1. A statute of Nebraska provided that an action may be brought
and prosecuted to final decree, judgment, or order, by any person
or persons,
Page 110 U. S. 16
whether in actual possession or not, claiming the title to real
estate against any person or persons who claim an adverse estate or
interest therein, for the purpose of determining such estate or
interest and quieting the title to such real estate.
Held
that it dispensed with the general rule of courts of equity that in
order to maintain a bill to quiet title, it is necessary that the
party should be in possession, and in most cases that his title
should have been established by law or founded on undisputed
evidence or long continued possession.
Clark v.
Smith, 13 Pet. 195, with reference to a Kentucky
statute, in some respects, similar, approved.
2. Jurisdiction over proceedings to quiet title and prevent
litigation is inherent in courts of equity, and although the courts
have imposed limitations upon its exercise, it is always competent
for the legislative power to remove those restrictions.
3. While it is true that alterations in the jurisdiction of
state courts cannot affect the jurisdiction of the circuit courts
of the United States so long as the equitable rights themselves
remain, yet an enlargement of equitable rights may be administered
by the circuit courts as well as by the courts of the state.
4. Under the Nebraska statute cited above, a bill to quiet title
which on its face presented a good title in the complainant gave
him the right to call upon the defendant to produce and disclose
whatever estate he had in the premises in question, to the end that
its validity might be determined, and if adjudged invalid, that the
title of the plaintiff might be quieted.
Bill in equity to quiet title. Plaintiff claimed under a tax
sale, but did not aver possession. Defendant was owner prior to the
tax sale. The bill charged
"That said defendant is contriving now to wrong and injure your
orator in the premises by claiming to be the owner of said real
estate and by trying to obtain, take, and keep possession thereof,
and by denying and slandering your orator's title to and his right
of possession thereof, all of which acts, doings, and pretenses of
said defendant are contrary to equity and good conscience and tend
to the manifest wrong, injury, and oppression of your orator in the
premises."
The defendants demurred, and the court below dismissed the bill.
The plaintiff appealed.
Page 110 U. S. 17
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit in equity to quiet the title of the plaintiff to
certain real property in Nebraska as against the claim of the
defendant to an adverse estate in the premises. It is founded upon
a statute of that state which provides
"that an action may be brought and prosecuted to final decree,
judgment, or order by any person or persons, whether in actual
possession or not, claiming title to real estate against any person
or persons who claim an adverse estate or interest therein for the
purpose of determining such estate or interest and quieting the
title to such real estate."
The bill alleges that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple
and entitled to the possession of the real property described. It
then sets forth the origin of his title, particularly specifying
the deeds by which it was obtained, and alleges that the defendant
claims an adverse estate or interest in the premises;
Page 110 U. S. 18
that the claim so affects his title as to render a sale or other
disposition of the property impossible, and that it disturbs him in
his right of possession. It therefore prays that the defendant may
be required to show the nature of the adverse estate or interest
claimed by her; that the title of the plaintiff may be adjudged
valid and quieted as against her and parties claiming under her and
his right of possession be thereby assured, and that the defendant
may be decreed to have no estate in the premises and "be enjoined
from in any manner injuring or hindering" the plaintiff in his
title and possession.
The defendant demurred to the bill on the ground that the
plaintiff had not made or stated such a case as entitled him to the
discovery or relief prayed. Te court below sustained the demurrer
and dismissed the bill. From this decree the case is brought here
on appeal.
It does not appear from the record in what particulars it was
contended in the court below that the bill is defective -- that is
in what respect it fails to show a right to the relief prayed. We
infer, however, from the briefs of counsel that the same positions
now urged in support of the decree were then urged against the bill
-- that is that the title of the plaintiff to the property has not
been by prior proceedings judicially adjudged to be valid, and that
he is not in possession of the property -- the contention of the
defendant being that when either of these conditions exist, a court
of equity will not interpose its authority to remove a cloud upon
the title of the plaintiff, and determine his right to the
possession of the property.
The statute of Nebraska enlarges the class of cases in which
relief was formerly afforded by a court of equity in quieting the
title to real property. It authorizes the institution of legal
proceedings not merely in cases where a bill of peace would lie --
that is, to establish the title of the plaintiff against numerous
parties insisting upon the same right or to obtain repose against
repeated litigation of an unsuccessful claim by the same party --
but also to prevent future litigation respecting the property by
removing existing causes of controversy as to its title, and so
embraces cases where a bill
quia timet to remove a cloud
upon the title would lie.
Page 110 U. S. 19
A bill of peace against an individual reiterating an
unsuccessful claim to real property would formerly lie only where
the plaintiff was in possession, and his right had been
successfully maintained. The equity of the plaintiff in such cases
arose from the protracted litigation for the possession of the
property which the action of ejectment at common law permitted.
