Russell's heirs v. Craddock
Russell's heirs v. Craddock
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
The complainants below claim land under an entry survey and patent, on military warrant, South of Green River, against an adverse entry, survey and grant of the same nature.
The complainant’s patent issued to four individuals, two of whom are complainants, and a number of persons are represented by the bill, as the heirs and devisees of the third, and a considerable number more as the hens of the fourth.
The defendants, or as many as appeared, put the complainants upon the proof of every material fact necessary for their recovery.
The court below decreed in favor of the complainants, from which this anneal is taken.
Certainly the death of two of the patentees, and who were then next of kin, to inherit the land, or who were the devisees to be shewn by a will, were facts material to the title of the plaintiffs; as part could not recover, without all were joined or made parties, according to repeated decisions of Ibis court.
Where the proper parties have not been made in such case, and the decree has been rendered, dismissing the bill absolutely, according to the pract
None of these decisions come up to the present case. In every one of these Gases where this court has absolutely dismissed the bill, the party claimed the entire title by devise or descent, either immediately to himself, or mediately through or under some person who claimed by devise or descent, and had failed to prove ids title, by exhibiting Hint devise or proving that descent, as a necessary link of the chain of title; or they are cases where the. court has corrected the dismission of the court below, when it was absolute, and not without prejudice as before stated.
It is clear that the last class of cases cannot apply to this, for here the complainants below have a decree — nor can the first, because the complainants have shewn title in part of themselves to the claim they set up.
The reason is obvious why we must dismiss a bib absolutely, because tbs complainant has failed ts
But we are relieved from determining this question, by the want of proper defendants also, and for this cause the suit was not in a situation for a decree on its merits, and the chancellor ought not to have done more than have dismissed the bill, for the want of proper parties, without prejudice, or rendered a decree nisi, that the bill should be thus dismissed, unless the proper parties were brought before the court in a reasonable time, fixed by bis order. As hedias done neither; we send the case back
The defendants are numerous, and are charged all to be the heirs of William Russell, consisting of both children and grand children. From an attentive examination of the record, we discover that a subpæna has never been executed on a considerable part of them, nor have they answered or appear. It is not suggested in any part of the record, that any partition has taken place, or that any of them hold their portions in severalty; hut they are ail represented as holding the undivided territory by descent. They were, therefore, unquestionably necessary parties before a decision on the merits. While the complainants are bringing this before the court, they will have time to shew their relation to the patentees, or to bring the real holders of the title set up by them, before the courts.
As we have to set the cause back so near its commencement, we decline deciding on the important questions of law, which have been raised and ably debated at the bar. The cause may appear in a different shape, on the final hearing. Then these questions may either be silenced, or made more formidable than they now appear :—
In doing so, we cannot help regretting that this suit should have engaged the talents of so many counsel, and progressed so solemnly through both courts, and consumed so much of the time of both, to the prejudice of other suitors, till the record is swelled to an inconvenient size, and yet he in no better state of preparation; and it has not been the least of the burden that it has imposed on us, the exploring of its transcript, badly made out by the clerk of the court below. It is full of needless repetitions and wrapped in obscurity by the transcriber, and has imposed upon the parties an unwarrantable weight of costs, and contained other imperfections and improprieties not easily to be surmounted. We often have grounds of complaint arising from records, unskilfully and improperly
The decree must be reversed, with costs, and the cause be remanded, for new preceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.