Ulman v. Iaeger

67 F. 980, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3442
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia
DecidedMay 17, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 F. 980 (Ulman v. Iaeger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ulman v. Iaeger, 67 F. 980, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3442 (circtdwv 1895).

Opinion

JACKSON, District Judge.

Alfred J. Ulman filed his bill in the circuit court of McDowell county, W. Va., against W. R Iaeger, W. G. W. Iaeger, and others, claiming that he was a cotenant of W. R [981]*981laeger in a tract of 150,000 acres of land lying in said county, having acquired title to one undivided half interest. The bill alleges that certain proceedings were instituted by the commissioner of school lands in McDowell county to forfeit the land for the nonpayment of taxes, which finally resulted in the sale of over 7,000 acres of the same to sundry third parties, which sales were confirmed by the court, and deeds were made by the commissioner to the various purchasers in pursuance of the order of the court confirming the sale. The primary object of the hill is to annul and vacate the deeds made by the commissioner, and thereby to remove the cloud upon the title of the owners to the land sold. The further object of the bill is a partition of the land between the tenants in common. There are other grounds of relief sought which at this time we do not think require attention. After the filing of the original bill, the case was, by proper proceedings, removed into this court, for further proceedings to be had therein.

It appears from the bill that Ulman conveyed to Kent, Neal, and Totten one undivided fifth part of his one-fourth of the land in controversy first acquired by him, and that on the 8th day of February, 1888, W. R. laeger conveyed the equity of redemption in tkreefoinths to his father, W. (I. W. laeger; and it further appears that on the 24th day of April, 1888, W. G. W. laeger conveyed the land to Henry Parmalee, trustee, to secure $6,000 to C. B. Wilkins, and that on the 26th day of March, 1889, he conveyed the same land to John P. Jenny, trustee, to secure $60,000 to Charles C. Hanes. The bill prays for an account between the plaintiff and defendant W. G. W. laeger as to the amounts advanced for taxes, and other moneys advanced for the protection of the land, and calls for a discovery as to the amounts due on each of said trust deeds, and asks that said trust deeds be set aside as clouds upon the plaintiff’s title, claiming that they were “shams.” To this bill W. G. W. laeger filed his answer, denying many of the allegations of the bill, and admitting others, which are unnecessary to be considered at this time. After the filing of the answer, the plaintiff filed an amended bill, making Elias Adler a party, alleging that W. G. W. laeger had conveyed one-fourth of his interest in the land to Adler, which was in fact a conveyance for the benefit of Ulman, who, it is alleged, had furnished the purchase money, by which transaction Ulman claims he acquired that interest which Adler and wife conveyed to him on the 30th day of July, 1889, making Ulman’s interest one-half of the land. The amended bill also makes a number of the purchasers at the tax sale parties defendant who were not before made parties. On the 2d day of June, 1890, after the issues were made up between Ulman and laeger, the defendant W. G. W„ laeger filed Ms cross bill, which filing was before that of the first amended bill, against the parties brought into the case by the cross bill. It further appears that Ulman, in his original and amended original bills, seeks relief against the laegers and all the defendants who set np any title to the land in controversy, and calls for a partition of the lands between Mm and W. G. W. laeger. This is the scope of the original bills, while the cross bill of laeger seeks af[982]*982firmative relief from Ulman, setting' up the issues made in his answef to the original bill of Ulman, and bringing to the attention of the court sundry new parties, who, it is alleged, were necessary parties to this proceeding, all of whom were purchasers of a portion of this tract of land at the commissioner’s sale, thus rendering it necessary to pass upon the validity of their deeds, claiming that they were clouds upon the title of the rightful owner of the land sold by the commissioner. Other matters are presented for the consideration of the court in both the original and cross bills, which we do not think necessary to consider upon the demurrer; but they are all more or less directly connected with the title to this land, and grew out of the same original controversy between Ulman and laeger, on the one hand, and the defendants, on the other. In fact, all the parties to this suit claim portions of the original tract of land now in controversy, and derive their titles from the same common source. Upon this state of facts, as they appear in the original and cross bills, the several defendants have filed their demurrers, and invoke the judgment of the court upon the questions of law raised by them, which are substantially the same.

The first ground assigned is that both Ulman and laeger have plain adequate remedies at law, and that all the purchasers at the tax sale hold adversely to them, which requires an action at law to dispossess them. This ground of demurrer is not an unusual one in cases of the character we have under consideration. In passing upon the questions raised by the demurrers, the exhibits filed with the bill are to be read as part ©f it, and the statements found in them must be accepted as true against the demurrants. In this connection it seems to us that some of the questions raised by the demurrers should be considered upon the merits, rather than upon demurrer to the bill. We will dispose of the question as to the remedy of the plaintiff in this action hereafter, as we wish to first notice the question of misjoinder of parties.

It is urged that all of the defendants who were purchasers at the tax sale have been improperly impleaded in this action because there exists no privity of interest between them and Ulman and laeger, and, as a consequence, no such privity between the parties as would entitle Ulman or laeger, or both of them, to maintain this action. This is the most serious question raised by the demurrers. To enable us to discuss this position, we have reviewed briefly the history of this case. From that history it is apparent that the title to the land in controversy was either in Ulman or laeger, or in both, as tenants in common, and that in this proceeding they must be recognized as the source, and the only one, from which all of the defendants who are impleaded in this action derived their title, if any they have, to any of the land in controversy. It is true that the purchasers at the commissioner’s sale claim that they are holding under the state; but it cannot be denied that the state only got the title of Ulmer and laeger, if any she acquired, and, when she sold it, she only sold and conveyed the title of Ulman and laeger as purchased at the sale. De Forrest v. Thompson, 40 Fed. 375, and reported as Wakeman v. Thomp[983]*983son in 32 W. Va. Append. 1. We hold this position to be sound, and, as a consequence, there 'is a privity of estate between the plaintiffs in the original and cross bills and all of the defendants who were purchasers at the tax sale, and it must follow that as to them there was no misjoinder of parties to the action. But we do not rest this conclusion alone upon this position, for the reason i ha t if, in the disposition of the case, it should turn out that the proceedings taken by the school commissioner on behalf of the state were irregular, and either void or voidable, the land would be, by such legal action, restored to the former owners in whose name ox-names it was sold.

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Bluebook (online)
67 F. 980, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ulman-v-iaeger-circtdwv-1895.