That action being founded upon a fictitious demise between
fictitious parties, a recovery in one action constituted no bar to
another similar action, or to any number of such actions. A change
in the date of the alleged demise was sufficient to support a new
action. Thus the party in possession, though successful in every
instance, might be harassed and vexed, if not ruined, by a
litigation constantly renewed. To put an end to such litigation and
give repose to the successful party, courts of equity interfered
and closed the controversy. To entitle the plaintiff to relief in
such cases, the concurrence of three particulars was essential. He
must have been in possession of the property, he must have been
disturbed in its possession by repeated actions at law, and he must
have established his right by successive judgments in his favor.
Upon these facts appearing, the court would interpose and grant a
perpetual injunction to quiet the possession of the plaintiff
against any further litigation from the same source. It was only in
this way that adequate relief could be afforded against vexatious
litigation and the irreparable mischief which it entailed. Adams on
Equity 202; Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence § 248;
Stark
v. Starrs, 6 Wall. 409;
Curtis v. Sutter,
15 Cal. 259;
Shipley v. Rangeley, 2 Ware 242;
Devonsher v. Newenham, 2 Schoales & Lef. 208.
In most of the states in this country, and Nebraska among them,
the action of ejectment to recover the possession of real property,
as existing at common law, has been abolished with all its
fictions. Actions for the possession of such property are now not
essentially different in form from actions for other property. It
is no longer necessary to allege what is not true in fact and not
essential to be proved. The names of the real contestants must
appear as parties to the action, and it is generally sufficient for
the plaintiff to allege the possession or
Page 110 U. S. 20
seizing by him of the premises in controversy, or of some estate
therein, on some designated day, the subsequent entry of the
defendant, and his withholding of the premises from the plaintiff,
and although the plaintiff may in such cases recover, when a
present right of possession is established, though the ownership be
in another, yet such right may involve, and generally does involve,
a consideration of the actual ownership of the property, and in
such cases the judgment is as much a bar to future litigation
between the parties with respect to the title as a judgment in
other actions is a bar to future litigation upon the subjects
determined. Where this new form of action is adopted and this rule
as to the effect of a judgment therein obtains, there can be no
necessity of repeated adjudications at law upon the right of the
plaintiff as a preliminary to his invoking the jurisdiction of a
court of equity to quiet his possession against an asserted claim
to the property. A bill
quia timet or to remove a cloud
upon the title of real estate differed from a bill of peace in that
it did not seek so much to put an end to vexatious litigation
respecting the property as to prevent future litigation by removing
existing causes of controversy as to its title. It was brought in
view of anticipated wrongs or mischiefs, and the jurisdiction of
the court was invoked because the party feared future injury to his
rights or interests. Story's Equity § 826. To maintain a suit of
this character, it was generally necessary that the plaintiff
should be in possession of the property, and, except where the
defendants were numerous, that his title should have been
established at law or be founded on undisputed evidence or long
continued possession.
Alexarder v.
Pendleton, 8 Cranch 462;
Peirsoll v.
Elliott, 6 Pet. 95;
Orton v.
Smith, 18 How. 263.
The statute of Nebraska authorizes a suit in either of these
classes of cases without reference to any previous judicial
determination of the validity of the plaintiff's right and without
reference to his possession. Any person claiming title to real
estate, whether in or out of possession, may maintain the suit
against one who claims an adverse estate or interest in it for the
purpose of determining such estate and quieting the title.
Page 110 U. S. 21
It is certainly for the interest of the state that this
jurisdiction of the court should be maintained, and that causes of
apprehended litigation respecting real property, necessarily
affecting its use and enjoyment, should be removed, for so long as
they remain, they will prevent improvement, and consequent benefit
to the public. It is a matter of everyday observation that many
lots of land in our cities remain unimproved because of conflicting
claims to them. The rightful owner of a parcel in this condition
hesitates to place valuable improvements upon it, and others are
unwilling to purchase it, much less to erect buildings upon it,
with the certainty of litigation and possible loss of the whole.
And what is true of lots in cities the ownership of which is in
dispute is equally true of large tracts of land in the country. The
property in this case, to quiet the title to which the present suit
is brought, is described in the bill as unoccupied, wild, and
uncultivated land. Few persons would be willing to take possession
of such land, enclose cultivate, and improve it in the face of a
disputed claim to its ownership. The cost of such improvements
would probably exceed the value of the property. An action of
ejectment for it would not lie, as it has no occupant, and if, as
contended by the defendant, no relief can be had in equity because
the party claiming ownership is not in possession, the land must
continue in its unimproved condition. It is manifestly for the
interest of the community that conflicting claims to property thus
situated should be settled so that it may be subjected to use and
improvement. To meet cases of this character, statutes like the one
of Nebraska have been passed by several states, and they accomplish
a most useful purpose. And there is no good reason why the right to
relief against an admitted obstruction to the cultivation, use, and
improvement of lands thus situated in the states should not be
enforced by the federal courts when the controversy to which it may
give rise is between citizens of different states.
