Foote v. Brown

62 A. 667, 78 Conn. 369, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 62 A. 667 (Foote v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foote v. Brown, 62 A. 667, 78 Conn. 369, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 95 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

*372 Hamersley, J.

Tlie disposition of this appeal depends upon the meaning and legal effect of § 4053 of the General Statutes ; this section contains unchanged the provisions of “ An Act concerning Civil Actions,” passed in 1893 (Public Acts of 1893, p. 237, Chap. 66). The terms and language of the Act are suggestive of doubt as to its meaning in some particulars, and in ascertaining its meaning, where thus doubtful, the Act should be read in view of the evil it was passed to remedy. What this evil was had been shortly before brought to public attention by certain opinions delivered by this court.

In 1890, one Ernest Strong Miles, who was in possession of certain land devised to him by the will of Selah Strong (who died in 1879), conveyed said land to his father, Samuel A. Miles, in trust for purposes specified in the deed. The entire estate of Selah Strong had, in 1882, been duly distributed to the devisees, and the estate had then been finally settled. When Samuel Miles attempted to sell the land conveyed to him in trust, he found himself hindered in making a sale, by reason of certain claims of heirs of Selah Strong, that the land devised to Ernest Miles was not thereby vested in him absolutely, but that these heirs had a remainder interest contingent upon the happening of events named in the will. Whether or not Ernest Miles, when he executed the trust deed, had an absolute estate in the land conveyed, depended on the meaning expressed by the language of the will indepéndently of extrinsic circumstances. For the purpose of obtaining a judicial construction of this language so that he might be able to make a sale beneficial to his cestui que trust, Samuel Miles, who was also executor of the will, brought an action as such executor for the construction of the will. We held that upon these facts an executor could not maintain such an action, and the complaint was dismissed. Miles v. Strong, 60 Conn. 393.

Immediately afterward, Samuel Miles, as trustee under the deed above mentioned, and Ernest Miles brought an action for quieting the title of said Ernest or his grantee, stating in the complaint the facts above mentioned. We held *373 that the real question between the parties, as stated in the complaint, related wholly to the legal title to land, involving only legal questions, and as such the defendants were entitled to litigate them in a trial at law; and that under our practice an action in equity for that purpose could not be maintained, and the complaint was accordingly dismissed. Miles v. Strong, 62 Conn. 95.

As a result of these decisions, it appeared that an owner in possession of land was prevented from making a beneficial sale thereof by claims of others to a contingent remainder interest in the land, that the validity of these claims depended solely on the legal effect of language used in a will, that the owner could not have this question determined in a court of equity, because it was solely a legal question relating to the title to land, and being in possession he could not compel a trial at law until the claimants should see fit to assert their claim through a legal action or some illegal act, and that in the meantime there was no redress for the injury to his property rights caused by the existence of these claims. We recognized in our opinion the force of the dilemma in which an owner of land under such circumstances was placed, and indicated that it arose from the fact that such actual, present damage did not constitute, under our common law and existing statutes, a present legal injury. Immediately after the rendition of this decision had called attention to this state of our law in reference to such damage, the A ct of 1893 was passed. The Act provided that' it should take effect from its passage, and the day after it went into effect Samuel and Ernest Miles, plaintiffs in the last mentioned action, commenced an action in pursuance of the new Act, stating in their complaint substantially the same facts alleged in their prior complaint, and upon this action we held, in effect, that the present damage caused the plaintiffs by existing claims adverse to their ownership in fee simple of the land, which before the passage of the Act was practically damnum absque injuria, had become, through the operation of the Act, a legal injury, for which they were entitled to redress through a judgment settling the title in *374 them as against the defendants. It seems to us apparent that this Act was passed for the purpose of remedying an evil such as that disclosed by the decisions above mentioned, and that, as we have before said, it was evidently intended to provide a remedy for such a wrong and hardship as that thus disclosed, for which there was under the previously-existing law no plain and adequate remedy. Miles v. Strong, 68 Conn. 273, 288. This evident intent and purpose of the legislature in passing the Act must be an influential element in- determining its meaning and legal effect as expressed in the language used.

In Miles v. Strong, 68 Conn. 273, 287, we said that the Act was in some respects very loosely and carelessly drawn and might require amendment, but that its purpose was tolerably clear, and that effect ought to be given to its provisions. The Act has now remained unchanged for twelve years. There has been misconception as to its scope, and abuse as to its application. The exigencies of the present case justify, and indeed require, such a definite construction of the Act in respect to the questions involved as will serve the purpose of its enactment and give reasonable effect to its provisions. Since the last-mentioned decision in Miles v. Strong, several actions brought upon this statute have been before us on appeal. The case of Lawlor v. Holohan, 70 Conn. 87, was similar to that of Miles v. Strong. The plaintiff, in possession as owner in fee, brought an action against the defendant claiming to own a contingent remainder, praying for an adjudication of these conflicting claims. In Curtis v. Lewis, 74 Conn. 367, 368, the action was in reality brought by the receiver of an insolvent estate to set aside a mortgage deed as fraudulent and void as against creditors. Upon the pleadings and finding of facts by committee, it was reserved for the advice of this court. No question as to pleading was raised. In the opinion we say: “ The pleadings in this action are unnecessarily framed for the purpose of taking advantage of the provisions of ‘ An Act concerning Civil Actions ’ (Public Acts of 1893, Chap. 66, p. 237), and for this reason the real cause of action is not set forth *375 in the complaint and no material issue is raised by the answer. The reply alleges the cause of action, and the rejoinder serves the purpose of an answer.” In Cahill v. Ca hill, 76 Conn. 542, 548, the complaint stated facts showing that the controversy was one concerning title to land, the plaintiffs being out of possession and claiming title as heirs of one party, and the defendants who were in possession claiming title as devisees of another.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A. 667, 78 Conn. 369, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foote-v-brown-conn-1905.