Nave v. Marshall

6 Ohio N.P. 488
CourtClark County Probate Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 488 (Nave v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nave v. Marshall, 6 Ohio N.P. 488 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Rockel, J.

John G. Nave,administrator of Matilda Todd, filed his petition herein to sell certain real estate, therein described, to pay debts of decedent.

By leave of court Eliza J. Marshall et al. filed an answer and oross-petition alleging that they are the children of John H. Todd the deceased husband of said Matilda Todd by a former wife: that the premises in the petition described w>ere held by said Matilda Todd under a deed of gift frem their father John H. Todd : that said Matilda Todd died seized of other real estate, the title to which was,not acquired by deed of gift from John H. Todd, they therefore ask that all the real estate of said Matilda Todd be sold, and after a proportionate abareis taken out of the proceeds derived-from the sale, of the real estate in the petition described, that the remainder of said proceeds be distributed to them as heirs at law of said John H. Todd.

A demurrer to this answer and cross-petition has been filed by the plaintiff,, and the deeds conveying title to said' Matilda Todd have been offered in¡ evidence.

The questions upon which it is-sought to have the opinion of the-court, are, first — Do the deeds upon their face show that Matilda Todd acquired said real estate by deed of gift, from John H. Todd. Second — -If saidi [489]*489deeds upon their face fail to show that said Matilda Todd aoquired said real estate by deed of gift from John H. Todd, can parol evidence be introduced to establish such fact?

The statutes under which these defendants claim,is section 4162, which reads as follows — ■

“When the relict of a deceased husband or wife shall die intestate, and without issue, possessed of any. real estate or personal property, which came to such intestate from any former deceased husband or wife by deed of gift, devise or bequest, or under the provisions of section 4159, then such estate, real and personal, shall pass to and vest in the children of such deceased husband or wife, or their legal representatives of such children. * * * -*>>

If said Matilda Todd acquired the real estate in the plaintiff’s petition, by deed of gift, from John H. Todd, then the claim of these cross petitioners, should be sustained.

The deeds introduced in evidence show that on the 13th day of November 1858, Owen D. Garlough, “in consideration of the sum of $1 to him in hand paid by Matilda Todd, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, does hereby bargain, sell and convey to the said Matilda Tcdd, her heirs and assigns forever, the following real estate: (Describing the premises in the petition described.) “Together with all the privileges and appurtenances at the same belonging: To have and to hold the same to the said Matilda Todd, her heirs and assigns forever. The grantor, his heirs and as. signs hereby covenanting with the •grantee, her heirs and assigns that the title so conveyed is clear, free and uninoumbered by any act of the .grantor herein.”

On the same date, a deed with exactly the same recital is made by John H. Todd to Owen B. Garlough. It is claimed by the cross-petitioners that these two deeds are but one transaction. That as the law stood in 1858, a husband could not direotly transfer his real estate to his wife, and that the deed made by John H. Todd to •Owen B. Garlough, was made to him in trust that he would convey the premises therein described, to his wife Matilda Todd.

The deeds on their face do not show any trust, and further, that such a trust could be shown to control or direct the course of descent is a question not free from difficulty. The descent of real estate as determined by a number of judicial determinations, is controlled by the legal title. The legal title in the case at bar passed from John H. Todd to Owen Garlough, and from Owen Garlough, a stranger, to Matilda Todd.

John H. Todd, therefore, was not the immediate person from whom the legal title came to said Matilda Todd and in this view of the case, under the decisions of our supreme court, the same could not be considered as ancestral property coming from said John H. Todd, Brower v. Hunt, 18th Ohio St., 311; Patterson v. Lanson, 45th Ohio St, 77.

Under our statutee, as at common law, real estate is held to be acquired in two methods, to-wit — Descent, and purchase. At common law title was acquired by descent in but one way that is, where an heir at law inherited the real estate from an ancestor;

The inclusion of title by gift or bequest was an addition made by statute. The distinction between these two methods of acquiring title to real estate was, that he first was acquired by operation of law, and the latter by act of the parties themselves.

A deed of gift at common law, was held to transfer a title by purchase to the grantee because it took an act of the grantee, to perfect such a conveyance, in that, in order to secure its validity, there must be an acceptance of the gift. Likewise, it was held that real estate coming by bequest, gave to the devisee a title by purchase, because it required action on his part to perfect the devise.

These two methods of acquiring and owning title to real estate as now recognized by cur statutes, are well defined by Judge White in Brower v. Hunt, 18th Ohio St., 311. Here it is said “All estates are by law divided into two classes, and the line or order [490]*490of succession is to be determined by the olass to which they belong. The first section creates, defines, and prescribes the course of the first class, appropriately called anoestral. All the estates not included in the first class necessarily belong to the second, and are non-ancestral in their character, and pass under the seocnd section, It rather seems that the courts, when considering whether a title is held by purchase or descent for the purpose of determining its ancestral qualities, look with more favor upon 'title by purchase. It seems that they have been very technical iu applying rules of common law in determining this question.

What will constitute a deed of gift, such as will cast upon the grantee a title by descent as distinguished from a title by purchase, the authorities fail to disclose.

It is claimed that the reason for making title acquired by deed cf gift, to descend the same as title acquired by inheritance, is because the property came from a certain ancestor and should be enjoyed or go baok to per-» sons of his blood.

While this may have been the objeot of the classification, yet it is not always carried into effect. There are several noticeable oases in Ohio, in which the consideration for the purchase was either ancestral property,or furnished direotly by an ancestor.

The first case that will be noticed is that of Rrower v. Hunt, 18th Ohio St., 811. Here a man devised real estate in certain proportions to his children. The land was allotted or divided to the children as directed in the will. Afterwards two of the children concluded to exchange tracts. The consideration mentioned in the deed was a monied consideration, but in fact the contract of land was the consideration for the other tract, and the oourt held that these devisees by this sale, had cast upon each other a title by purchase and that they did not hold by descent. Here it will be seen that no new consideration passed, and that ancestral property was solely and alone the consideration. But the oourt reasons that these devisees did not hold or have cast upon them the-title to their several tracts of land by operation of law, but by their own acts.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nave-v-marshall-ohprobctclark-1895.