In
Clarke v.
Smith, 13 Pet. 195, a doctrine is declared, with
reference to the legislation of Kentucky as to the removal of
clouds upon titles to land, which seems to us to be applicable
here, and to be decisive of this point. A law of
Page 110 U. S. 22
that state regulating proceedings in the courts of chancery
provided
"That any person having both the legal title to and possession
of land may institute a suit against any other person setting up a
claim thereto, and if the complainant shall be able to establish
his title to such land, the defendant shall be decreed to release
his claim thereto and pay the complainant his costs, unless the
defendant shall by answer disclaim all title to such lands, and
offer to give such release to the complainant."
Under that act, the complainant Clark filed a bill in the
circuit court of the United States to compel the defendant to
release the title claimed by him to certain lands, under patents
from the State of Kentucky, obtained years after the registration
of the survey of the ancestor of the complainant and patent to him.
The circuit court heard the evidence of the parties as to their
respective claims, and was of opinion that the complainant had
established a legal title to the premises under a valid grant from
the commonwealth, and was in possession at the commencement of the
suit, and that the defendant had not shown any right or title,
either in law or in equity, to the land or any part of it; but
being divided in opinion on the question of the jurisdiction of the
court to compel the defendant to execute a conveyance, the bill was
dismissed. On the case's coming here, the decree below was
reversed. In giving its decision, this Court referred to the
unsettled condition of titles in Kentucky and observed that
"Conflicts of title were unfortunately so numerous that no one
knew from whom to buy or take lands with safety, nor could
improvements be made without great hazard by those in possession
who had conflicting claims hanging over them and which might thus
continue for half a century, the writ of right being limited to
fifty years in some cases -- that is, where it was brought upon the
seizing of an ancestor or predecessor -- and to thirty years if on
the demandant's own seizin. During all which time, the party in
possession had no power to litigate, much less to settle the title
at law, though he might be harassed by many actions of ejectment
and his peace and property destroyed, although always
successful,
Page 110 U. S. 23
by no means an uncommon occurrence. This evil it was the object
and policy of the legislature to cure, not so much by prescribing a
mode of proceeding as by conferring a right on him who had the
better title and the possession to draw to him the outstanding
inferior claims."
And again:
"Kentucky has the undoubted power to regulate and protect
individual rights to her soil and to declare what should form a
cloud on titles, and, having so declared, the courts of the United
States, by removing such clouds, are only applying an old process
to a new equity created by the legislature, having its origin in
the peculiar condition of the county."
"The state legislatures," the Court added,
"certainly have no authority to prescribe the forms and modes of
proceeding in the courts of the United States, but, having created
a right and at the same time prescribed the remedy to enforce it,
if the remedy prescribed is substantially consistent with the
ordinary modes of proceeding on the chancery side of the federal
courts, no reason exists why it should not be pursued in the same
form as in the state court; on the contrary, propriety and
convenience suggest that the practice should not materially differ
where titles to lands are the subjects of investigation. And such
is the constant course of the federal courts."
The opinion concludes with the observation
"That when investigating and decreeing on titles in this
country, we must deal with them in practice as we find them, and
accommodate our modes of proceeding, in a considerable degree, to
the nature of the case and the character of the equities involved
in the controversy, so as to give effect to state legislation and
state policy, not departing, however, from what legitimately
belongs to the practice of a court of chancery."
That case differs from the one at bar in that the complainant
was in possession of the premises at the commencement of the suit,
and the law of Kentucky gave the right to the relief claimed only
to persons having both the legal title and the possession. But the
law did not require that such possession should have been disturbed
by legal proceedings, and that the title of the plaintiff should be
sustained in them by judgments in his favor, before the court could
entertain jurisdiction of the
Page 110 U. S. 24
case and grant the relief prayed, and therefore no such
disturbance of his possession and adjudication sustaining his title
were held to be essential to the maintenance of the suit. If the
jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed remained unaffected when
the legislature had thus dispensed with previous legal proceedings
affecting the possession of the plaintiff, it would seem to follow
that the jurisdiction would remain unimpaired if possession itself,
as a condition of the institution of the suit, was also dispensed
with.
