Johnson v. Dudley

3 Ohio N.P. 196
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 196 (Johnson v. Dudley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Dudley, 3 Ohio N.P. 196 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

KOHLER, J.,

The petition in this case alleges that on or about the 10th of May, 1888, Lucius M. Warren, Virginia A. Conoway and Andrew J. Warren, children of Malachi Warren, deceased, and Maggie S. Bowler, Minnie C. Waldon and Thomas Waldon, grandchildren of said Malachi, were seized in fee simple of certain premises specifically described in the petition. That the said parties entered into a contract with the plaintiff, whereby it was agreed, in consideration that the plaintiff should prosecute,as their attorney, an action against the defendant Dudley, who was then in possession of the premises and refused to surrender the same, for recovery of possession of said lands, they would pay plaintiff the sum of 81,100; and that to secure the payment of said sum, the above named owners, on or about the date aforesaid, executed and delivered to the plaintiff their mortgage deed, and thereby conveyed to the plaintiff, his heirs, etc., the following premises, situated in the township of Russia, county of Lorain — describing two parcels of land, one piece consisting of about 166 acres, and the other piece consisting of 92 acres.

The contract referred to, provided that said Johnson should prosecute in the courts the claim of the said heirs of Malachi Warren, to recover said real estate from Dudley, and the sum of 81,100.00 was to be paid to the plaintiff in this case by said heirs, provided the claim to said land should be adjudged bv the courts to constitute a good title thereto.

This mortgage was, in fact, made to secure the payment of this sum of 81,100, for the plaintiff’s services in that behalf, and to secure the performance of the contract entered into by the heirs aforementioned, and 8100 has been paid to the plaintiff upon this contract.

The mortgage was duly filed and recorded in the records of Lorain county and the 11th of October, 1889.

The plaintiff, thereupon, pursuant to this contract, commenced an action in the court of common pleas of Lorain County, against Mr. Dudley, some time in 1887 or 1888 ; and after some delay, the case was at last brought to trial before a jury, and a verdict was rendered in that cause in favor of Stowell B. Dudley. That judgment was subsequently reversed by the circuit court, for errors of the court below in its instructions to the jury, and the case thereupon proceeded to the Supreme Court of the state, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed.

It is alleged that there upon the defendant Dudley, pending said action, and without the knowledge of the plaintiff, purchased all the right, title and interest of the aforementioned heirs in and to the title to said real estate, and that the transferof the title thereupon to said Dudley put an end to and caused a dismissal of the action for the recovery of said lands, and that the plain[197]*197tiffs’ said mortgage thereupon became absolute. He prays that an accounting may be taken of the amount due him, with interest from the date of said sale, and that judgment may be rendered, and that unless the sum so found due, with costs of suit, be paid at a short day, that the lands may be ordered sold, according to law to satisfy the same, with costs.

Issue is taken by the defendant Dudley, and in brief,he sets up that the mortgagors were not the legal heirs of Malachi Warren; that Malichi Warren and the mother of the said children were never married, and that consequently the mortgagors never derived any title whatever to any of the lands mentioned and described ; and in short, the issue in this case turns upon the question of the legitimacy of these children, or rather their right to inherit title to these lands from their father Malachi Warren.

The case possesses a very interesting history, and perhaps a brief summary of the facts connected with the conclusions at which the court has arrived, may not whollj be out of order.

The main facts of the case have been before the courts before in various phases of litigaiton. A great many witnesses were called in the ease who testified before this court, and the facts hereinafter stated, were fully brought out. The case was very ably and fully argued, both upon principle and authority, by counsel entirely familiar with the case from is earliest inception.

The following facts were in substance disclosed : For sometime prior to 1837,Malachi Warren resided in the state of Alabama; he was a slave owner, and about that time, in the city of Richmond, Va., he purchased a young colored woman, then about sixteen or seventeen years of age.and took her with him to his home in Alabama; she was, however, it appears, more than his slave, for he lived with her in the state of Alabama, and several children were born there, the fruits of such cohabitation, viz., Mary Warren was born in 1837, James Warren was born in 1838, Alonzo Warren was born in 1844, Andrew Warren was born in 1846. Along about 1847, Malachi Warren removed from Alabama coming as far north as the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, and remaining there with his family a few months, went to the town of Madison. Ind.,to reside, and while there Virginia Warren, a daughter, was born. He remained in Indiana some three or four years with his family, and then removed with them to Oberlin, Lorain county, and with the exception of a short time that he resided in Columbiana county, he resided at Oberlin until about the year 1861,about the time of the breaking o' t of the civil war, so that there was more than twenty years of constant cohabitation, and during which time six children were born ; and during which time, the evidence shows that he cared for his family in all respects as a father, giving them the best education that he was capable of affording, providing for them not only the necessaries, but doing more than that in the way of education, nurture and care. They lived together all these years, except in the winter season, when, on account of ill-health,Warren went to the south, to all appearances as husband and wife; he paid all the bills very liberally, bought his groceries at wholesale, and on his return from the south at the end of each winter’s season, he was accustomed to settle up everything that had been incurred in the way of debts, and in this way so lived and treated his wife and children that it is but fair to say, I think, that no one would have ever thought of any other relation existing between him and Ellen, other than that of husand and wife, except the fact that he was a white man and that Ellen, the mother of these children, was colored.

He bought valuable tracts of land in Lo-rain county, I think three tracts in all, one piece of 130 odd acres, and another of 72. His evident purpose, his declared purpose in doing this, was to put his means into landed property to the end that his children surviving him might have the benefit of it, and in that shape they would be less likely to spend or squander it, than if the property was in some other condition.

About 1861, or just before the breaking out of the civil war, he and the woman Ellen, were prosecuted in the courts of Lo-rain county, on an indictment charging them with living together in a state of adultery. He was convicted and fined, which he paid. He was a southerner by nirth, and it is evident that he sympathized with the southern cause in that great struggle, and that his sympathies were carried so far as to induce him to contribute substantial aid to the south ; at all events,his opinions were so pronounced that he was more than sus'pected of it, and became so obnoxious to the patriotic people of the town of Oberlin that they threatened him with mob violence.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-dudley-ohctcompllorain-1896.