McAlpine v. Tourtelotte

24 F. 69, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2026
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 8, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. 69 (McAlpine v. Tourtelotte) 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
McAlpine v. Tourtelotte, 24 F. 69, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2026 (uscirct 1885).

Opinion

MilleR, Justice.

This suit is by a bill in chancery, the main purpose of which, perhaps, is expressed in the equitable phrase “to quiet title.” The title to be quieted originated in this way: Mr. Joseph E. Snyder, who is the common source of title to all the parties in this controversy, became bankrupt in 1867, and was discharged from liability to all his debts. Not long thereafter there appeared upon the records of the land-titles of the county in which he lived evidence of title in him to property which had not been found there before, which had not been presented by him in his schedule of assets; and this induced some of the creditors to undertake to set aside his discharge, and to subject that property to sale for his debts. It is unimportant to go very much into the details of that proceeding in bankruptcy. It is sufficient to say that the discharge was set aside; that a new assignee was appointed; and that this assignee, under the directions of the court, produced a new schedule of the property, which was supposed to include the land now in controversy — part of it, or all of it.

[70]*70Mr. Snyder appeared in answer to the proceedings taken against him to set aside his discharge. No special appearance or notice seems to have been served on him in regard to the further proceedings to subject this property to sale as a part of his assets; nor does it appear that he made any response to that particular movement other than that which is made in his answer to the proceedings to set aside his discharge. The schedule of property which the assignee presented, and for which he asks an order of the court that he might sell it, differs in some respects in its description, though it is probable that it was intended to be the same as that which is mentioned in the proceeding^ to set aside his discharge; but the description brought forward by the new assignee, in his additional schedule, is a very minute description,, and says no more than that it was his property, and gives its' description by metes and bounds, which was somewhat complicated; but it says nothing about how he became the owner of the property, from whom he derived it, nor what was the nature of his title. The decree of sale proceeded on the same principle, the sale itself proceeded on the same principle, and the deed proceeded on the same principle; i. e., upon the principle of describing the property by metes and bounds and declaring it to be his property, but saying nothing about how he got it, from whom he obtained it, or anything connected with it. Afterwards certain persons sued Snyder, his discharge having been set aside, in the ordinary state courts, and levied an attachment on part of this land for judgment, and had it sold, and bought it, and got the title that such attachment could give. Out of that proceeding two suits have grown up — two actions of ejectment, probably three. Three actions of ejectment, I think, depend on' that attachment title.

The heirs of Snyder took possession or had possession of a part of this property, and they were sued in ejectment in the state courts by the holders of this bankrupt title. There were those four actions of ejectment pending in the state courts, growing out of the claim under Snyder and of the possession of these respective titles. Two of these suits, Tourtelotte’s and Mrs. Snyder’s actions of ejectment, were removed into this court. The suit against Mrs. Snyder and the heirs of Snyder was not originally an action of ejectment, but was a suit in the state court by bill in chancery. That was removed; but two others involving the same subject-matter were left in the state courts. One of these suits, I believe the Tourtelotte suit, has been tried, and verdict rendered against the present plaintiff; taken to the supreme court of the state; reversed; and was pending on a new trial when it was removed into this court. The present suit is a bill in chancery, brought by Nicholas McAlpine, James M. Mason, and Sophia A. Oobb, claiming to be the owners of all this property under the bankruptcy sale and purchase, and the object of it is to compel all these parties who are sued in an action of ejectment, and the one in chancery, to come in and answer in this suit, and try the question in chancery, so [71]*71that all may be settled, and one decree rendered to give them a quiet or perfect title against all these parties.

The first thing that presents itself is that no such suit, whether well founded or ill founded, can be maintained against the parties to the action in ejectment pending yet in the state court. The act of congress has decided that no injunction, — and no relief could be had here without an injunction, and that is what is prayed, — that no injunction could be issued to the state courts to a party to prevent his proceeding in a state court, except in such cases where that relief is authorised by the act concerning bankrupts. I think it was in the idea of the party who drew this bill that since he founded his claim on the title derived from the decree in bankruptcy, that this was a proceeding in bankruptcy within the meaning of that statute; but that clearly is not so. The simple meaning of that was and is that since in a bankruptcy proceeding there may be various suits by attachment, by execution, and by a hundred ways, in the state courts, which hold, absorb, and destroy the assets before it could be administered in bankrupt court in that class of actions, the bankruptcy statute allows an injunction against everybody, no difference where their proceeding is; but the old rule remains, that, except in that class of actions, the federal courts will not interfere by injunction in the suits pending in the state courts.

Tiiero is another exception also in the case where the federal court first has jurisdiction, — where the matter in controversy is fairly within its jurisdiction, — and shall issue its injunction to a party to that suit to prevent his proceeding in another court. Nono of these come within this caso; and it is very clear that as to the two parties whose suit remains in the state court, and have not, been brought here, that this action will have to be dismissed.

We come, then, to consider, however, the cases against Tourtelotte and against Teresa Snyder and the heirs of Snyder. Of course, the parties purchasing under that bankruptcy decree or sale were in the same condition that all other purchasers at a judicial sale are; that is to say,-they take what they get. They buy publicly and openly, not of the original owner of the title, but they buy at the hands of the judicial salo by an officer. They take what the law gives them. They run their chances. That is the universal rule with regard to purchases at a judicial sale. Nobody is bound to them for anything. They look to the title they get before they buy; if they do not, it is their own fault. And in this ease there seems to be no reason to depart from this, except what I will mention hereafter.

As the land sold was specifically described by metes and bounds, so that it might be said that a surveyor could take his compass and the description and go and lay off that land exactly, there is nothing wanting to identify it, with the single exception that it is alleged that the description is susceptible of two constructions. Very well; let' that be so. Where that is the caso a court of law has just the same [72]*72right to rnahe the construction that a court of chancery has. I know of no right a party has to resort to a court of chancery simply tc get a correct construction of a deed or instrument in writing. A court of law can decide and make that construction just as well as a court in chancery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. 69, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2026, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalpine-v-tourtelotte-uscirct-1885.