Shepherd v. McIntire
Shepherd v. McIntire
Opinion of the Court
delivered the Opinion of the Court in this case—in the decision of which Judge Ewing took no part.
James McIntire and John McIntire, two of the sons of Nicholas McIntire, having, prior to 1805, taken possession of a thousand acres of land in Bourbon county, granted to their father in 1784, each of them claiming to be entitled to the equitable right to a moiety thereof, by bonds from their father, dated in 1784—he died in 1805, after publishing a will, afterwards admitted to record, in which, after making various specific devises, not affecting the Bourbon tract of land, he devised the residue of his estate to his sons Jacob and Isaac McIntire, who afterwards claimed that tract under that residuary devise.
James McIntire, some time prior to 1810, sold to James Hughes two hundred and twenty seven acres of the said tract of one thousand acres; and, in 1808, Isaac McIntire, for the recited consideration of five pounds, conveyed whatever interest he held in the same tract of one thousand acres, to John McIntire.
In 1814—during the pendency of a suit in chancery brought in 1810, by James Hughes against the heirs of Nicholas McIntire, deceased, for a conveyance to the two hundred and twenty seven acres he had bought from James McIntire—Isaac McIntire conveyed to Hughes all his interest in the entire tract of one thousand acres; and, in 1819, whilst the same suit was still pending, James McIntire assigned to Hughes, the bond he held on his father for five hundred acres. And, in consequence of these sales by James McIntire, Hughes finally obtained a decree against Jacob and Isaac McIntire, for a conveyance of the legal title they claimed as residuary devisees, to four hundred and fifty acres—
In 1822, a fieri facias for sixty six dollars sixty two cents, which had been issued for costs decreed in favor of Hughes, in the suit just mentioned, was levied on Jacob McIntire’s remaining interest in the tract of one thousand acres; and, at a sale under that execution, Shepherd—for about seventy dollars—bought, and obtained the sheriff’s deed for, the whole of that interest, supposed to be the undivided legal right to two hundred and fifty acres. Afterwards, in 1823, having, himself, procured the revival of a judgment of eviction which had been obtained by Jacob McIntire against John McIntire, and others holding under him, and having also caused a writ of habere facias possessionem to be issued on that judgment, Shepherd was put into the possession of about two hundred and forty seven acres by the sheriff, under that writ; and which land he has ever since occupied and claimed as a purchaser under the execution against Jacob McIntire, and also under a contract of purchase, alleged to have been made in 1823, with James Hughes for the most of the undivided interest of five hundred acres, claimed by him under the deed of 1814, from Isaac McIntire.
The sheriff’s deed to Shepherd having afterwards been declared void by this Court: first—because the sale under the execution was made whilst persons holding adversely to Jacob McIntire were in the actual and exclusive possession of the land thus sold; and, secondly—because the decree, to enforce which the execution was issued, had been rendered on a contract made before land in this State was subject to sale under execution—an action of ejectment was brought against him, on the demise of Jacob McIntire, and a judgment for an undivided moiety of the two hundred and forty seven acres was therein rendered against him.
To enjoin that judgment, and also to obtain other and general relief, this bill in chancery was filed by Shepherd against Jacob McIntire and Kenaz Farrow claiming under him, and against the heirs of James Hughes, deceased.
The bill was taken for confessed against Jacob McIntire. And Hughes’ heirs having required proof of the alleged sale by their father, and Farrow having demurred in part and answered in part—the Circuit Court, upon the final hearing of the case, dissolved Shepherd’s injunction, and dismissed his bill absolutely.
It is to reverse that decree that this appeal is prosecuted.
In revising the decree, we will first consider the appellant’s claim to relief against the judgment in ejectment for Jacob McIntire’s undivided moiety of the two hundred and twenty seven acres; and afterwards notice his claim under his alleged contract with Hughes.
And as to this first matter, there is, in our judgment, error to the prejudice of the appellant.
First. Were he entitled to nothing else, he has, we think, an equitable right to retain the possession of the land as a security for the money which, as we must presume, he paid to the use of Jacob McIntire, on Hughes’ execution against him. And the injunction to McIntire’s judgment of eviction should not be dissolved, until that sum shall have been reimbursed, or, in some equitable mode, settled. That matter ought, therefore, in our opinion, to have been investigated and equitably adjusted—and the record does not show that the appellant has no right to the equitable lien.
