Stone v. Doster

3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 637, 7 Ohio C.C. 8
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 637 (Stone v. Doster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. Doster, 3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 637, 7 Ohio C.C. 8 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

BALDWIN, J.

By both of the proceedings above named Ithiel Stone and those interested with him, seek relief from the same judgment of the court of common pleas.

They cannot prosecute both appeal and error, and one of the suits is improperly here.

The original petition was one for partition and a receiver filed by Silas Maynard Stone and his brother and sister, children of Reuben C. Stone, deceased, and who was a brother of the whole blood of Silas S. Stone, deceased, against Philip Doster and other brothers and sisters of the whole blood of Margaretta Stone, deceased, setting forth that Silas S. Stone in his life time was and died seized of a very large amount of real estate in the city of Cleveland, which is described; that he died without children and intestate, leaving Margaretta Stone his widow, who took the same by inheritance; that She thereafter died childless and intestate seized thereof.

It asks a partition of the lands, one-half to the plaintiffs and one-'half to the defendants, brothers and sisters of Margaretta Stone.

A portion of these lands are held one-half under the above title and one-half by Worthy S.Streator, trustee, who is made defendant.

Henry C. Ranney, administrator of S. S. Stone, is made defendant under the allegation that without objection and for all he is collecting large rents of the property, and he is asked to account.

In this action Ithiel Stone and others appeared under leave, alleging, in addition to the facts of the petition, that they were brothers and sisters of Silas S. Stone of the half blood, and each equally entitled to share with the plaintiffs, legal representatives of Reuben C. Stone, brother of S. S. Stone of the whole blood, in the premises described^ and asking a partition to them of their shares. To this answer and cross-petition the plaintiffs demurred; the demurrer was sustained, and a judgment of dismissal thereon rendered against the new defendants, Ithiel Stone and others.

Ithiel. Stone and others appealed to this court and also prosecute proceedings in error.

[638]*638So that the first question is, was the case appealable?

We are very clear that it was.

Whatever may have been the rule in partition under the statute specially providing for that action formerly called statutory partition, there can be no doubt about it since the special statutory partition has been abolished by the revision of 1880, since which time all partitions have of necessity pursued the code forms (as did this suit), and all alike have been civil actions.

The sole reason why a statutory partition was not appealable, was because it was not a civil action; Barger v. Cochran, 15 O. S., 460; but even the statutory partition might be turned into a civil action, and be appealed. Stableton v. Ellison, 21 O. S., 527, and other cases. Quite a list of cases show that when a civil action it was appealable, and if it needed any adjudication to say that by the change in the Revised Statutes, all new suits in partition became civil actions, it is supplied .by the reasoning of the Supreme Court in Corry v. Lamb, 43 O. S., 390, affirming a previous decision and reasoning of this court in another case to the same effect in an action for dower.

We shall proceed, therefore, to consider the appeal case upon the demurrer by plaintiffs to the answer and cross-petition of Ithiel Stone and others.

This raises, and was intended to raise, in a concise, convenient form the construction oí sec. 4162, Rev. Stat.

Do the words “one-half to the brothers and sisters of such deceased husband or wife from whom such personal or real estate came,” include, in the words “brothers and sisters,” both brothers and sisters of the whole and half blood when both classes exist?

The whole section reads:

“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 sec. 4159, then such estate, real and personal, shall pass to and vest in the children of said deceased husband or wife, or the legal representatives of such children. If there are no children or their legal representatives living then, such estate, real and personal, shall pass and descend, one-half to the brothers and sisters of such intestate or their legal representatives, and one-half to the brothers and sisters of such deceased husband or wife from which such personal or real estate came, or their persona! representatives.”

The property involved in this question is very large, and has justified the wide range and long arguments of counsel in discussion.

We have listened with interest to the very full collection of dictionary definitions of the word “brother,” often defined solely as “a son of the sam'e mother and father,” half-brother being defined as if it were a separate word.

There has also been a long discussion of the various statutes of the state for many years, and the supposed policy of the state as to the descent of ancestral and non-ancestral property as among brothers of the whole and half blood.

We are, however, plainly, first and foremost to study as diligently as we can the meaning of the same words when used by the legislature of the state in prior and the same acts.

The claiming plaintiffs, although not brothers and sisters of S. S. Stone, are children of a brother of the whole blood, and under secs. 4166 and 4167, Rev. Stat., stand in the place of their father.

The statute of descent and distribution sometimes uses the term “brothers and sisters,” and often qualifies these terms by adding “of the whole blood,” “of the half blood,” or “of the blood of the ancestor from whom the estate came.”

The term “brothers and sisters” appears first in section 4158, where after providing in the third subdivision for “the brothers and sisters of the intestate who are of the blood of the ancestor from whom the estate came, or their legal representatives, whether such brothers and sisters be of the whole or half blood of the intestate,” a provision is made, fifth, that in certain contingencies the estate shall pass for life to the husband or wife, relict of an ancestor; “that on the death [639]*639of such husband or wife, or if there is no such husband or wife, the estate shalt pass .to and vest in the brothers and sisters of such ancestors or their legal representatives.” That the words “brothers and sisters” in this section mean both of the whole and of the half blood is decided in case of Cliver v. Sanders et al., 8 O. S., 501, the syllabus of which reads:

“Under the 4th (now 5th), subdivision of the first section of the statute of descents of 1835, (Swan’s Statutes of 1840, p. 286), the half-brothers and sisters of the ancestor are included in the words “brothers and sisters of such ancestor.”' That fourth clause became the fifth in the act of 1853, as amended in 1857, (1 S. & C., 501); that the fifth in the act of 1865, (S. & S., 304), and that the fifth clause in section 4157 of the Revised Statutes, with such small changes that it cannot be supposed the meaning of these words was changed. See the Cliver case, and cases therein cited.

In 1869, 19 O. S., 531, 536, in White v. White, commenting on the act of 1857 (1 S.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio Cir. Dec. 637, 7 Ohio C.C. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-doster-ohcirctcuyahoga-1892.