Heller v. Hawley

18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 678, 8 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 265, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 290
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 678 (Heller v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heller v. Hawley, 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 678, 8 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 265, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 290 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

MARVIN, J.

Suit was brought in the court of common pleas by Hawley to recover possession from Heller of certain real estate in the possession of Heller. The petition was in the usual form of a petition in ejectment, ■setting up that Hawley was the owner, and that Heller was in possession and unlawfully kept him out of such possession.

Heller answered, setting up three defenses:

First. She denied the ownership and right of possession of Hawley. She admitted that sh^ was in possession and averred that she was the -owner of the premises in fee simple.

Second. She averred that under a claim of title and by virtue of a warranty deed, she had been in open, notorious, continuous, adverse and undisputed possession of the premises for many years, and that L. E. Holden, from whom she purchased and who delivered the possession to her, had been in like manner since January 4, 1872, a [679]*679period of about thirty years before the bringing of the action, in open, notorious, continuous, adverse and undisputed possession of the same premises, and that the persons from whom he derived title had been in like possession for many years, and that the right of the plaintiff: to maintain any action for the possession of the premises for the reason that she and those under whom she claimed her title had been in such adverse possession for at least thirty-five years.

Third. She repeats her averments of adverse possession; says that for over thirty-five .years she and her predecessors in title, by virtue of deeds duly acknowledged and recorded, have claimed the premises and have erected lasting and valuable improvements thereon, with the knowledge of, and without interference by, the plaintiff or his predecessors in title.

To this the plaintiff replied, denying that defendant was owner in fee simple, and all allegations of the answer which deny the absolute -ownership in the plaintiff and deny the adverse title and possession in the defendant and her predecessors.

With the pleadings in this situation, the ease went to trial to the -court and Jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for Hawley. By proper proceedings "in error the case is here for review.

A bill of exceptions is filed here containing all the proceedings •on the trial, including the evidence, the rulings of the court on the admission of evidence, and the charge of the court to the jury.

It will lie seen that the plaintiff was put to the proof of his title, •as he must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his title and not upon •the weakness of the title of her who was in possession.

To prove his title, the plaintiff introduced records of deeds, showing that at one time one D. W. Babcock had a deed of certain real estate, including the lands here in dispute and other lands which the plaintiff now owns immediately adjoining the same on the east, and also lands immediately to the west of the disputed land, which last-named land is now owned by Heller, the land in dispute being a strip five feet in width fronting on Harrison street, now in the city of Cleveland, and extend'ng back seventy-two and one-half feet from said street, so that Hawley is the undisputed owner of the land bounding on the east and Heller is the undisputed owner of the land bounding on the west of the ■disputed land. Hawley thus having shown such deed in Babcock, ■showed by proper record that Babcock conveyed by warranty deed a tract including the disputed tract and the lands on the east thereof in [680]*680' 1864, and that through various mesne conveyances the record title which Babcock had is now in Hawley. The plaintiff then offered in evidence record of deeds, beginning with a deed from Babcock in 1866 and showing by this and by mesne conveyances that the record title which L. E. Holden, from whom Heller says in her answer she received her deed and who put her into possession, did not include the land in dispute, but only the land immediately on the west of it, and then the deed from Holden to Heller, executed less than twenty-one years before Hawley brought suit to recover possession, the deed from Holden including the disputed tract. All of this evidence tending to trace the title of Heller back to Babcock was objected to by Heller, but was admitted over such objection. Proper exception was taken by Heller, and it is now urged by plaintiff in error that there was error in the introduction of such evidence.

The defendant in error insists that it was properly admitted and that by it he was relieved in making proof of his own title from tracing the title back of Babcock.. It is not contended by counsel for Hawley but that he must, to make his case, trace title under which he claims back to the government or to one in possession from whom he or one of his predecessors obtained title, or to one under whom both parties claim title. This rule is well stated in Middleton v. Westerney, 4 Circ. Dec. 650 (7 R. 393), the second clause of the syllabus of which reads:

“Where the title of the plaintiff is denied by the answer of the defendant, and possession of the land claimed is, by force of the statute, thereby admitted by the defendant, to entitle the plaintiff to recover, he must show a better title to the land in controversy than that of the defendant. A prima facie case is made by his showing a conveyance to him or one of his grantors in his chain of title, by one then in the possession and occupancy of the land in question. If this is not done,, he must run his title by deed or other necessary proof, to some one-shown or admitted to be the common source of title, to him and the defendant and in default of there being such common source of title, back to the government. And on his failure to offer evidence tending to do either, it is not error in the trial court to withdraw the evidence from the jury and render a judgment for the defendant.”

See, also, the opinion of Judge Ranney in Blake v. Davis, 20 Ohio 231, 239, in which this language is used, speaking of the plaintiff in an ejectment case:

“Neither he nor those under whom he claims ever having had possession of this land, it was incumbent upon him to show a connected paper title from the government to sustain the action of ejectment.”

[681]*681That it is sufficient in Ohio that the plaintiff in ejectment show a better title than the defendant from one vendor whom both claim, is well settled. In Hart v. Johnson, 6 Ohio 87, it is said:

“Where both parties’ claim to title is based on a common origin, neither can go behind the person from whom they hold or show that his claim is not good.”

In Newell, Ejectment 585, note 4, it is said:

“Where both parties claim title from the same grantor it is sufficient to establish a prima facie case to prove derivation of title from the common grantor without proving his title.”

In Doe v. Dugan, 8 Ohio 87 [31 Am. Dec. 432], it is said:

“Where the source of title is common to both parties, in ejectment, neither is at liberty to contest it.”

If, then, in this case, both parties were claiming title through or under Babcock, the plaintiff was relieved from the necessity of going back of Babcock.

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29 Ohio St. 359 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1876)
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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 678, 8 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 265, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-v-hawley-ohcirctcuyahoga-1905.