Mudd v. Grinder
Mudd v. Grinder
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
By the bill in this case the court was asked to decree the sale, of certain real estate for partition among parties supposed to be entitled thereto by descent, and for certain other relief. The defendant, Grinder, the party in possession, denies title in the plaintiffs, and sets up title in himself, acquired at a tax sale; and avers that the deed for the property has been made to him by proper authority. On this state of pleading and contention of the parties, the court ordered the case to stand over or to “ be suspended until the question of title to the property in question could be determined
It appears that the defendant Grinder, by his original answer to the bill, admitted the right of the plaintiffs, and a willingness to have the property sold. But afterwards, and after proof taken and the case was ready for hearing, he made application for leave to amend his original answer; and upon affidavit, as required by the rule of court, leave was given to file an amended answer. And by this amended answer, the defendant introduced a new defence, and denied that any title to the property was ever cast by descent upon any of the children of Maria Boswell, deceased, who are plaintiffs in the bill; and that the legal title to the property is in the defendant, John F. Grinder, acquired as purchaser at a tax sale of the property. It is denied that the court below had any power to allow the amendment of the original answer to be made at the then stage of the case; but that question would seem to have been fully regulated and controlled by Rule 53 of the Supreme Court of the District. Moreover, the order granting leave to amend is not before this court on the appeal taken — that appeal being from the order suspending the proceedings in equity until the question of the legal right was tried and determined at law, and not from the order giving leave to amend. Whether an appeal from such order, giving leave to amend an answer under the circumstances stated, will lie, is, a question we need not decide.
The legal title to the property is disputed; and while the jurisdiction of a court of equity to decree partition, or sale for partition, is undoubted in cases where there is no serious question of the legal title as between the parties,” it is equally well settled that the court does not sustain a bill for partition unless the legal title be clear; and where the legal title is disputed, the court will retain the bill to give the plaintiff an
Order affirmed, with costs to appellees, and cause remanded..
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MUDD v. GRINDER
- Status
- Published