Harman v. Kelley

14 Ohio St. 502
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Ohio St. 502 (Harman v. Kelley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harman v. Kelley, 14 Ohio St. 502 (Ohio 1846).

Opinion

Birchard, J.

The answers state that the plaintiff in error was not tenant in common with the defendants, in all the lands of which partition was demanded; but that some of the defendants were interested in particular lots only. If such were the facts, the suit was rightly dismissed. The point decided by this court in Prentiss’ case, 7 Ohio, 129, pt. 2, settles this cause, and we need look to no further authority.

From the record, it appears that the answers of the defendants ■stood uncontradicted. The court had but one thing to do, and that was to dismiss the bill, if the proof sustained the answer. The plaintiff claimed the right to prosecute his particular suit on the ground that he owned an undivided interest in the entire premises, and in common with certain others who owned also the residue of the undivided entire interest. To support his case, proof of the alleged joint ownership by the parties named was indispensable. The deed offered by him, at best, only proved his [507]*507own title to the undivided interest of Reuben Dresser. It had very little tendency to establish the ownership of the remaining undivided interest. It in no sense connected either ayne, Kelley, or the Willards with the title. The records of the several proceedings in partition, which were offered, had no tendency to enlighten the court upon the subject. They showed only that certain persons, who were once entitled, as would appear by the book of drafts of the Connecticut Land Company, had ceased to have any interest in these lands, prior to the commencement of the suit. The remaining evidence introduced by the plaintiff, was this record *of a certain proceeding in ejectment, to which the defendants were not parties, by which <they were not bound, and against whom it proved nothing. For the plaintiff, it might be considered proof of his own' interest, and, as to the parties to that record, should be regarded conclusive of that fact; but it did not tend to establish the fact that this remaining interest in all of these lands, was held in common with the plaintiff by the defendants.

We do not learn from the transcript that anything was offered tending to prove that Henry B. Payne or Irad Kelley owned any interest whatever in lots 94, 95, or 97 ; and we see not how the court, in the absence of such proof, with the, sworn answer of the other defendants, denying that they had any such joint interest, could have done otherwise than dismiss the j>etition. Having come to this conclusion, it would follow that all of the other blatters assigned for error must fail to work a reversal of the judgment of the court below. It is manifest, then, that plaintiff has not been injured by other decisions that were made pending the trial. Even if they were erroneous, they- arc to be regarded in the light of bad reasons given to sustain correct decision, and for the giving of which a revisory court will never reverse the judgment. The object of a proceeding in error is to reach the judgment, and to avoid it when it does not possess the elements upon which alone all judgments should stand. I know of no case where a court has ever set asido a judgment upon the examination of a record, conclusively showing that it was correctly rendered and sustained by the proof, merely because the inferior tribunal had erred on some abstract point, in no way affecting the general merits of the suit. As we view the matter, independently of any[508, 509]*508, 509thing offered by the defense, the case was with the defendants upon the pleadings, and the plaintiff’s proofs.

It is objected that the defendants, Willards, are mere volunteers, > and should not be regarded as parties. That the petition did not make them so; that it put in issue no title or interest which they claim ; did not name them, and that the unknown ^owners, notified by the advertisement to come in and defend, were those unknown persons only, who were tenants in common with Orrin Harman of the whole premises. This position may be met in more ways than one. If it were'sound, the better way would have been to take the objection by a motion to strike the answers from the file before going to a hearing, or by demurrer. But if sound, it is difficult to see what is the object of the legislature in requiring unknown owners to be informed by publication of the pendency of the suit. It is very certain that any party demanding the partition of real estate, may, if desirous of having an ex parte proceeding, set forth that any two or more own a tract of land in common with him ; and if they do not so own, and each has title in severalty, that he may also say that the persons who do so own as tenants in common, are unknown to him. If, then, he may overlook and by such a false pretense avoid the actual notice to the real owner, and advertise for the pretended unknown owners, and-when the real owners come in to resist him, turn them out of court, because he has misdescribed them in his petition — I inquire, What is the object of a notice? What good purpose does it serve? The framers of the law intended to afford every person interested as owner in a tract of land of which partition is demanded, an opportunity of being heard, and of showing the demand unjust; for that the notice was required, and for that and other things, the demandant should have set forth the ownership and the state of the title, according to the truth. It would be a reproach to the law itself, if it would permit one to defeat the policy of the statute, and secure an advantage, by reason of his ignorance of the facts of his case, or his own cunning in suppressing or misstating them. We do not find that the court made the decision stated in the fourth assignment.

The third is, that the court erred in permitting evidence of an, adverse possessory title to a part of the premises.

It is not easy to assign a reason for sustaining this objection. It is very clear that proof of an absolute title in fee of *the [510]*510entire interest in a part of the land of which partition was demanded, was a perfect bar to that part of the demand. A deed from Orrin Harman to the Willards, subsequent to the date of his deed from (he surviving trustee of the Connecticut Land Company, would have defeated him, and on the ground that it disproved the title incumbent upon him to sustain, in order to make out his case. So any other good and valid title in the defendants, inconsistent with the one which he was bound to maintain and prove, must have had the same effect. It would equally defeat his claim, because it would disprove it. By showing that they owned all the land, the defendants established the fact that plaintiff did not own the 8-23 parts. This they had a right to show, by the production of the kind of proof appropriated to make their right manifest. Whether they succeeded or not, is another matter, depending upon the facts proved, and the influence which they had upon the mind of the court. If they found them sufficient, we can not correct that finding in this proceeding. We do not, on a proceeding in error, undertake to correct the judgment of the common pleas in weighing evidence. We can only reach such mistakes as amount to errors in law. This seems to dispose of what is said concerning the statute of limitations; for we know not, from the record, that any such consideration influenced the court in arriving at their conclusion.

The remaining question is, whether or not the court erred in presuming a conveyance from the trustees to Reuben Dresser, prior to the quitclaim deed to Harman.

This point has been fully and ably argued.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio St. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harman-v-kelley-ohio-1846.