Stark v. Turner

23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 313
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedApril 15, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 313 (Stark v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stark v. Turner, 23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 313 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Matthews* J.

The plaintiff, claiming to be the legal owner and entitled to the immediate possession of the east half of let No. 1.07 of the Rose Hill Park Subdivision, Cincinnati, Hamilton county, Ohio, filed his petition in this ease to recover possession thereof from the defendant, and for 'mesne profits.

[314]*314The defendant filed an answer and cross-petition, and in her cross-petition alleged, among other things, that the plaintiff’s testatrix in her life time, in contemplation of the defendant’s marriage, made a gift by parol of said real estate to the defendant, placed the defendant in possession, which possession the defendant had held for about twenty years, during which time she and her husband had made permanent improvements on said real estate and paid the taxes and street assessments.

The prayer of the cross-petition is. that the court decree specific performance of said parol gift, and that the defendant’s title to said lands be quieted against the claim of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff replied denying the gift, and alleging the defendant had been guilty of laches.

Clara Dixon and Blanche Partridge McCarty, beneficiaries under the will of Mary Ann Britt, and entitled to one-third of the estate, have befen made parties and have joined in the prayer of the petition. The other beneficiaries entitled to two-thirds of the estate, have conveyed their interest, if any, to the defendant. ■ |

The cause came before the court upon the issues raised by the defendant’s cross-petition, evidence was offered, and said issues were submitted for decision by the court upon the law and the facts.

At the trial the court admitted evidence of declarations by Mary Ann Britt, the plaintiff’s testatrix, offered by the defendant to prove the intention to make the gift. The court excluded evidence offered by the plaintiff of declarations made by said testatrix during her life time, the purport of which was that she spoke of the real estate in question as her property.

In admitting these declarations offered by the defendant, and excluding those offered by the plaintiff, the court followed the rule laid down in the early case of Tipton v. Ross, 10 Ohio Rep., 273, in which the court at page 274 said:

“While one holds the title, the admissions he makes may be given in evidence against him and against-, his privy. The heir, pursuing the estate of his ancestor, takes his right and interest, incumbered by all that rests against it, before descent. If this deed had been set up against John Ross, the father, while hold[315]*315ing the land, his own admissions would have been competent evidence; they are equally competent when offered against his heir.”

Such declarations are only admitted in evidence as admissions against interest, and the declarations of an ancestor or testatrix are admitted in evidence against the person who is seeking to assert a right in the stead of the ancestor or testatrix; such ancestor or testatrix standing thus in privity with the litigant asserting the right, the declaration stands on the same basis as though the litigant himself had made it. It is therefore admissible against, but not in favor of such party.

In the ease of Ogden v. Dodge County, 97 Ga., 461, the court had before it the double aspect of a‘ease under facts almost identical with that of the case at bar, and held as stated in the syllabus:

“Declarations by a donor of land in favor of his own title, made after he has delivered possession of the same to the donee, are not admissible in evidence against the latter. Declarations of a donor against his title and in favor of that of the donee bind the donor and his privies in estate, and consequently are admissible in the donee’s favor against one who derived title from the donor after the declarations were made.”

The same rule was applied in the recent case of Hayes v. Hayes, 136 Minn., 389. And the same rule is stated textually in 22 Corpus Juris, 356 and 357, under division IX, which is headed “Admissions” commencing on page 296. In defining admissions on page 296, the author says:

“More accurately regarded, they are statements by a party or someone identified with him in legal interest, of the existence of a fact which is relevant to the cause of his adversary. ’ ’

At pages 356 'and 357 the author classifies the declarations of a predecessor in title as a species of admissions or declarations against interest.

So it is the opinion of the court that these declarations of Mary Ann Britt during her life time were only competent as admissions 'against interest in favor of the defendant, and when [316]*316her declarations were offered by the plaintiff standing upon her rights they fell within the prohibition of- self-serving declarations, and were therefore incompetent.

The basis of the admission of declarations by a prior owner of real éstate was stated by our own Supreme Court in the recent case of McAdams v. McAdams, 80 O. S., 232 and 236.

The defendant asserting a right against the personal representative of the decedent to have her title quieted against the claim of the decedent’s estate, and to have a specific performance of an oral agreement decreed, the degree of proof required as stated in the ease of Merrick v. Ditzler, 91 O. S., 256, is:

“If the defense is made by the personal representatives of a deceased person, the contract, whether in writing or parol, must be established by clear and convincing proof.”

Without stating in detail the evidence, but testing it by the degree of proof required, the court has concluded that the evidence offered proves the following facts:

That in the spring of 1899 the defendant was engaged to be married to William L. Turner, and in contemplation of that marriage Mary Ann Britt, who was the defendant’s aunt, made up her mind to give to the defendant a home as a wedding present, and in pursuance of that intent after having inspected several houses, concluded to give to the defendant the house and lot which is the subject matter of this action. Accordingly Mary Ann Britt and the defendant went to Albert IT. Mitchell and negotiated for- the purchase of the house. At the time of the purchase Mrs. Britt stated to Mr. Mitchell that she was buying it to give to the defendant; and at the time of the execu-' tion of the deed gave as a reason for the insertion of her name as grantee, not that she was postponing the gift,'but that for certain personal or iamily reasons the purchase was being consumated in the name- of Mrs. Britt. Immediately upon the purchase of this property the keys were delivered to the defendant, and she and her husband took possession and have held uninterrupted and exclusive possession over since. The- defendant was married on May 31, 1899, and she and her husband have ever since occupied the property and used it in the same sense [317]*317that absolute owners occupy and use property. The title on the tax duplicate standing in the name of Mrs. Britt, the tax bills went to her, but the defendant’s husband regularly reimbursed her for the taxes paid, and in addition paid all street assessments.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-turner-ohctcomplhamilt-1921.