The truth is that the jurisdiction to relieve the holders of
real property from vexatious claims to it, casting a cloud upon
their title and thus disturbing them in its peaceable use and
enjoyment, is inherent in a court of equity, and though conditions
to its exercise have at different times been prescribed by that
court both in England and in this country, they may at any time be
changed or dispensed with by the legislature without impairing the
general authority of the court. Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence §
1398. The equitable rights of parties in Nebraska claiming the
legal title to real property are simply enlarged by its statute,
not changed in character. And the language used by this Court,
speaking by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, in the
Broderick Will
case, is appropriate here:
"Whilst it is true that alterations in the jurisdiction of the
state courts cannot affect the equitable jurisdiction of the
circuit courts of the United States so long as the equitable rights
themselves remain, yet an enlargement of equitable rights may be
administered by the circuit courts as well as by the courts of the
state."
And it may be affirmed of this case what was said as probably
true of that one -- that it is "a case in which an enlargement of
equitable rights is effected, although presented in the form of a
remedial proceeding." "Indeed," as the Court there observed, "much
of equitable jurisdiction consists of better and more effective
remedies for attaining the rights of parties." 21 Wall.
88 U. S.
520.
No adequate relief to the owners of real property against the
adverse claims of parties not in possession can be given by a court
of law. If the holders of such claims do not seek to enforce them,
the party in possession, or entitled to the possession
Page 110 U. S. 25
-- the actual owner of the fee -- is helpless in the matter
unless he can resort to a court of equity.
It does not follow that by allowing in the federal courts a suit
for relief under the statute of Nebraska, controversies properly
cognizable in a court of law will be drawn into a court of equity.
There can be no controversy at law respecting the title or right of
possession to real property when neither of the parties is in
possession. An action at law, whether in the ancient form of
ejectment or in the form now commonly used, will lie only against a
party in possession. Should suit be brought in the federal court
under the Nebraska statute against a party in possession, there
would be force in the objection that a legal controversy was
withdrawn from a court of law; but that is not this case, nor is it
of such cases we are speaking. Undoubtedly, as a foundation for the
relief sought, the plaintiff must show that he has a legal title to
the premises, and generally that title will be exhibited by
conveyances or instruments of record, the construction and effect
of which will properly rest with the court. Such also will
generally be the case with the adverse estates or interests claimed
by others. This was the character of the proofs establishing the
title of the complainant in
Clark v. Smith, supra. But
should proofs of a different character be produced, the controversy
would still be one upon which a court of law could not act. It is
not an objection to the jurisdiction of equity that legal questions
are presented for consideration which might also arise in a court
of law. If the controversy be one in which a court of equity only
can afford the relief prayed for, its jurisdiction is unaffected by
the character of the questions involved.
In the present case, the plaintiff claims under a purchaser at a
tax sale by the state, to whom deeds by the treasurer of the county
in which the property is situated were executed. By the law of
Nebraska, the fee of real property, and not merely a term of years,
may be sold for unpaid taxes. A certain time is allowed to the
owner to redeem the property from such a sale, but if redemption is
not made within the period designated, a deed is executed by the
treasurer of the county to the purchaser, and such deed vests in
him the right,
Page 110 U. S. 26
title, and estate of the former owner of the land and also of
the state and county, and is evidence in all courts that the
property conveyed was subject to the taxes for the years stated;
that they were not paid, and that redemption was not made before
the sale; that the property had been properly listed and assessed
and the taxes properly levied; that the property was advertised for
sale in the manner and for the length of time required, and was
sold as stated in the deed, and that the grantee named was the
purchaser or assignee of the purchaser of the property; and,
indeed, that all the prerequisites of the law had been complied
with by the officers whose duty it was to have taken any part in
the transaction relating to or affecting the title conveyed. No
person is permitted to question the title thus acquired without
showing that he had title to the property at the time of the sale
or has since obtained the title from the United States, and that
the property was not subject to taxation for the years named, or
that the taxes had been paid before the sale, or that the property
had never been assessed for taxation, or had been redeemed from the
sale, or that there had been fraud committed by the officer in
making the sale, or by the purchaser to defeat it.
The plaintiff therefore had a complete legal title to the
premises in controversy unless some one of the defects mentioned,
affecting the validity of the assessment and sale of the property,
existed at the time or fraud had been committed by the officer or
purchaser in the sale. Having an apparent legal title by the deeds,
it was, of course, important to him and indeed necessary for the
peaceable possession of the property and its improvement to have
any adverse claims, notwithstanding such deeds, considered and
settled.
We think, therefore, that he was entitled, upon the statement
made in his amended bill, the only one before us, to call upon the
defendant to produce and disclose whatever estate she had in the
premises in question, to the end that its validity may be
determined, and if adjudged invalid, that the title of the
plaintiff may be quieted. It follows that the decree of the court
below must be reversed and the cause remanded, with leave to the
defendant to answer the bill, and
It is so ordered.