Carroll v. Lessee of Olmsted
Carroll v. Lessee of Olmsted
Opinion of the Court
The court of common pleas erred, it is said, in refusing to charge the jury, as required, upon the defendants’ right of possession, and erred also in rejecting the deed from the executors of Aaron Olmsted to David Abbott, and the other subsequent deeds in the chain of title. These points have been examined at some length by the counsel, but we are not satisfied that in either case there was any error. We come, therefore, to consider the third alleged error, which has been amply discussed* and treated, we think, with reason, as presenting the important question in this case to be decided. This third error assigned is, the exclusion of the act of the legislature offered in evidence by the defendants. The act alluded to was passed as early as in the year 1813, January 7th, and the preamble recites substantially as follows: That whereas, Aaron Olmsted, late of Hartford, Connecticut, by his will devised to his three sons, Horace B., Aaron F., and Charles H. Olmsted, all his estate in the Connecticut Western Reserve, in Ohio, containing about 30,000 acres, to be to them (his said three sons) in equal shares, and to the heirs of their bodies lawfully begotten forever; and whereas said lands are unimproved and unproductive, and by reason of the entailment unsalable, whereby the aforesaid devisees are unable to derive any benefit' therefrom, or any means of paying the taxes thereon, which are yearly accumulating, with penalties aud interest, which must in a short period totally divest the said devisees of their interest in said lands, which to prevent, and to render said property useful to said devisees and their posterity. After reciting as aforesaid in the preamble, the act went on to provide that a committee should make partition of the lands among the three devisees; that they should be governed by the provisions of the general act to provide for the partition of real estate, and should make return of such partition to the Supreme Court for the counties within which the lands were situated. Three trustees were appointed by the act, to wit: Ma^r L. Olmsted, Levi Goodwin, and Caleb Goodwin; one, to wit, Mary L. Olm.sted, said to be the ^mother of the devisees, and the executrix named in the will, and another of the three, Caleb Goodwin, executor also of the will. The trustees were required to give bond to the acceptance of the Supreme Court, in double the value of the lands, conditioned for the faithful performance of the trust. They were authorized to sell and convey all or any part
Upon the trial of a cause, it is not essential that the facts to be proved should be introduced in any given order, though the party, 'before the close of his case, must be prepared to show each link in the chain of his evidence. Nor is it customary, before offering the proof of a fact, to state what further facts will be proved j such statement not being often of any use for the purposes of the trial. But if the cause is to be taken up by writ of error, and the judgment of the court questioned for rejecting evidence, then it may be desirable to know the state of facts connected with the
The important question in the case, and whieh we are now called to decide, is, whether the act, with the evidence in connection with it, will support the title of the defendants in ejectment. And here, in behalf of the children of the devisees, the ground is taken, that the act is unconstitutional and therefore void; that it is a special act, attempting to take the property of one person, and without or against his consent, to give it to another. This makes it proper to inquire, what kind of estate was to be operated upon by this act. It is described in the will of Aaron Olmsted, as devised to his three sons in equal shares, and to the heirs of their bodies lawfully begotten forever. The law must determine what estate the devisor meant to convey, and what power over it belongs to the devisee. We may go back to the early periods of the English common law, and in the search among its ancient records we shall discover that words such as are employed in this will meant in England, first, *a conditional fee, and afterward, by the operation of statute de donis, a fee tail.
By the law, under the first description of estate, if the grantee had issue, the estate became absolute in him, so that, by his conveyance, he could bar both his own issue and the reversioner; and, even before issue, the grantee could have barred his issue. But in England a restraint was imposed upon this power of alienation by the above-mentioned statute, and the result was, that this conditional fee became a fee-tail. Such a fettering of estates created great uneasiness and dissatisfaction, but the struggles to obtain relief beiore the parliament, were without any success. Afterward, while the evil was pressing with great severity upon the body of the English subjects, and parliament, to whom the duty properly belonged, refused to interpose and pass the necessary laws, that relief, in another form, was obtained from this great national grievance. It was secured by what has been characterized as a bold and unexampled stretch of the power of judicial legislation. The English judges, upon consultation, resolved that
The tenant holding a conditional fee could, by the common law, pass a title to the estate. By an act of parliament, the statute de donis, the owner was deprived of his ancient power of alienation ; and, by this act, it is said, the true policy and rule of the common law was overthrown. But this resolve of the judges before mentioned, in effect, at once removed burdensome restraints which had been imposed upon alienations, by the express provisions of a statute, and furnished a memorable instance of an act of the English judges, which could resist and overturn the power, sometimes irreverently called omnipotent, of an English act of parliament. This interposition of the courts of law took place as early as in the reign of Edward IY. Afterward ^restraints were in various ways further removed ; and estates tail in England have long been reduced to almost the same state even before issue born, as conditional fees were at common law after the birth of issue. 4 Kent’s Cora. 12, 13, etc. In which case, as has been before stated, the grantee can pass a perfect title, barring both his own children and the reversioner.
It is asked, in the present case, whether an estate tail could ever have existed in Ohio, and whether any such estate was recognized when the will of Aaron Olmsted took effect, on September 9, 1806. We have had some legislation in this state, by which, in terms, the English common law, and statutes made in aid of the common law, wore introduced into this state. The last act upon the subject repealed the law which had expressly adopted the common law, and certain statutes made in aid thereof, which were not mentioned by name. The repealing act was passed in January, 1806. What was the effect of this legislation, first adopting the common law in a body, and then repealing the law which had so adopted it? It has not been to exclude the common law. That has always been in force, and it could not have been excluded without producing effects marked in character like those which follow in the train of a revolution. If that could have been actually excluded, we must, from necessity, have been driven to adopt at once the civil law, or some other code, to furnish a system of rules needed to act upon the countless and complicated
Upon one of the English laws, the statute of uses, which was deemed objectionable, this court passed in the case of Helfenstine’s Lessee, 7 Ohio, 276. Of this law, they there say, if ever in force, it became so by the statute of 1795 or 1805, and was-repealed by that of 1806.
It will be discovered, by this view of the case, that the title of issue, even if an estate tail be created by the words of the will, would not probably have been deemed a serious obstacle in the way of any conveyance, when such conveyance was believed to be demanded by circumstances. But upon the supposition that rights were actually created by the will, which would become vested rights in th e issue of the devisees, upon the birth of such issue, then it is to be determined in that aspect of the case, whether the act in question, or so much as authorized a sale of the premises, is valid.
The legislature undertook to provide, by a private act, that certain trustees named in the act should have power to pass the title to this estate. Had they the power ? It can not be claimed that in England, from which mainly we derive the principles governing in our system of jurisprudence, innumerable private acts of parliament have been passed; and from a remote period down to
Upon legal principles, as applied to this case, we think the defendants in ejectment had a right to give the special act in evidence, and that the common pleas erred in rejecting it.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Noah Carroll and another v. Lessee of Aaron G. Olmsted and others
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