Jenkins v. Hannan

26 F. 657, 5 Ohio F. Dec. 282, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedApril 19, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. 657 (Jenkins v. Hannan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Hannan, 26 F. 657, 5 Ohio F. Dec. 282, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636 (uscirct 1884).

Opinions

Sage, J.

The complainants are the children and heirs at law of Albert G. Jenkins, who died May 21, 1864.

The bill sets forth that on the seventeenth day of May, 1862, Albert G. Jenkins was, and bad been for many years, the owner in fee-simple of certain improved real estate situate in the city of fronton, Lawrence county, Ohio, and described in the bill: that in the months of July and August, 1861, certain parties named in the bill brought five several actions at law in the court of common pleas of Lawrence county, Ohio, against said Albert O. Jenkins and others, and sued out attachments based on the non-residence of said Jenkins, which were levied upon said real estate; that service was made by publication, judgments taken in each of said cases, — in three of them by default, and in the remaining two upon trials on the issues joined by answers filed by H. S. Neal, an attorney at law, as attorney for said Jenkins. The complainants allege that Neal acted as such attorney without the knowledge or authority of said Jenkins, who, they allege, never knew of the institution of said suits, or any of them, or of any of the proceedings thereupon. The complainants further allege that upon each of said judgments an order for the sale of said real estate was issued, and upon said order the same was, on the seventeenth day of May, 1862, sold to the defendant William F. Hannan for the [658]*658price and sum of $2,760, and was subsequently conveyed by deed to biin by the sheriff of said county of Lawrence; that afterwards, to-wit, on the twenty-third day of October, 1866, said Hannan sold and conveyed said real estate to the defendant the Second National Bank of Ironton for the sum of $12,500, and on the twenty-ninth of September, 1868, said bank sold and conveyed a portion of said real estate to the defendant Jeremiah Davidson; that said deeds were inoperative, void, and of no effect, and so was each of them, to pass the title to said real estate, for the reason that said judgments were void; that said bank and said Davidson are in possession of said real estate, and claim the ownership thereof under and by virtue of said judgments, sales, and conveyances; and that they have no other right or claim thereto.

Complainants further aver that prior to the institution of said suits, to-wit, on the twenty-ninth of May, 1861, said Albert Gr. Jenkins entered the military service of the so-called Confederate States of America, and continued therein and remained within the limits of said so-called Confederacy, without departing therefrom, thenceforth until his death, which they say took place on the twenty-first of May, 1864, at which time he held the rank of major general in said service; that during the year 1861, and for many years prior thereto, he was and had been a resident of the state of Virginia; and that he was from the twenty-ninth of May, 1861, until his death continuously, and without interruption, engaged in armed hostility against the government of the United States, all of which facts were well known to the defendants, one of whom, said Davidson, was on said twenty-ninth of May, 1861, a tenant of said Jenkins, and has ever since that date occupied the same property that he afterwards, as aforesaid, bought; that at the time of making service by publication in said cases said Jenkins was, as each of said defendants well knew, a resident of Virginia, living within the district covered by the proclamation of the president of the United States, and was by said proclamation prohibited from holding any intercourse with persons living in the county of Lawrence and state of Ohio, and being an enemy of the United States, he could not lawfully obey any summons issued or published by any court of said state, nor could he have appeared or defended said suits had he known that they were pending; that said defendant Hannan was an intimate acquaintance of said Jenkins, and at the time of purchasing said real estate at said sheriff’s sale openly proclaimed that he did so to save the property for said Jenkins or his heirs. Complainants further allege that said real estate at the time of said sale was well improved, and ever since said time has been yielding the defendants a rental of $100 per month. Wherefore complainants pray the court to set aside said pretended judgments and sales, and declare them null and void; that the said deed to said Hannan may be delivered up and canceled, and an'account taken of said rents and profits of said real estate, and charged to the defendants; and that the plaintiffs may be at liberty [659]*659to redeem said premises on payment to the defendant Hannan of the amount ho paid for said premises at said sale, less tho rents and profits as aforesaid; and that thereupon the defendants be ordered and required to deliver possession of said premises to the complainants, free of all incumbrances done or suffered by the defendants, or either of them; and that the deeds under which the defendants claim may be delivered up for cancellation. The bill concludes with a general prayer for relief.

The defense is a denial of the invalidity of the judgments and sale thereunder, and a denial that Neal, who it is admitted acted as attorney for Jenkins, did so without authority. Defendants admit that Jenkins was an inhabitant of the state of Virginia, but they aver that his residence was at the date of said judicial proceedings, and always had been, upon his farm on the south bank of the Ohio river, in Cabell county, in said state, and that from the breaking out of the rebellion, in April, 1861, until June 19, 1863, that part of the state of Virginia lying west of the Alleghany mountains, embracing some 48 counties, and including the county of Gaboil, had a state government for the state of Virginia, with its capital at Wheeling, and with Francis H. Pierpoint as governor, and that the same was the legal and valid government of the state of Virginia; that under proceedings had with the consent of the state of Virginia, the state of West Virginia, composed of the counties aforesaid and others, was organized, and was admitted into the Union, and from and after June 19, 1868, became and was one of the states of the United States. And the defendants aver that said Albert G. Jenkins was, during a large portion of his time from the breaking out of the rebellion until his death, in the said county of Cabell, and in other counties oí West Virginia. Admitting that said Jenkins was in armed hostility to tho government of the United States, they aver that he was voluntarily so engaged, in opposition to tho views of a large majority of tho inhabitants of Cabell county, and of West Virginia; that none of the territory now included in West Virginia was ever in armed hostility to the government of the United States, or recognized by the government of the United Slates as enemy’s territory, or included in the president’s proclamation; wherefore they aver that said Jenkins never was prohibited or prevented from holding intercourse with the citizens of tho loyal portion of the United Slates. Defendants deny that said Jenkins was ignorant of the institution of said suits, and aver that when they wore brought, and continuously thereafter, while they were pending, said Cabell county was within the lines of the army of the United States. Defendants deny the averments of the bill as io the rents of said real estate, and the defendant Hannan denies that at the time of his purchase he proclaimed that he made the purchase to save the property for Jenkins or his heirs.

As to the averment by the complainants that defendant Hannan proclaimed, when he bought the property, that he did so for the ben-[660]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hipp v. Babin
60 U.S. 271 (Supreme Court, 1857)
Ludlow v. Ramsey
78 U.S. 581 (Supreme Court, 1871)
University v. Finch
85 U.S. 106 (Supreme Court, 1874)
McQuiddy v. Ware
87 U.S. 14 (Supreme Court, 1874)
Lewis v. Cocks
90 U.S. 466 (Supreme Court, 1874)
Root v. Railway Co.
105 U.S. 189 (Supreme Court, 1882)
Ellis v. Davis
109 U.S. 485 (Supreme Court, 1883)
Haymond v. Camden
22 W. Va. 180 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1883)
Duncan v. Drakeley
10 Ohio St. 45 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1840)
Jennings v. Kee
5 Ind. 257 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1854)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. 657, 5 Ohio F. Dec. 282, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-hannan-uscirct-1884.