Griswold v. Bragg

48 Conn. 577
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 Conn. 577 (Griswold v. Bragg) 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
Griswold v. Bragg, 48 Conn. 577 (Colo. 1880).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

At the September term, 1879, of this court, the jury returned a verdict, in an action of ejectment, in favor of the present defendants against the present plaintiff, that they recover the seizin and possession of an undivided fourth part of a tract of land in the town of Chester. Upon motion of the defendant in the ejectment suit, judgment and execution were stayed until further order. He thereupon filed a supplemental bill on the equity. side of the court. This bill, after setting out the state statute hereinafter recited, commonly called the “Betterment Act,” alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff and those under whom he claims have held said land by a series of connected conveyances since 1846, which deeds purported to convey, and were intended and believed to convey, an absolute estate in fee simple, and that the plaintiff and his grantors have had uninterrupt[578]*578ed possession since 1846, under a like belief that they had an absolute estate, and that, during this time, and before the commencement of the ejectment suit, improvements of the value of $10,000 have been made on said land by said reputed owners, in good faith, and in the like belief, and prays that the present value of said improvements, and the excess of the value thereof over the amount due to the defendants for the use and occupation of said premises, may be ascertained, to the end that the equitable relief provided by said statute may be granted. To this bill the defendants have demurred. Their title became vested in them in 1878.

The statute (Revision of 1875, p. 862, sec. 17,) provides as follows: “Pinal judgment shall not be rendered against any defendant in an action of ejectment, who, or whose grantors or ancestors, have in good faith, believing that he or they, as the case may be, had an absolute title to the land in question, made improvements thereon before the commencement of the action, until the court shall have ascertained the present value thereof and the amount reasonably due to the plaintiff from the defendant for the use and occupation of the premises ; and, if such value of such improvements exceeds such amount due for use and occupation, final judgment shall not be rendered until the plaintiff has paid said balance to the defendant; but if the plaintiff shall elect to have the title confirmed in the defendant, and shall upon the rendition of the verdict file notice of such election with the clerk of the court, the court shall ascertain what sum ought in equity to be paid to the plaintiff, by the defendant, or other parties in interest, and, on payment thereof, may confirm the title to said land in the parties paying it.” The •original statute was passed June 26,1848. (Laws of Connecticut, 1848, p. 48.) It plainly appears from the act as passed, and as reproduced in the revisions of 1849 (p. 112, sec. 223,) and 1866 (p. 63, sec. 281,) that the proceeding in the state court, upon the motion of the defendant, after the verdict, is a proceeding in equity.

The question of law which is raised by the demurrer is in regard to the validity of this statute. It is not denied that [579]*579the statutes of the several states in regard to realty, except when the constitution, treaties or statutes of the United States otherwise require or provide, which are in conformity with the constitutions of the respective states, are rules of property and rules of decision in the courts of the United States, (Bank of Hamilton v. Dudley’s Lessee, 2 Peters, 492) ; and that, if a state legislature has created a right and established a remedy in chancery to enforce such right, such remedy may be pursued in the federal courts, if it is not inconsistent with their constitution, (Clark v. Smith, 18 Pet., 195 ; Ex parte Biddle, 2 Mason, 472) ; and that an inability of the federal courts to proceed in the exact mode provided by a state statute need not preclude a party from the benefit of the relief which is intended to be granted, if the modes of proceeding in courts of chancery are adapted to carry into effect the statute, (Bank of Hamilton v. Dudley’s Lessee, cited supra.') This is true, although the right which has been established by the local statute is a new right, and one previously unknown to a court of chancery in this country or in England. Lorman v. Clarke, 2 McLean, 568; Bayerque v. Cohen, 1 McAll., 113. The practice in equity is, in general, except when otherwise directed by statute or by the rules of the Supreme Court, regulated by the English chancery practice as it existed in 1842, before the adoption of the “ New Rules.” Equity Rule, 90; Badger v. Badger, 1 Cliff., 237 ; Goodyear v. Rubber Co., 2 Cliff., 351.

The statute practically impresses upon the land of a successful plaintiff in ejectment a lien for the excess, above the •amount due for use and occupation, of the present value of the improvements Which have been placed on the land, before the commencement of the action, by a defendant or his ancestors or grantors, in good faith, and in the belief that he or they had an absolute title to the land in question, and forbids occupancy by the plaintiff until the lien is paid. There is a natural equity which rebels at the idea that a Imid fide occupant and reputed owner of land in a newly-settled country, where unimproved land is of small value, or where skill in conveyancing has not been attained, [580]*580or where surveys have been uncertain or inaccurate, should lose the benefit of the labor and money which he had expended in the erroneous belief that his title was absolute and perfect. While it is true that improvements and permanent buildings upon land belong to the owner, yet in a comparatively newly-organized state, where titles are necessarily more uncertain than they are in England, there is an instinctive conviction that justice requires that the possessor under a de. fective title should have recompense for the improvements which have been made in good faith upon the land of another. The maxim, often repeated in the decisions upon the subject, “ Nemo debet locupletari ex alterius incommodo,” tersely expresses the antagonism against the enrichment of one out of the honest mistake and to the ruin of another. It is obvious that this statutory equity is not without occasional hardships. The true owner may be forced to sell his land against his will, and may sometimes be placed too much in the power of capital, but a carefully regulated' and guarded statute should ordinarily be the means of doing exact justice to the owner.

It is well known that the English law made no provision for reimbursement of expenditures of this kind, as against the owner of the legal title, except by allowing the bond fide occupant to recoup the value of his improvements, when he is a defendant in a bill in equity praying for an account of rents and profits. The established theory was, that a court of equity should not go any further and “ grant active relief in favor of such a bond fide possessor making permanent meliorations and improvements, by sustaining a bill, brought by him therefor, against the true owner, after he has recovered the premises at law.” Bright v. Bozet, 1 Story, 478, 495. Such was the opinion of Chancellor Walworth, in Putnam v. Ritchie, 6 Paige, 390, and such may be taken to be the state of law in this country, in 1841, apart from local statutes, and of the English law then and now. In 1841 Judge Story decided, in Bright v. Bozet, in favor of the power of courts of equity to grant affirmative relief at the suit pf a

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Bluebook (online)
48 Conn. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griswold-v-bragg-conn-1880.