Lamb v. Carter

14 F. Cas. 991, 1 Sawy. 212, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1622
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedJune 28, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 991 (Lamb v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. Carter, 14 F. Cas. 991, 1 Sawy. 212, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1622 (circtdor 1870).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

This suit was brought December 31, 1869, for a partition of block 25S in the city of Portland, and for an adjustment of a lien thereon for owelty, heretofore paid by certain of the defendants in a suit for partition of a tract of land including the premises, between the children of Nancy Lownsdale and the heirs and ven-dees of her husband Daniel H. Lownsdale. The plaintiffs, John R. Lamb and Emma, his wife, and Ida Squires, her sister, are citizens of Kentucky. The defendants are citizens of Oregon; and except T. J. Carter and Isaac B. Smith, are united in interest with the plaintiffs, and make no defense to the bill. The defendants, Carter and Smith, demur to the bill, and for cause of demurrer assign, substantially, that the plaintiffs have no interest in the premises.

Prom the bill it appears that Daniel H. in his lifetime, and at and after September 27, 1830, occupied a certain tract of land upon which the city of Portland is partially built, and which includes the premises in controversy, as a settler, under the donation act of September 27, 1850 (9 Stat. 497); and that on April 15, 1854, Nancy, the wife of Daniel H.. died intestate, leaving said Daniel H. and "William Gillihan and Isabella Ellen Gillihan, her children by a former husband, and Millard O. and Ruth A. Lownsdale, her children by Daniel H., surviving her; and that afterwards, in pursuance of said donation act, the west half of said tract, being about ninety acres, and now commonly known as the “Nancy Lownsdale Tract,” and embracing the premises in controversy, was duly set apart by the proper officers of the United States land office to said Nancy; and that on June 6, 1865, the United States issued a patent purporting to grant said Nancy Lownsdale tract, including said block 25S, to the said Nancy and her heirs in fee simple. That upon the death of said Nancy, said Daniel H., by operation of said donation act, became seized of an undivided one fifth of said tract, and her children aforesaid of an undivided one fifth thereof each, in fee simple; and that on January 27, 1860, the said Daniel H. became the owner by purchase of the aforesaid one fifth of Isabella Ellen Gillihan, then married to William Potter.

That on February 14. 1860, said Daniel H. conveyed an undivided two fifths of the aforesaid one fifth purchased from'said Isabella Ellen, to Hannah M. Smith; and that on February 26, 1861, he executed and delivered to George G. Robbins, a bond for a deed to his undivided interest in said block 258; and that on November 8, 1861, said Robbins sold his interest in said block, and duly assigned said bond to the defendant Smith.

That on May 4, 1862, said Daniel II. died intestate, leaving the plaintiffs, Emma Lamb and Ida Squires, and the defendants, J. F. O. Lownsdale, Ruth A. Lownsdale and Mary E. Cooper his only heirs at law, the said Emma and Ida being the children of Sarah M. Squires, a deceased daughter of said Daniel H., and the others being his children.

That on May 22 and August 12, 1865, in a suit brought for the partition of said Nancy Lownsdale tract by said William Gillihan against said Isaac B. Smith and others, including all the parties hereto, except T. J. Carter, decrees for partition and payment of owelty were duly given by the circuit court of the state, and for the county of Multno-mah; and that by said decree it was determined that two fifths of said tract had belonged to said Daniel H. in his lifetime, and that the other three fifths belonged to said William Gillihan and Millard O. and Ruth A. Lownsdale; and that certain portions of said tract were set apart in sev-eralty to said William. Millard O. and Ruth A., and the remainder of said tract was set apart in gross to the Heirs or vendees of said D. H. L., according to their respective interests, whatever they might be; and because of the inequality in quantity and value of such partition as between the children of Nancy Lownsdale and the heirs and vendees of Daniel H., said circuit court by its decree provided that the portion or parcels allotted to the latter should pay to the former the gross sum of $39,156.02 owelty, to be distributed among said parcels, in proportion to their respective value, and that $1,259.61 of said sum was assessed upon said block 258, and made a lien thereon, which amount the said defendant Smith afterwards paid with interest.

The effect of this partition upon the ownership of the parcels allotted to the heirs or vendees of Daniel H. was duly considered by this court in Fields v. Squires [Case No. 4.776], It was then held that the three fifths interest in any particular parcel of which the children of Nancy were divested by the decree of partition, was by the same means vested in the heirs of Daniel H., and not in his previous vendees of all or any portion of said parcel. In other words, the heirs of Daniel H. gave up their two fifths interest in the parcels allotted to the children of Nancy, and received in exchange therefor the three fifths interest of the children in the remaining parcel or portion of the tract, and because of inequality of such partition, the owelty was given to such children, and made a lien upon such three fifths interest as a security for its payment.

The vendees of Daniel H. neither gained nor lost by the partition. Neither did his heirs, unless by some covenant of their ancestor, they should be estopped to claim this three-fifths interest in some particular parcel or block which was allotted to them in exchange for their two fifths interest in the portions of the tract allotted to the children of Nancy. As Daniel H. only had two fifths interest in the Nancy tract, when he sold or conveyed away any specific portion of it [993]*993—as block 25S — the purchaser by means of such sale, release, or quit claim only acquired such two fifths of such parcel.

It also appears that the interest conveyed by Daniel H. to Hannah M. Smith, was on February 18, 1SC9, pui'ehased by the defendant J. P. O. Lownsdale. from said Hannah and Hiram, her husband; and that the defendant Carter has become the assignee and grantee of the interest acquired by Isaac B. Smith in the east half of the premises, to wit, lots 1, 2, 3, and 4.

Upon this state of facts, the plaintiffs claim that the defendants Smith and Carter as assignees of Bobbins, are entitled in equity to the interest which Daniel H. had in this block at the date of the bond to Bobbins, which was eight twenty-fifths, and that J. P. O. Lownsdale is entitled to the interest conveyed to Hannah M. Smith, which was two twenty-fifths, but that the remaining three fifths belonged to the heirs of Daniel H., and was acquired by them after the death of their ancestor in exchange for their two fifth interest in other portions of the Nancy Lownsdale tract allotted to the children of said Nancy.

The defendants, Smith and Carter, rest their denial of any interest of the plaintiffs in the premises upon the legal effect of the bond of their ancestor to Bobbins, and maintain that the question turns upon the proper construction to be given to that instrument.

The bond is in the usual form, and in the penal sum of $700, conditioned as follows: “Whereas, I have this day sold, released and quitclaimed unto Bobbins, his heirs, assigns, etc., all that piece or parcel of land within the eorporated limits of the city of Portland, etc., and particularly described as follows — (here follows a description of the premises in controversy by metes and bounds) — together with all and singular, the appurtenances thereunto belonging, to their own use and benefit forever.”

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291 U.S. 361 (Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 991, 1 Sawy. 212, 1870 U.S. App. LEXIS 1622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-carter-circtdor-1870.