to said Daniel H., “with all the equities in partition.” And divers lots and blocks in said tract having been before then laid off and “disposed off” by the said Daniel H. and improved by different persons, were allotted to the heirs, grantees and assignees of the said Daniel H.; and to make partition equal the said lots and blocks were severally encumbered with large sums' of money, which if not paid within a specified time, should be sold to.pay the same; and that if [31]*31any claiming under the said Daniel H., and paying such assessments, should be after-wards evicted, that the sum so paid and in-, terest should continue a lien on the particular tract for reimbursement That the said block G was among the blocks so- assigned in partition to the heirs and grantees of the said Daniel H., and the sum of $998.79, and $- costs, was assessed upon the north half of said block, which the complainant was compelled to and did pay to prevent the same from being sold.

That the defendant, Ida Squires, though a resident and citizen of Kentucky, had a guardian (the said William E.' Cooper), a resident of the city of. Portland, and that said guardian and his ward well knew that the complainant was-about to pay said sum, claiming this property as his own, yet neither of them made any objection thereto, but suffered and encouraged the complainant to pay the same: “Whereby the said Daniel H. in his life time and his heirs-at:law since his death, became and are bound to convey the said half block to your orator, by a good and sufficient deed;” and that the said Ida Squires, by virtue of the covenants in the deed of June 25, 1850 — the possession of the complainant, and the said decree and the payment of the assessment thereunder is es-topped to set up the title of the said Daniel H., so obtained as aforesaid, as a defence to the suit of the complainant. That the defendant paid Dobleblower $250, for the premises in question, and has since expended about $2,700 in improving the same, and that his possession from the date of such purchase until the present time has been visible and notorious, to the knowledge of Daniel H. and Nancy- while living, and of the heirs of the former since his decease; and that at the date of such purchase, Daniel JEL.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. Cas. 29, 1868 U.S. App. LEXIS 1413, 1868 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-squires-circtdor-1868.