Nolan v. Urmston
Nolan v. Urmston
Opinion of the Court
This case-was before the court at the last term, and examined upon a plea put in by the defendant, that the bill was not filed in time, within the five years allowed for that purpose by our statute. But the plea was overruled on the ground that the time under the act commenced to run from the day when the decree was actually rendered, and not from the first day of the term. 17 Ohio Rep. 170.
We have now to decide whether the case made by the bill is such as to justify the decree rendered, and if so can the decree be reversed for the want of sufficient evidence to support it.
Barr, while the owner of the land, conveyed it by deed in
There is nothing in this statement of the case, showing any acts inconsistent with equity, either on the part of Barr, the mortgagee, who had bought in, as may be supposed, Nolan’s equity of redemption, or on the part of Urmston, the complainant in the -original bill, who may have supposed that he had taken by his purchase, the entire title to the premises. The mortgagee’s equity of redemption is not an interest that cannot be affected except by a deed duly executed. It will receive indeed as against the claim of the mortgagee and his assignee the favorable consideration of a court of equity, but.still it may be forfeited, or made to pass by decree to a bona fide purchaser of the premises. If Urmston had made only a verbal agreement to purchase of Barr and Nolan, who, together, had a perfect title to the land, and had gone into possession and occupied as he shows he has done in this case, he would, upon payment of the purchase money, have been entitled to a decree for a conveyance in fee. If Nolan had encouraged Urmston to pay off Barr, or had stood by and permitted him to purchase under a belief that he had given up his interest to Barr, a court of equity would grant relief to the purchaser, and decree to him an unincumbered title.
There is a provision in the act regulating proceedings in chancery, (Swan’s Statutes 792,) by which any person having the legal title and the possession of land, may file a petition against
The defendant, in this bill of review, claims that the original bill contained all' the allegations required, to authorize a decree for the relief prayed for; and that the decree as above set forth, contains, within itself, all the evidence needed to support the case made in the bill. And such is the opinion of the court. The court in the 15 O. R. 313, says : “ That the exhibits and depositions are open for examination, unless the facts are found in the decree, but when they are so found, the court, on a bill of review, will only inquire whether they are sufficient, if true, to sustain the decree.” By this decree all the required facts are distinctly found by the court, and therefore without any reference to the exhibits and testimony, the decree must be sustained. But we have examined the depositions, and we find in them satisfactory evidence of all the facts stated in the decree.
The bill of review is dismissed.
Concurring Opinion
though concurring with the other members of the court sitting in the case, in the decree dismissing the bill, holding that the original decree was correct, and sustained by the proof in the case, dissented from so much of the opinion of the court as denies to a court of chancery, on a bill of review, the power to examine and pass upon the testimony, when the
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Mary Nolan v. Samuel Urmston
- Status
- Published