Heirs of Ludlow v. Kidd's Executors

3 Ohio 541
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 Ohio 541 (Heirs of Ludlow v. Kidd's Executors) 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
Heirs of Ludlow v. Kidd's Executors, 3 Ohio 541 (Ohio 1828).

Opinion

Opinion of the court, by

Judge Sherman:

The complainants, the heirs at law of Israel Ludlow, deceased in 1811, being then infants,'filed their bill against Kidd and Williams, to obtain the legal title to a-lot in the city of Cincinnati. In 1817, the Supreme Court, upon the hearing, dismissed the bill upon the merits, the plaintiffs still continuing minors. In 1825, and within the time allowed them by statute, alter attaining full ager [510]*510they filed their bill of review, upon the hearing of which the decree •of dismissal was reversed, and the cause continued for hearing. In 1827, after the decree of reversal, a supplemental bill was filed, making the Bank of the United States, Shaw, and others, defendants, all of whom, except the Bank of the United States, have pleaded, that after the original decree, and before the filing of the bill of review, they severally purchased, for valuable consideration .and without notice, several parts of the lot claimed by the plaintiffs. The Bank of the United States have answered, that after the ■ original bill of plaintiffs was dismissed, and before the filing of .the bill of review, Kidd then having the legal title to part of said ■lot, leased it to Smith & Loring, for nine hundred and ninety-nine years, renewable forever, at a certain yearly rent; that Smith & Loring, for a valuable consideration, assigned and transferred their interest to the bank, and that neither Smith & Loring nor the respondents had notice of the claim of the plaintiffs. Those pleas and the answer of the bank have been set for hearing without replication, upon the ground that the matter alleged does not ^constitute a defense to the relief sought by plaintiff's, and they insist:

1. That the purchases were made lis pendens, and consequently ..are affected with notice.

2. That as to the leasehold estate, a lessee for years can not protect himself against the right owner, by showing he was a purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice.

The principle that the purchaser of the subject matter of a suit pendente lite acquires no interest as against the plaintiff’s title, whether legal or equitable, is too well established to be now questioned. Such sale as against the plaintiff is considered a nullity, and he is not bound to take any notice of it. The decree of the ■ court binds the property in the hands of such purchaser, although he is no party to the suit, and paid a full price for it, and had, in fact, no notice of the pendency of the suit, or the claim of the plaintiff. He is chargable with constructive notice of the pendency ■of such suit, so as to render his interest in the subject of it liable ;to its event. This rule may sometimes produce individual hardship in its application to a purchaser, for a full consideration, and without actual notice; but if it were not adopted aud adhered to, * there would be no end to any suit. The justice of the court would ,be wholly evaded by alienating the lands after snbpena served, [511]*511•and the suitor subjected to great delay, expense, and inconvenience» without any certainty of at last securing his interest. It is, for these reasons — reasons founded on public utility and general convenience — that the courts of equity of England and of the United States, whenever the question has been made, have uniformy held that he who purchases during the pendency of a suit is chargeable with constructive notice of the rights of the parties litigant, and •bound by the decision that may be made against the person from whom he derives title. This rule adopted by courts of equity from necessity, and in imitation of the common law, that when the defendant in a real action aliens after suit brought, the judgment in such real action will overreach such alienation, is yet considered as against a real and fair purchaser without actual notice, as a hard rule, and courts gladly avail themselves of any defect in the pleadings or proofs of the plaintiff, to prevent its operation upon such a ^purchaser. Sorrell v. Carpenter, 2 P. Wms. 482. This rule of constructive notice does not extend beyond the termination of the suit, and therefore it has been frequently held that a final decree is not notice of the matters in controversy, and intended to be settled by such claim.

As all the purchases were made after the decree of the Supreme Oourt in 1817, dismissing the original bill of the complainants, and before the filing of the bill of review, in 1825, it becomes important to inquire whether there was, during that interval of time, such a •Zis pendens as to charge the defendants with constructive notice? Eor if there was, their pleas must be overruled, and their interests abide the event of the suit between the original parties.

The complainants contend, that the decree of dismissal, in 1817, whatever were its terms, can not be considered as final, it being against infants. But as conditional, and subject to re-examination and correction, after they attained their age; and if this is not so, that the bill of review afterward filed, is so connected with the original suit that it will, by relation, be considered as pending from the filing of the original bill, so as to affect intermediate purchasers with constructive notice.

By provision of our statute, bills of review must be filed within ■five years after making the decree complained of, except in certain specified cases, of which infancy is one. A minor being allowed five years after he attains full age, to bring such bill. But a decree which puts an end to the suit, has not heretofore been considered [512]*512the less final because it was subject, within a limited time, to be-reversed upon a bill of review. The argument for complainants is, that the statute giving the infants a day after they became of age,, to file a bill of review, is to be taken as part of the decree itself, and considered as if the privilege was contained on its face; and that the legal effect thereof is, that it remains a matter pendente lite, until the rights reserved by the decree are extinguished. I do mot consider it at all important to determine in this case whether the statute is to bo so blended with the decree, as to be considered a part of it, for if the decree had, in terms, reserved to the complainants the right of showing cause against it, after they arrived at age,, it would not have had the effect of continuing the cause *until that period. A decree to be final, need not conclusively settle and determine all the questions litigated, or rights involved in the suit between the parties, but it must put an end to that particular suit. The decree of dismissal in the original suit has all the requisites of a final decree. It is so in its terms; it is rendered upon final hearing; the court adjudicate upon the equity of the parties, and find that equity in favor of the defendants, and that the complainants are not entitled to the relief which they seek, and decree a. general dismission of the bill, with costs. Nothing is reserved or left for further determination by the court, but the whole controversy between the parties is disposed of, and a final end put to that particular cause, and I can not perceive that the decree, being against infants, at all changes its character or alters its effect as to third persons. ‘ , '

The master of the rolls, in the case of Bishop of Winchester v. Beaver, 3 Ves.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-ludlow-v-kidds-executors-ohio-1828.