Second. After the filing of his original bill, the appellant urged, in some of his amended bills, the discovery of the fact, that Farrow had made with Jacob McIntire, a champertous contract for the land, and had carried on the action of ejectment in McIntire’s name, for his (Farrow’s) own benefit; and had, for a nominal pecuniary consideration, obtained a conveyance for Jacob’s interest in the entire tract of land. To these allegations Farrow demurred, and the Circuit Judge sustained his demurrers. The facts, as alleged, must therefore be
But according to the allegations, as made and confessed, the contract between Farrow and Jacob McIntire, was in violation of the second section of the statute last referred to—which declares, that neither party shall have a right to maintain any suit on the title concerning which the champertous contract was made. And this provision is certainly constitutional—even though that which denounces a forfeiture of the title itself may not be so. And, indeed, the sole object of the whole of that anomalous statute, was to act on the remedy, and not to destroy the mere title. Even the provisions respecting cultivation and improvement are merely subsidiary to the purpose of enforcing the occupant statute of 1812; because no forfeiture is denounced for non-improvement, if a successful claimant will agree, on record, to abide the provisions of the act of 1812. The only practical effect of all the provisions respecting cultivation and forfeiture for non-cultivation, is, therefore, that, if the successful claimant will submit to the act of 1812, there shall be no forfeiture. And even if the forfeiture of title, in the mode prescribed by the act of
Then, had the facts now urged, and virtually admitted, been known and proved on the trial of the action of ejectment, the lessor could not have obtained the judgment which the appellant has enjoined.
But, as the eleventh section of the act of 1824, authorizing a bill in chancery after judgment, does not apply to cases arising under the first and second section, the facts now relied on, can, in our opinion, be made available after judgment, for one purpose only; and that is a new trial in the action of ejectment.
We are, therefore, of the opinion, that the Circuit Judge erred in sustaining the demurrers, and also in overruling the appellant’s motion for leave to file an amended bill, setting forth other and more specific facts than those previously exhibited. If the facts thus stated be admitted or proved, the injunction should be perpetuated, unless Farrow will consent to a new trial of the ejectment.
But upon the next point:, the claim to partition—in consequence of Isaac McIntire’s deed to Hughes, and of the alleged bond of the latter to the appellant—depends on other and different facts and principles; and, upon the facts as now appearing, it would be difficult to perceive any sufficient ground for decreeing a partition, or for giving any other relief than that indicated in the first branch of this opinion: unless, as is not improbable, McIntire’s title was established by the Supreme Court of the United States, against that of Miller’s heirs, through the instrumentality of the appellant. If this be
But if he could be entitled to any other or greater relief in this branch of the case, he has failed to establish satisfactorily the facts upon which he seeks that relief: first—although required by Hughes’ heirs to prove that he holds their ancestor’s bond, he has exhibited only a paper purporting to be a copy of such an obligation, and his evidence is far from being satisfactory or sufficient to show that there ever was a genuine original.
Second. The prior deed from Isaac to John McIntire, has not been successfully assailed. It is by no means certain that John’s bond on his father was spurious, (1.) because he settled on the land long prior to his father’s death, and was not disturbed or questioned as to his right; (2.) because James McIntire having a genuine bond for one moiety of the thousand acres; and he and John both being on the land, claiming it as their own, and their father having failed to make, any specific disposition of it by his will—are facts conducing, in no slight degree, to the conclusion that the testator had given the whole thousand acres to his two sons, James and John—one undivided moiety to each; and (3.) because it is scarcely probable that Isaac McIntire would have conveyed all his interest to John, for the nominal consideration of five pounds, unless he had known that John, as well as James, was equitably entitled to a moiety of the thousand acres, and that therefore he himself had no available right to any interest therein under the residuary devise to himself and Jacob.
But there is no proof of fraud, or of entire want of consideration in the conveyance from Isaac to John McIntire; and not only is it rather probable that Hughes
It would rather appear, therefore, from the facts, as now exhibited, that John McIntire’s heirs may have been entitled to an undivided moiety of the thousand acres, either under his father’s gift, or the deed from Isaac McIntire; and if under the former, Jacob McIntire would have no equitable right to any portion of the tract.
But to litigate these facts conclusively, John McIntire’s heirs were necessary parties, and the record does not show that they were ever made parties. They petitioned to be made parties, and there is a paper in the record purporting to be an answer by the appellant, to a bill filed by them; but there is neither any such bill, or cross bill, in the record, nor any answer by those heirs to the appellant’s bill, nor even any record evidence of their having been, in any mode, made parties to this suit.
It was, therefore, under this head, erroneous to dismiss the appellant’s bills absolutely.
Wherefore, the decree of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to the charge of champerty, and give leave to answer thereto; and also to give leave to bring the heirs of John McIntire before the Court.
Reference
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- Shepherd against McIntire and Others
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