Johnston v. Glancy

4 Blackf. 94, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 41
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 4 Blackf. 94 (Johnston v. Glancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Glancy, 4 Blackf. 94, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 41 (Ind. 1835).

Opinion

Stevens, J.

James H. Johnston filed a bill in chancery against Joseph Glancy, John Moore, and John Glancy, to obtain a legal title to a lot of land in the town of Marion, county of Shelby, and state of Indiana, numbered 24 on the plat of the town. The bill, answers, and depositions; establish the following facts:

In the month of October, 1831, and for some time before, the above-named Joseph Glancy was seized in fee of the above-described lot of land, on which there was a log cabin, part of the logs of which vrere hewed, and part scored but not hewed; that said Johnston, the complainant, lived in the cabin on the lot as tenant to the said Joseph; that about the first of October, 1831, the said Joseph sold the lot to Johnston, the tenant, for 40 or 45 dollars, which Johnston paid him in work; that Johnston remained in the uninterrupted possession from that time until the commencement of this suit, and still so remains in possession;-that after Johnston had so purchased said lot, he put a shingled roof on the cabin, raised a frame house, made a board fence round the lot, and dug a well on the same; making permanent improvements worth the sum of 80 dollars as estimated by the complainant, by the witnesses at not less than 50 dollars, and by the defendants at 25 dollars; that Johnston never held any contract in writing respecting the purchase, but the said Joseph was to have made him a deed, and a day was once fixed to make the deed, but the said Joseph failed to attend, and it was not made; that afterwards on the 12th of January, 1.833, the said Joseph conveyed the said lot, together with all his other real estate, consisting of lands, mills, &c. of great value, to the above-named John Gian [95]*95cy, his brother, and the above-named John Moore, his brother-in-law, and on the same day left the country and has never since returned; that the said John Glancy and John Moore, to whom the said Joseph conveyed, well knew, at the time of receiving the conveyance, of the possession and claim of the complainant, Johnston, of, in, and to, the premises in question.

In addition to these facts, the complainant alleges in his bill, that the conveyance by the said Joseph to the said John Glancy and John Maore was made without consideration, and was fraudulent; that it was made expressly to defraud the complainant out of his lot, and to defraud the creditors generally of said Joseph. As to this allegation there is no direct proof; but it is not denied- by any of the answers of the defendants. Neither of them asserts, that any consideration whatever passed from the said John Glancy and John Moore to the said Joseph for the lots, lands, mills, &c. conveyed to them by the said Joseph.

The defendants, in their answers, do not deny the sale of the lot to Johnston, but they deny his having paid for it. That fact, however, is clearly proved by all the witnesses.

The defendants rest their defence on the statute of frauds and perjuries, which they plead in bar, and on which they appear to rely with much confidence.

Previously to the filing of this bill, John Glancy and John Moore, the persons to whom the said Joseph had conveyed, commenced an action of disseisin against Johnston, the complainant, to dispossess him of the lot in dispute; and this bill was filed praying for a perpetual injunction against them, and for a decree’ compelling them to convey to him, the said Johnston, &c., and for general relief in the premises, &c. An interlocutory injunction was granted; but, upon á final hearing, that injunction was dissolved, and the bill dismissed at the costs of the complainant.

The only question of any weight in the case is, whether under all the facts presented by this record, a specific execution of this parol contract between Joseph Glancy and the complainant, can be enforced against the plea of the statute of frauds, pleaded and insisted on by the defendants?

Before entering into that question, we will • notice a few minor objections raised by the defendants’ counsel in argument.

[96]*96The defendants’ counsel insists that the grantees, Glancy and Moore, cannot be affected by the equitable claim set up by Johnston; they being subsequent purchasers without notice of this parol contract. To this it may be answered, that that objection is not, as to matter of fact, sustained by the record. The’ complainant has expressly charged in his bill that these defendants are volunteers, and that they had notice of his claim. This charge they have not, either directly or indirectly, denied or traversed. They have tacitly admitted that they are volunteers, and have expressly admitted that they knew that the complainant was in possession of the premises in dispute : and it follows as a legal consequence, if they knew of his possession, they were bound to take notice of his title to that possession, whether it was legal or equitable. But that is not all; it is directly proven by one of the depositions that they knew that Johnston claimed the lot as his own. By these facts we are relieved from any difficulty as to that objection. "These defendants cannot be viewed in the light of bona fide purchasers, for value, without notice. They have no protection that is not applicable to their grantor; they stand in his shoes, and as to the claim of Johnston are mere trustees

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Bluebook (online)
4 Blackf. 94, 1835 Ind. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-glancy-ind-1835.