Langdon v. Sherwood

124 U.S. 74, 8 S. Ct. 429, 31 L. Ed. 344, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1837
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 9, 1888
Docket1301
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 124 U.S. 74 (Langdon v. Sherwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langdon v. Sherwood, 124 U.S. 74, 8 S. Ct. 429, 31 L. Ed. 344, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1837 (1888).

Opinion

Me. Justioe Milleb

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Nebraska.

The defendant in error brought in that court a suit in the nature of an action of ejectment to recover several tracts or parcels of land then in the possession of the plaintiffs in error. The case was first tried before a jury, and the verdict afterr wards set aside. By a written agreement of the parties, it was then submitted to the court without a jury. That court made a general finding in favor of the plaintiff, Sherwood, and certain special findings, and upon both- of these rendered a judg *79 ment for him, for all the land claimed in. his petition. A bill of exceptions was taken, which related to the introduction of evidence and the findings of the court. On this bill of exceptions and the special findings of fact the plaintiffs here assign two principal errors.

The first one of these, which affects all the land embraced in the suit, has reference to the introduction and effect of a decree in chancery, rendered in the Circuit Court of the United. States for the District of Nebraska, April 9, 1883, in which Sherwood was complainant and the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company' was defendant. The plaintiff in the action of ejectment, having given evidence which he asserted showed title to all. the land in controversy in the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company, introduced the record of this suit in chancery to establish a transfer of the title by means of the proceedings in that suit from that company to himself. The bill of complaint set out that this company, while owner of the land,' had made a verbal agreement with ■'William A. Gwyer that the latter should take, have, and hold the real estate mentioned, as his own property, and as consideration for the same should pay off, settle, and discharge the indebtedness of the- company.

The decree of the court established the fact that Sherwood had acquired the interest of Gwyer in the property, whereby he became the equitable owner of it all, and that he was entitled to have a conveyance of the legal title from- the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company. ■ The decree then proceeded in the following language:

“ It is further ordered and decreed that the respondent, the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company, shall, within twenty days after the entry of this decree, execute, acknowledge, prove, and record, in the manner provided by law, a good and sufficient deed of conveyance to the complainant of all said real estate, to vest the entire legal title thereof in the respondent, and to deliver said deed of conveyance so. executed, acknowledged, proved, and recorded to the complainant.

“ It is further ordered and decreed that in case said respondent shall fail, neglect, or refuse to make, execute, acknowledge, prove, record, and deliver to the complainant such deed of *80 conveyance within the time hereinbefore fixed, then, and in that case, this decree shall stand and be a good, sufficient, and complete conveyance from the respondent, the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company, to the complainant, Willis M. Sherwood, of all the right, title,, and estate of said respondent in and to said real estate, and shall be taken and held as good, complete, -and perfect a deed of conveyance as would be the deed of conveyance hereinbefore specified. And that the respondent, and all persons claiming through, from, or under it, be, and they are hereby, perpetually barred, restrained, and enjoined from asserting any right, title, ownership, or interest in or to said real estate adversely to the complainant, -and from in any manner interfering with the peaceable and quiet possession of complainant in and of the same.”

No conveyance was ever made under this decree by that company, and it is objected that for this reason Sherwood did not acquire by that proceeding the stfict legal title, but only obtained an equitable one, and the quieting of that title as against the Sauntee Land and Ferry Company. Section 429 of the Code of Nebraska is, however, relied upon by Sherwood’s counsel as giving to the decree in his favor in the chancery suit the effect of an actual conveyance of the title. That section is as follows :

“ When any judgment or decree shall be rendered for a conveyance, release, or acquittance in any court of this State, and the party or parties against whom the judgment or decree shall be rendered do not comply therewith within the time mentioned in said judgment • or decree, such judgment or decrée shall have the same operation and effect, and be as available, as if the conveyance, release, or acquittance had been executed conformable to such judgment or decree.”

. We are of opinion that if this section of the code be valid, it was "'the intention of the makers of it that a judgment and decree, such as the one before us, should have the same effect, ■where' the parties directed to make • the conveyanqe fail to comply with the order, as it would, have had if they had ■ complied, in regard to the transfer of title from them to the party, to whom they were bound to convey by the decree.' The *81 language of this section of the code hardly admits of any other' construction. When the party decreed to make the conveyance does not comply therewith within the time mentioned in the judgment or decree, such judgment or decree shall have the same effect and operation and be as available as ■ if the conveyance had been executed. The operation or effect here meant was the transfer of title, and it could not have been made any clearer if it had .said that it should have the effect of transferring the title from the party who fails to convey to the one to whom it ought to be conveyed. This must have been the meaning in the minds of the legislators.

It was undoubtedly the ancient and usual course in such a proceeding to compel the party who should convey to perform the decree of the court by fine and imprisonment for refusing to do so. But inasmuch as this was a troublesome and expensive mode of compelling the transfer, and the party • might not be within reach of -the process of the court so that he could be ¡attached, it has long been the practice of many of the States, under statutes enacted for that purpose, to attain this object, either by the appointment of a special commissioner who should convey in the name of the party ordered to convey, or by statutes similar to the one under consideration by which the judgment or decree of the court was made to stand as such conveyance on the failure of the party ordered to convey.

The validity of these statutes has never been questioned, so far as we know, though long in existence in nearly all the States of the Union. There can be no doubt of their efficacy in transferring the title, in the courts of the States which have enacted them, nor do we see any reason why the courts of the United States may not use this mode of effecting that which is clearly within their power.

The question of the mode of transferring real estate is one peculiarly within the .jurisdiction of the legislative power of the State in which the land.Hies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 U.S. 74, 8 S. Ct. 429, 31 L. Ed. 344, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langdon-v-sherwood-scotus-1888.