Stall v. City of Cincinnati

16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1865
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169 (Stall v. City of Cincinnati) 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
Stall v. City of Cincinnati, 16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169 (Ohio 1865).

Opinion

Scott, J.

The plaintiffs claim to be a portion of the heirs of ■Frederick Haifligh, deceased, and, as such, seek to enforce the execution of a trust, upon which they allege that certain real estate in -the city of Cincinnati, was by the said Frederick Haifligh, on the 9th day of January, 1809, conveyed to his son,. Jacob Haifligh, and by the said Jacob was subsequently, in 1818, sold and conveyed, with notice of the trust, to the trustees of Cincinnati township, of whom the common council of the city of Cincinnati is the succes•sor. The premises in controversy consist of four acres of land, which, in 1809, when the ancestor of the plaintiffs conveyed the 172] same to his son *Jacob, were an out-lot, forming part of the plat of the city of Cincinnati, and were then used for the purposes -of pasture. Since that time, however, by the growth and extension of the city, said lot has been surrounded by streets, by dwelling and business houses, and being thus thrown in the midst of the .business portion of the city has become quite valuable. The city ■of Cincinnati has constructed upon the premises, for the purposes .of a hospital, a large and costly building, known as the Commercial Hospital of Cincinnati.

The .plaintiffs claim, by their petition, filed in the court of .common pleas of Hamilton county, March 26, 1855, that the said Frederick Haifligh, being the owner and in possession of said premises, and of other real estate within and in the neighborhood -of said city of Cincinnati, and being of advanced age and feeble health, and desirous of having his estate managed to the best advantage for the benefit of his creditors and children, on the 26th •day of March, 1808, by the advice of personal friends, executed and delivered to his son Jacob Haifligh, three deeds of conveyance, vesting in his said son Jacob, the legal.title to all of his said estate; that said conveyances were made to the said Jacob, for the benefit •of the creditors and children of the said Frederick, and with the promise of the said Jacob that he would first pay the just debts •of the said Frederick, and distribute the residue of the estate equally among his seven children, of whom the said Jacob was one; -and that said promise of said Jacob was the only consideration upon [157]*157which, the premises were conveyed to him, as aforesaid. That saidl Jacob, in violation of the trust reposed in him, left the State of' Ohio, soon after the death of his father, which occurred on the 9th ■ day of January, 1809, and did not return till 1818, when he sold and conveyed the premises to the trustees of Cincinnati township, who purchased the same with full knowledge of the rights of the heirs of said Frederick Haifiigh and of the trust under which said" Jacob held the same.

The plaintiffs thereupon seek to charge the city of Cincinnati (as successor to the rights of the township trustees), and the premises, so conveyed, with the trust aforesaid, and to restrain the city from disposing of or encumbering the premises, *and to have partition of the premises made among the heirs of said Frederick Haifiigh, pursuant to said trust. And with a view to such partition, a portion of the heirs of said Frederick Haifiigh are made defendants to the petition.

The city, in its answer, sets up six different defenses, as follows: 1. That Frederick Haifiigh, the plaintiff’s ancestor, never had a legal title to the premises, nor any other than a mere possessory title, and that the city has a connected legal title to the promises, not derived from or through the said Frederick. 2. That the ■■ deed from Frederick Haifiigh to Jacob Haifiigh was not in trust, but was made for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the. said Frederick Haifiigh. 3. Denying that the trustees of Cincinnati township had notice of the rights of the children and heirs • of Frederick Haifiigh. 4. That the city had, prior to the filing of" the petition in the case, about thirty-five years of open, notorious, exclusive, adverse possession of the premises. 5. That the cause of action-did not accrue to the plaintiffs within twenty-one years. 6. That the plaintiffs are estopped by a judgment of the Supreme •• Court of the State of Ohio, within and for the county of Hamilton, rendered at July term, 1822, in a suit prosecuted by the heirs-of Frederick Haifiigh against Jacob Haifiigh, in which the title - of the city, as a purchaser from Jacob Haifiigh, was established.

To this answer a reply was filed, as follows : 1. Denying generally, the truth of the answer. 2. Denying that the possession of the city was adverse, as stated in the fourth ground of defense. 3. As to the fifth ground of defense, alleging that the city held the property in trust for the plaintiffs; and as to such of the plaintiffs as are descendants of one of Frederick Haifligh’s daugters, that [158]*158their mother was a feme covert from 1806 till April 22, 1849, when ;she died; and that their father was tenant by the curtesy from that date till February 27, 1863. 4. As to the sixth answer, that neither they nor their ancestors from whom they claim, were parties to the record; and that if the proceedings can be sustained, they rely upon the same, as evidence establishing the truth of their allegations.

Upon the evidence adduced by the parties respectively in ^support of the issues thus joined, the case was submitted to -the district court, and was reserved by that court for decision here.

Of the numerous questions arising under the pleadings in this ■'case, and presented by counsel in argument, we apprehend that •the determination of a single one must be decisive of the case.

The deeds of conveyance from Frederick Haifligh to his son .Jacob, upon which it is here sought, by parol evidence, to ingraft .an express trust, are upon their face absolute. Now, if it be con- • ceded that such a trust may be established by parol evidence, yet it has been held that such trust can only be established by evidence “ clear, certain, and conclusive, in proof not only of the existence of the trust at the time of the conveyance, but also of its terms and conditions. The proof must show the existence of the trust affirmatively, and so conclusively as to remove all reasonable .and well-founded doubt.” Miller v. Stokely, 5 Ohio St. 194. Now, if it be conceded that the evidence in this case satisfactorily establishes that the conveyances by Frederick Haifligh to his son .Jacob were upon an express trust, yet the important question remains, whether the terms of the trust were such as to deny to the trustee the absolute power of disposing of the premises by sale or ■ conveyance, or whether the trust by its terms contemplated the ■ exercise of the power of sale by the trustee. The conveyances being absolute on their face, carried with them, prima facie, the power of sale and conveyance, on the part of the grantee. The burden of proof is, therefore, on the plaintiffs, to show such a trust in the case as would be inconsistent with a power of sale. The ■trust, as stated by the plaintiffs in their petition, was that, Jacob, the grantee, should first pay the just debts of the grantor, Frederick, and then distribute the estate equally among the grantor’s -children. The existence of a trust in the case and its terms are testified to by two witnesses only, to wit, John Shally and Maria JB. Stall, of whom the latter is a daughter of Frederick Haifligh [159]*159rand one of tbe present plaintiffs, and the former is a son-in-law of •said Haifligh, and father of other heirs claiming under the trust.

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Related

Miller v. Stokely
5 Ohio St. 194 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1855)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio St. (N.S.) 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stall-v-city-of-cincinnati-ohio-1865.