Hershberger v. Blewett

46 F. 704, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1332
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington
DecidedJune 27, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 F. 704 (Hershberger v. Blewett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hershberger v. Blewett, 46 F. 704, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1332 (circtdwa 1891).

Opinion

Hanford, J.

The material averments of the complainants’ bill necessary to be considered in deciding the questions raised by the defendants’ demurrer are as follows: On the 15th day of December, 1872, the United States by a patent conveyed a. certain tract of land in this state,to the heirs at law of one William A. Strickler, deceased; the said Strick-ler’s heirs being his mother, several brothers and sisters, and the children of deceased brothers and sisters. One William L. Rider, son of Rebecca Rider, a deceased sister of said Strickler, was, on the 6th day of December, 1870, married to the plaintiff, who is now’ Sarah Hersh-berger, and said marriage relation continued until October 26, 1871, when said William L. Rider died, intestate, and without issue. In the month of December, 1870, after said marriage, the mother of said Strick-ler, for a valuable consideration, executed and delivered to said William L. Rider a deed of her undivided interest in said land. Said deed w'as recorded in the deed records of the county in which the land is situated in the month of June, 1890. Sarah Hershberger is now the wife of her co-plaintiff, John B. Hershberger, and resides with him in the state of Ohio. In the bill plaintiffs assert that the mother’s share of said land was an undivided one-seventh thereof, and that said interest, by virtue of the deed above mentioned and the statutes of the territory of Washington relating to the rights of married people, became the common property of said William L. Rider and his wife, nowr Sarah Hershberger; also, that, as one of the heirs of said Strickler, said William L. Rider took an undivided thirty-sixth part of said land, which share.^ls.q,, became the common property of said Rider and his then wdfe, under the statutes of the territory, and that upon the death1 of said Ridef, bis wddow, now Sarah Hershberger, became the owner in fee-simple of an undivided one-half of all such common property, — that is to say, ‘an undivided one-half of both of said shares; and she claims now to be the owner of the undivided one-half of said shares, and brings this suit to establish her title thereto against the defendants, and for ail injunction.to prevent the sale or disposition of said land, and for an accounting ás to [706]*706the proceeds as to any and all portions thereof which may have been sold or disposed of by the defendants before the suit was commenced. The defendants are husband and wife, and claim title to the whole of said land, deraigned through and under a convej^ance thereof made pursuant to a sale under a decree by the district court of the third judicial district of the territory of Washington, in a suit wherein several of the heirs of said Strickler, but not the plaintiffs, were made parties.

The bill fails to .state many of the facts which should appear in order to make good the claim of title asserted by plaintiffs. It fails to state the date and place of Striekler’s death. It iails to state any facts by which it can be ascertained under what act of congress the patent referred to was issued, or whether Strickler or his heirs could have acquired any interest in the land at any time prior to the date of the patent.' It does not state whether the plaintiff Sarah Hershberger, and her former husband, William L. Rider, or either of them, lived in the territory of Washington, nor where they did live, during all or any part of the time between their marriage and the death of said Rider, nor the place where Rider died. It does not show the date of any of the proceedings in the suit mentioned, or of the sale made under the decree in said suit; and it does not allege the existence of any reasons or excuses for the delay on the part of plaintiffs in commencing this suit, nor that the plaintiffs had asserted any claim to the property at any time prior thereto. .The bill in my opinion is defective, and the demurrer should be sustained for lack of allegations as to these, important matters. Presumably only the heirs of Strickler living at the date of the patent were entitled to share as beneficiaries by that grant, and they would take by purchase, as. grantees of the government, and not by inheritance, as the heirs of Strickler. Therefore it is necessary for the plaintiffs, in order to sustain their claims to the contrary, to show under what law and under what state of facts the patent was issued, and when Strickler or his heirs acquired ownership of the land. Otherwise, as William L. Rider died prior to the issuance of the patent, the court will be unable to discover that either he or his wife ever became in any way interested in the land, or that the mother of said Strickler ever acquired any interest in said land which she could have conveyed to any one in her life-time, as she also died before the date of the patent. Unless the heirs of Strickler took the land by inheritance, and not as grantees of the government, the court cannot determine who are the lawful heirs of Strickler, or what share or interest either would take without being informed as to the place of Strickler’s death, and the laws in force in the country where he died, at the time of his death, and all the facts as to his family and relatives. Since the year 1869 several changes have occurred in the laws of the territory of Washington in relation to the property rights of married people, and'-it is ■ necessary, therefore, in a suit such as this, to show the time of the inception of any claim to real estate depending upon the. community property laws of the territory.

For the purpose of obtaining the opinion of the court as a guide to the parties in the future conduct of the case, and especially in preparing an [707]*707amended bill, if the plaintiffs shall elect to amend, counsel have argued the questions which may fairly arise in the case, assuming a state of facts not disclosed by the bill; and I am urged at this time to render an opinion upon these questions. The facts thus assumed are that Strick-ler became entitled to the land as a settler under the act of congress of September 27, 1850, (9 St. U. S. 496,) known as the “Oregon Donation Law,” and the several acts amendatory thereof; that he died prior to the date of the deed alleged to have been given, in 1870, by his mother to William L. Rider; and that said William L. Rider and his wife, now the plaintiff Sarah Hershberger, during all the time of their marriage lived in the state of Ohio.

In view of all the facts thus assumed, together with what appears in the allegations of the bill, it is my opinion that the complainants cannot prevail in this suit, and that they have no interest whatever in the land referred to. Prior to December 2, 1869, the rights of all married people to real property situated in the territory of Washington, whether residents of the territory or elsewhere, were governed by the rules of the common law. On the date last mentioned the first statute enacted by the territory, changing the law as to the property rights of married people, was approved and went into effect. In November, 1871, which was after the death of Rider, another act relating to this subject was passed, supplanting the act of 1869. In 1873 the act of 1871 was repealed, and at the same session of the legislature the act of 1869 was reenacted. It is therefore by virtue of-this statute, passed in 1869, that the plaintiffs claim that Mrs. Hershberger, during the time she was the wife of Rider, acquired an interest in the land. In making this claim it is assumed that Strickler in his life-time owned the land, and that upon his death it descended to his heirs, and that the issuing of the patent subsequently was a mere formality, in confirmation of the title which before existed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 F. 704, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hershberger-v-blewett-circtdwa-1891.