Williams v. Mears

2 Disney (Ohio) 604
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedDecember 15, 1859
DocketNo. 8,346
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Disney (Ohio) 604 (Williams v. Mears) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Mears, 2 Disney (Ohio) 604 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1859).

Opinion

Hoadly, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Upon the trial, at special term, the plaintiff proved that John Mears, the former owner of the premises in question, the father of the plaintiff and father-in-law of the defendant, conveyed the property in 1856 to Daniel H. Horne in fee simple upon certain trusts, hereafter more particularly to be considered; that Mr. Horne accepted the trust and acted under it; that he subsequently resigned, and the plaintiff was appointed his successor by the probate court, and thereupon Horne conveyed the premises, to the plaintiff to be held upon the trusts of the original deed from John Mears.

During the trial, Horne was examined on behalf of the plaintiff, and upon cross examination several questions were asked him, which were objected to, and the objections sustained. One of these was directed to the condition of mind of John Mears prior to the time the. deed to the witness was executed. The object of counsel was‘explained to be, not to show any fraud in the factum or act of execution, or any mental infirmity which rendered the grantor .then incapable [608]*608of a valid execution, but by wbat had taken place previous to its execution, that it was procured by misrepresentation, imposition, and fraud of the plaintiff’. The court then said that such evidence would be competent upon a petition filed by the proper party to have said deed set aside for fraud, but that in the present action it was incompetent, and therefore was excluded.

The common law rule is stated by Chief Justice Savage, in Franchot v. Leach, 5 Cowen, 508, in these words: “ The fraud which avoids a deed is not a fraudulent representation as to the consideration, but a fraud relating to the execution of it, as a fraudulent misreading or obtaining such an instrument as the obligor did not intend to give.”

For, at law, the consideration of a specialty could not be disputed, and fraud antecedent to the execution of the instrument, and entering into the motives and inducements which lead thereto, is excluded by the presumption of consideration. Such fraud only as rendered the specialty absolutely void and incapable of ratification except by re-execution, which so affected the instrument that it might be said to be not the act of the party, could be alleged against it at law. In the language of the Supreme Court of Indiana, in Huston v. Williams, 3 Blackf. 172, “ if the defense is bottomed on the false, fraudulent, and covinous conduct of the obligee, in relation to the execution of the instrument, as where it is fraudulently misread, or where the obligee fraudulently induces the obligor to execute the instrument when he is incapable of judging for himself, either by reason of drunkeness or lunacy, or where the obligee does any other fraudulent act which shows that the obligor, in truth and fact, never, in the eye of the law, executed the bond, the facts may be given in evidence under the plea of non est factum, or they may be given in evidence under a general plea of fraud, covin, and false representation.”

“But it appears,” say the court, in another part of the same opinion, “that such a defense only relates to fraud, covin, and false representation in the execution of the writing [609]*609obligatory, and not to the consideration or inducement which influenced the obligor to make the bond.”

In Dorr v. Munsell, 13 Johns. 430, Chief Justice Spencer, says: “ The plea demurred to is bad. It sets upa fraudulent representation of the .plaintiff’s patent right, and in substance it is a denial of any consideration for the bond. At law, the defendant can not avoid a solemn deed on the ground'of a want of consideration. That injury is precluded by the very nature of the instrument. The case of Vroman v. Phelps, 2 Johns. 177, is directly in point, that a fraudulent representation of the qiiality and value of the thing sold, forms no defense in a suit or specialty. In some of the elementary writers, it is stated that fraud may be given in evidence under the plea of non est factum. This must be confined to cases where the fraud relates to the execution of the instrument, as if a deed be fraudulently misread, and is executed under that imposition ; or where there is a fraudulent substitution of one deed for another, and the party’s signature is obtained to a deed which he did not intend to execute.”

In Jackson v. Hills, 8 Cowen, 290, the same rul'e was applied in an action of ejectment. This position is sustained by a great weight of authority. Parker v. Parmele, 20 Johnson, 133; Champion v. White, 5 Cowen, 510; Taylor v. King, 6 Mumford, 366; Wyche v. Macklin, 2 Randolph, 426; Logan v. Simmons, 1 Dev. and Battle’s Law, 16; Swift v. Fitzhugh, 9 Porter, 63; Mordecai v. Tankersly, 1 Ala. 100; Stokes v. Jones, 18 Ala. 737; Greathouse v. Dunlap, 3 McLean, 303; Saunders v. Stotts, 6 Ohio, 380; Doe, dem. Raguet v. Roll, 7 Ohio, 70, part 2; and there is, so far as we know, but a single case to the contrary, Hoitt v. Holcomb, 3 Foster, 535, in any State where there is an equitable j urisdiction vested in the courts.

This rule was modified in Ohio, so far as specialties for the payment of money, or delivery of property are concerned, by the act of of 1834, Swan’s Stat. of 1841, p. 685.

In the case already cited from Indiana, the court say that “ where the fraud, covin, and false representations, which are set up as a defense to a bond, are respecting the right, title, [610]*610amount, soundness, quantity, quality, or value, of the consideration which influenced the obligor to make the bond, the defense is equitable and not legal.” P. 171.

In such cases, and by parity of reasoning, in case of a deed founded on natural love and affection, where the conveyance though intelligently executed by a grantor, mentally capable, is induced by antecedent false representations, fraudulently creating the motives for the gift, the conveyance is not void; it is entirely valid until avoided; it can be ratified even by parol, or, in some cases, by silence and acquiescence, and may be avoided by resort to a court of equty.

But the distinction between law and equity having been abrogated in Ohio, it is insisted that a deed.may now be attacked for such defect, by a defendant, in a proceeding to recover possession of real estate.

We are not inclined to dispute this proposition, but the question is whether before the testimony becomes competent, it is not necessary for the party to show that he stands in such privity with the grantor of the conveyance proposed to be attacked, or has such an interest in the property, as authorizes him to object to the deed, and to ask that it be avoided by proper pleading to that effect.

It has been held in New York, Dewey v. Hoag, 15 Bar. 865, that while an equitable title may be a defense under the code, in such cases, it is only where the defendant becomes an actor, and asks affirmative relief by filing an answer containing all the averments necessary for a petition to that end.

This seems a just rule, at least where the equitable title needs judicial action to give it efficacy.

This deed is admitted to have been executed by John Hears, while possessed of sufficient mental vigor, and knowing and intending fully what he was doing.

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Related

Vrooman v. Phelps
2 Johns. 177 (New York Supreme Court, 1807)
Dorr v. Munsell
13 Johns. 430 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)
Mordecai v. Tankersly
1 Ala. 100 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1840)
Stokes v. Jones
18 Ala. 734 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1851)
Swift v. Fitzhugh
9 Port. 39 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1839)
Huston v. Williams
3 Blackf. 170 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1833)
Greathouse v. Dunlap
10 F. Cas. 1062 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Ohio, 1843)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Disney (Ohio) 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-mears-ohsuperctcinci-1859.