McLaughlin v. Barnum

31 Md. 425, 1869 Md. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 8, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 31 Md. 425 (McLaughlin v. Barnum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaughlin v. Barnum, 31 Md. 425, 1869 Md. LEXIS 124 (Md. 1869).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Counsel for the several parties to these appeals, whilst differing upon other points, agree that a decree for a sale must be passed, and the two principal questions necessary now to be decided are:

1st. What is to be sold, and what provisions in this respect shall the decree contain ?

2d. Upon what basis or general principles shall the accounts be stated.

First. To that part of the decree appealed from which designates the property to be sold, objection is taken on one side, because what is called Mrs. Barnum’s lot is excluded, and on the other because certain rooms or apartments in the basement story of the hotel are included.

Mrs. Barnum acquired title in fee to her lot in 1838 ; and in 1849, after the death of her husband, the testator, she sold and conveyed it in fee to Andrew McLaughlin, for $5000. The position that title to this lot has passed, upon the doctrine of election, is wholly untenable. The [442]*442first clause of the will being void, and the second taking effect and being the only one that can be relied on, as making the requisite disposition to raise an election, no case of election is presented, unless it plainly appears the testator intended this second clause should affect this lot; for it is well settled the intention to raise an election must be clear and manifest from the will itself. There must appear on the face of the instrument a clear intention on the part of its author to dispose of that which is not his own. Jones vs. Jones, 8 Gill, 197; Smith vs. Townshend, 27 Md., 389; 1 Lead. Cases in Equity, White and Tudor, 259. This lot is not designated or referred . to in the second clause, and the general words of description there used, “said City Hotel, buildings, and grounds,” in the absence of anything pointing to a more enlarged construetion, must be confined to. property which the testator himself owned, and could effectually dispose of by will. But the intent not to include his wife’s lot is apparent from the fact that,in the second clause no provision is made for her in lieu of it; whereas in the first clause an annuity of $300 is given to the wife in consideration of her ownership thereof, and the use of it for the hotel.

, But the ground upon which the claim for its sale is chiefly rested is, that at the time of David Barnum’s death this lot constituted part of the hotel premises, and was used in connection therewith; that by improvements subsequently made by McLaüghlin, it is for the most part covered by structures, making up the Hotel buildings; water-closets and baths being in the buildings erected thereon, the drainage from which, and from other like parts of the premises, is carried off' by one common sewer; that, thus constituting a part of the establishment, supporting apartments devoted to purposes indispensable to the use of the Hotel as such, which were erected and improved by the purchaser himself, he'must be presumed to have bought for the common benefit of all parties jointly [443]*443interested with him in the Hotel buildings and grounds. In support of this position, reference is made to authorities announcing the well-established doctrine that if one of several devisees or tenants in common, holding under an imperfect title, buys in the outstanding title to the common property, the purchase will enure to their common benefit, upon contribution made to pay the purchase-money : to cases where a partner, without the knowledge of his co partners, had obtained a renewal in his own name, of the lease of the premises where the joint trade was carried on, and was decreed to hold the renewed lease in trust for the partnership: to cases of mortgagees, executors, tenants for life, trustees, and parties treated in law or equity as occupying the relation of trustees, executors, or guardians, as executors de son tort, or where one without lawful authority intrudes upon and assumes the management of an infant’s estate. In all such cases if the party occupying or to be treated as holding these relations, gains any advantage by his possession of, or dealing with the property, he must hold for those beneficially interested, and not for his own individual benefit. But the purchase of this lot was no interference or dealing with the property in which the purchaser was jointly interested with others, or removing any incumbrance thereon. If it be conceded McLaughlin at the time of this purchase was tenant in common with any of the parties to this cause, and this is the most favorable light in which the complainants’ claim can be presented, he was so only of the property which David Barnum owned at the time of his death, and upon which the second clause of his will operated. Purchase of this lot did not impair or improve the title to that property, nor make the purchaser, in respect to such purchase, a trustee for his co-tenants, or place him in any of the relations to them above indicated. There is no proof ho purchased with rents and profits which he had collected and received from the common property. And it would [444]*444be a doctrine both novel and strange to determine tbat a party cannot buy with his own money, and hold for his own • benefit, any real estate contiguous to that in which he has an interest in common with others. Nor is it perceived how the use of the lot, or the erection of buildings thereon, and their connection with the buildings and fixtures on the common property can work a divestiture of the purchaser’s title, so as to authorize the Court to decree its sale in this cause. It must be remembered that we are now dealing with title to real estate, it is that which is to be sold under the decree. The complainants have no title legal or equitable, derived under the will of their grandfather, to anything save the ground owned by the testator at the period of his death, constituting the site of the Hotel with the buildings then being thereon. This is all in which any common interest is created by the will, and, with the buildings and improvements now erected on the same property, is all the Court can in this proceeding decree to be sold for the purpose of partition, unless title to other property has been so acquired by all those interested in this, as to prevent the true owner, if he were a stranger, from recovering it in ejectment. It is not pretended there has been such adverse user and occupation of this lot for twenty years, as would prevent a recovery by the holder of the legal title; and by what other recognized mode of transfer of real estate has that title passed from him ? Goods, money, and jewels, the title to which passes by delivery and possession, may sometimes be lost to the owner by confusing or commingling them with like property of others, but no authority has been cited, and it would be extraordinary if any could be found to show that the intermingling or connection of buildings or structures can effect a transfer of title to land. Real estate is not susceptible of confusion, and its title cannot be disposed of in that way. An easement in lands may be acquired by the erection and use for a sufficient length of [445]*445time, of superincumbent structures, which will pass as appurtenant to the property entitled thereto; but no easement on this lot, or any part of it, is here claimed, and none in fact exists.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Md. 425, 1869 Md. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaughlin-v-barnum-md-1869.