Piatt v. St. Clair's Heirs

1 Wright 261, 1 Ohio Ch. 261
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 Wright 261 (Piatt v. St. Clair's Heirs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piatt v. St. Clair's Heirs, 1 Wright 261, 1 Ohio Ch. 261 (Ohio 1833).

Opinion

WRIGHT J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The complainant claims to be a judgment creditor o£ the estate of St. Clair, and to have issued execution, which has been returned nidia bona ; and he prays this court to charge his demand upon certain real estate which was of the intestate, now in the hands of the defendants. Voluminous matters are set forth in the bill, answers, exhibits and evidence, many of which, in the estimation of the court, have no material bearing upon the real controversy before it. I will not, therefore, state the allegations of the bill and answers in detail, but content myself with giving a statement of the material facts of the case, as the court understand them to be made out upon the papers, the documentary evidence and testimony on file.

The complainant and his brother, now deceased, in September, 1820, a few days before St. Clair’s death, entered into an agreement with him, by which they undertook to satisfy certain liabilities of St. Clair, to the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank of Cincinnati, then about to be transferred to the Bank of the United States, and for the amount so satisfied, the Piatts were to have credit upon a mortgage St. Clair held against them for about $11,000, and were to be paid for the residue in land on Main street, in Cincinnati, at $75 a foot. In pursuance of this agreement, the Piatts satisfied for St. [268]*268Clair the sum of $23,875.49, and took a transfer to themselves of the liabilities of St. Clair. This arrangement with the bank, was not fully completed, until about the 14th of October, 1820, a few days after St. Clair’s death.

263] *St. Clair died suddenly, in September, 1820, without will. Administration on the estate was granted to William Lytle, in March, 1821. The administrator did not pay the claim of the Piatts, but admitted a part of it as a general claim upon the estate, and confessed judgment for the amount, in favor of the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank, for the use of Piatts, on the 10th of May, 1821, viz.: $17,741.12-|-, supposing thereby that he secured to himself the privilege of paying it in the notes of that bank.

When St. Clair died, the taxes upon his real estate were unpaid for the years 1819 and 1820. The adminstrator paid these taxes, and those for 1821; but having no faith in the validity of tax sales, and finding it inconvenient to raise money to pay the taxes for 1822, he suffered them to remain unpaid, expecting that no sale would take place, and that the tax would lie until another year. Contrary to his expectation, the lands were brought to sale for taxes, and bidders attended. Arthur St. Clair, Jr., one of the children and heirs, then a few months over nineteen years old, attended the sale without any intention of bidding, but being advised to bid, and assured of pecuniary aid, he did, on the 24th of. December, 1822, buy in the estate at the tax sale. Bjr his consent, the collector’s deed was made to Jones, his guardian, on the 24th of May, 1823. The administrator did not consider this sale as extinguishing the lien of creditors.

On the 26th of February, 1822, the administrator, representing the personal assets as insufficient to pay the demands against the estate, applied to the probate court, according to law, for an order to sell the real estate of the intestate. Upon his application an appraisement was made, in March, 1822. This was returned to the court and confirmed on the 17th of March, 1S23. On that day, a sale was ordered to be made, and to be returned on the 19th of August, 1823.

On the lltli of June, 1823, Jones, guardian of A. St. Clair, at' the request of his ward, conveyed the estate to Joseph S. Benham, in trust for the heirs of St. Clair. Two days after this, the ward filed a bill in the name of Benham, to quiet the title to these lands; the pendency of which he caused to be advertised in the newspapers. This bill was afterwards dismissed.

On the 20th of June, 1823, the administrator took out the order [269]*269of court for the sale of the estate, advertised the sale on the 23d of the same month, in the same paper with the notice of the qui timet bill in the name of Benham. The sale took place on the 6th of August, 1823. In the written conditions of this sale, the administrator set forth a number of liens upon the estate, subject to [264 which the purchaser at the sale would take. Amongst these were Benham’s claim, the tax sale and conveyance to Jones, and thePiatt claim, “under an alleged contract” with St. Clair, before his decease. The terms of sale required payment in four equal installments, in nine, fifteen, twenty and twenty-four months, with interest from the sale, upon satisfactory security. At this sale, the estate was struck off to Arthur St. Clair, Jr., who then wanted afew days of being twenty years of age. He paid no money, nor gave any security. The administrator returned the sale to the court, without naming the purchaser, and it was confirmed by the court on the 19th of August, 1823, without its being shown to whom the sale was made.

On the 12th of November, 1823, Lytle, in his capacity of administrator, in conjunction with young St. Clair, conveyed the estate to Joseph S. Benham, as trustee, declared in the deed to be “without interest in or responsibility for the lands,” to hold to him or his successors, assigns, or grantees, in trust, to pay the purchase money, and for “liquidating such claims against the estate of A. St. Clair as the parties to the deed might see fit and' expedient.” Amongst other things, this deed recites that young St. Clair was “ desirous of securing to himself and co-heirs the ultimate resulting proceeds,” of the land, “ after paying the purchase money, and satisfying such claims as all the parties to the deed may agree upon.” The deed provides for the distribution of the residue of the proceeds equally amongst the children of St. Clair, or the division of land amongst them, as might be convenient. Benham' took both these trusts out of sympathy and regard for the St. Clair family.

Some time prior to this sale, a negotiation had been opened by the administrator, with the Bank of the United States, one of the creditors of St. Clair’s estate, having in view the liquidation of her claim, by the convej’'ance of a portion of the lands of the estate held by Benham under Jones’s conveyance. On the 13th of November, 1823, one day subsequent to the deed of the administrator to Ben-ham, the Bank of the United States adopted a resolution, in these words: “ Resolved, that if the legal representatives of Arthur St. Clair, deceased, convey to the president, directors and company of the Bank of the United States, by a clear, undisputed and uneneum[270]*270bered title, to the satisfaction of George W. Jones, the lots designated in the draft exhibited by Henry Avery, and described in the ‘article for adjusting,’ <&c., forwarded by George W. Jones, together with the lots marked in the same draft, Nos. 35 and 32, then the agent is authorized to make an advance to the family of Arthur 265J *St. Clair, of $500; to advance for the payment of taxes belonging to that estate, a sum not exceeding $300; to give to the said representatives a check on the Miami Exporting Company, for the sum of $2,000, and to execute a release of all claims by the bank on said estate.” Under the authority of this resolution, after its receipt in Cincinnati, Jones, as agent of the bank, completed the arrangement with the administrator, took from Benham a conveyance of the lots on the 8th of December, 1823, and executed a release to the administrator and heirs of the same date.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Wright 261, 1 Ohio Ch. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piatt-v-st-clairs-heirs-ohio-1833.