Heiden v. Howes

67 N.E.2d 641, 77 Ohio App. 525, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 33 Ohio Op. 353, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 554
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 22, 1945
Docket6543
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 67 N.E.2d 641 (Heiden v. Howes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heiden v. Howes, 67 N.E.2d 641, 77 Ohio App. 525, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 33 Ohio Op. 353, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 554 (Ohio Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

OPINION

By HILDEBRANT, P. J.:

Appeal on questions of law from a decree awarding partition of real estate.

During- her lifetime, by virtue of a deed to them jointly, plaintiff and wife each owned an undivided one-half interest in the real estate involved as tenants in common, and, of course, entitled to a judical partition thereof.

On her death testate, the wife provided in Item III of her Will as follows:

“All the real estate of which I may die possessed I give to my husband, Henry Heiden, for life, but with the right to sell the same at any time he may see fit, however if he should sell any of such real estate one-half of the sale price thereof, less expenses of sale, shall be paid to Hermine Howes, Margaret Schneider, Jake Heiden and Frederick Heiden in equal shares.”

*290 Taking under the will, plaintiff is now the owner of two estates in the land, being the undivided one-half interest in fee, with title derived by deed, and a life estate with power of sale in the remaining undivided one-half interest subject to a division of one-half the net proceeds of sale with the remaindermen in event of sale, with the title derived from the will. The defendants are the four children of plaintiff and his deceased wife holding the remainder of the undivided one-half interest by virtue of the laws of intestate succession.

The decree in partition, excepted to, reads in part:

“‘Thereupon the Court further finds that the plaintiff and the defendants herein named are tenants in common in the estate described in the Petition; and that the plaintiff, Henry Heiden, has a legal right to the undivided four-eighths (4/8) of said estate, the defendants, Hermine Howes, Margaret Schneider, Jake Heiden and Frederick Heiden each has a legal right to the undivided one-eighth (1/8) part thereof, subject to the life estate of the plaintiff herein thereto and if sold subject to the right of the plaintiff to one-half of the proceeds o.f such sale; and that the plaintiff is entitled to have partition made of said premises as prayed for in his Petition.

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that partition of said estate be made and Gordon E. Morgan, Edward C. Lovett and Don Burkholder, three judicious and disinterested freeholders of the vicinity are hereby appointed commissioners to make and set off the same, but it is ordered that if in the opinion of said commissioners said estate cannot be divided by metes and bounds without injury to the value thereof, that said premises be appraised and of his proceedings said Sheriff shall make due return to this Court.”

Appellants claim the right to partition does not exist under the statute and. the facts of this case for lack of the requisite unity of possession; that defendants have no present right of possession, due to the intervening life estate to which their moiety is subjected and a decree of partition could award no greater possession to plaintiff than he now has by virtue of owning one moiety with a life estate in the other. They also claim the remedy of partition with power of incidental sale may not be used as a substitute for the power of sale derived under the will.

The Ohio statute §12026 GC provides:

“Tenants in common, and coparceners, of any estate in *291 lands, tenements, or hereditaments within the state, may be compelled to make or suffer partition thereof.in the manner hereinafter prescribed.”

The nature and object of statutes providing for partition of real estate are stated in- 30 Oh Jur., p. 833, in part, as follows:

“The object of the statutes providing for the partition of real estate is to enable each owner to possess and control his own share of the estate, exclusively, and for that purpose to have the estate divided among the several owners, where that can be done without manifest injury, and thereby avoid the inconvenience that results from a joint or common and united possession, and enable the persons entitled, to know, take possession of, enjoy and improve their respective shares.”

That partition is a right much favored with reasons therefor is set forth in 40 Am,. Jur., section 4, at page 5. In Black v Sylvania Producing Co., 105 Oh St., 346, it is stated in the first paragraph of the syllabus:

“The right of partition, either under the statute or in equity, is remedial in its nature, and should be liberally construed.”

In English v Monypeny, 66 C. C. 554, at page 562, in a case where plaintiff owned a moiety in fee and had possession of the other moiety as trustee, which presents a possessory situation similar to the instant case in awarding partition, in the opinion of Judge Shauck the following appears:

“The conclusion that the court had jurisdiction of the persons of these plaintiffs furthers the inquiry as to its ‘jurisdiction over the subject of the action,’ as it has been called in the argument. The claim is, not that the court of common pleas did not have jurisdiction to apart lands among tenants in common, but that because Monypeny, alone, was entitled to the possession of the lands, he holding one moiety in his individual right and the other as trustee under the will of English, the court did not have before it a proper case for the exercise of that jurisdiction. This is upon the theory that an order in partition does not affect title but possession only. Most of the decisions cited by counsel for plaintiffs upon this point and of their deductions from them are without application to suits in partition since the revision of the statutes in *292 1880. It has been repeatedly held by this court that all suits in partition are now civil actions, and that I believe to be the uniform holding of the courts of the state. ‘The civil action of the code is a substitute for all such judicial proceedings as were previously known either as actions at law or suits in equity. Chinn v The Trustees, 32 Oh St., 236;”

In Morgan v Staley, 11 Ohio 389, it was held the owner of a life estate in the entire premises who also owned an undivided interest in fee in the remainder could compel partition. In Tabler v Wiseman, 2 Oh St., 208, holding that where there is an outstanding life estate vested in a third person on the whole premises sought to be partitioned, the reversioners or remaindermen could not have partition either at law or in equity, states in paragraph 10 of the syllabus: “But where the life estate covers only a part of the premises the case’ is different, owing to the provisions of the statute. Thus, section 13 expressly authorizes a partition of the whole of a tract, though dower may be assigned therein by the commissioners making partition.” The doctrine denying partition at the suit of reversioners or remaindermen where there is an intervening life estate on the whole of the premises is reaffirmed in Eberle, et al. v Gaier, Jr., et al., 89 Oh St., 118, and Embleton, et al. v McMechen, et al. 110 Oh St., 18.

In Pitts v Craddock, et al., 144 Ala., 437, the facts are identical with the facts in the case at bar. On page 438 of the opinion appears:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.E.2d 641, 77 Ohio App. 525, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 33 Ohio Op. 353, 1945 Ohio App. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heiden-v-howes-ohioctapp-1945.