State v. Griftner
State v. Griftner
Opinion of the Court
The facts found by the circuit court show that the State of Ohio acquired the fee simple title to the lands in question by the occupation and use thereof for canal purposes, and that thereafter the former owners of the land had no title to, or interest in said lands. 23 O. L., 50, Sec. 8; State of Ohio ex rel. v. Ry. Co., 53 Ohio St., 189; State of Ohio v. Snook, 53 Ohio St., 521.
The claim is made by counsel for defendant in error, that the.state was not in possesion of these lands by itself or tenant, and that therefore it could not maintain an action to quiet title, and this was the ground upon which the circuit court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant below.
Section 5779 of the Revised Statutes provides that
“An action may be brought by a person in possession, by himself or tenant, of real property, against any person who claims an estate or interest therein, adverse to him, for the purpose of determining such adverse estate or interest.”
If the state was in possession of these lands by itself or tenant when it brought its action to quiet title it had a right to maintain the action, but if it was not in possession of the lands by itself or tenant it could not maintain this form of action.
The facts found show that the state acquired the fee simple title to the lands, and no fact appears
In the year 1890 the state caused these canal lands to be surveyed and platted, and claimed to be the owner thereof and asserted title thereto, and in August of that year duly executed and delivered a lease of said lands to said. P. P. Maxwell for a term of fifteen years, while he was holding under said lease from the" former owners and as their tenant, and he has remained in possession of said lands ever since, and has paid rent to the state, and. refused to pay rent to the former owners.
Under this state of facts, the question is whether the state was in possession of the lands by its tenant. The state claimed and was the owner of the lands, surveyed and platted the same, asserted title thereto and made a lease thereof and received the rent therefor. These facts clearly constitute possession by tenant.
But it is urged by counsel for defendant in error that as Mr. Maxwell had accepted a lease of these lands from the former owners, and was in possession of the lands under that lease when he accepted the lease from the state, that the doctrine
It is not a question as to what Mr. Maxwell can or cannot do as to disputing the title of his landlord, whether such landlord be the state or the former owners, but the question is whether the state had the power to put him into actual possession of its lands while he held, as against the state, a wrong
We therefore hold that under the facts as found by the circuit court, the possession of Mr. Maxwell under his lease from the state, was the possession of the state, and that his. duty to the former owners did not, as between the state and such former owners, disqualify him from becoming the actual tenant of the state, and that his possession under such actual tenancy was and is the possession of the state.
The title to these lands being in the state, the auditor of Warren county had no authority to put the lands upon the duplicate for taxation, and the tax sale and the deed of the auditor were void, and conferred no right upon the purchasers to hold the lands.
The judgment of the circuit court upon the facts found should have been for the state, and its judgment will thereforé be reversed, and judgment rendered by this court for plaintiff in error.
Judgment reversed and judgment for plaintiff in error.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.