Parties in possession of land under titles from various sources
and having the equitable, as well as the legal, title to a portion
of it and the equitable, but not the legal, title to the remainder,
may, under the circumstances of this case, properly invoke the aid
of equity to restrain other parties from maintaining ejectment
suits and to adjudicate the title to the entire tract in a single
suit.
A court of equity ought to do justice completely, and not by
halves.
As a court of equity should prevent multiplicity of suits, it
may, to this end, if obliged to take cognizance of a suit for any
purpose, retain it for all purposes, even though required to
determine purely legal rights otherwise beyond its authority.
While a term, such as "ground rents," used in a conveyance may
not be the recognized equivalent of any legal estate in lands, the
court may ascertain the recognized meaning given to it and resort
to that as evidence of the intent of the parties using it, and thus
determine what effect ought in equity to be given to it.
The term " ground rents," as used in the deeds and proceedings
involved in this case, did not import merely the rents that were to
accrue during the residue of a 99-year lease renewable forever, but
included the reversion as well, it appearing that the entire
beneficial interest of the owner of the ground rents and the
reversion was undoubtedly the subject of the sale, and within the
contemplation of the buyer and seller.
Deeds made by a public officer in pursuance of a decree of the
court which are defective in form by reason of a mistake made by
such public officer will pass the title to the property intended to
be conveyed, as harmful consequences should not fall upon
purchasers who, in reliance upon apparent regularity, have paid
their money for the property.
Equity regards that as done which ought to be done. It looks to
the true intent and meaning, rather than to the form. It relieves
of consequences of accident and mistake, as well as fraud.
35 App.D.C. 159 affirmed.
Page 229 U. S. 531
The facts, which involve the title, legal and equitable, to
certain real estate in the City of Washington, District of
Columbia, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia affirming a decree of the Supreme Court
establishing the title of the complainants (now appellees) to a lot
of land in the City of Washington and granting a perpetual
injunction against the further prosecution of an action of
ejectment that was brought by the appellant, Joseph Parker Camp,
against Caleb C. Willard, the devisor of the complainants, to
recover possession, and also enjoining Camp and all persons
claiming under him from instituting any further proceedings at law
or in equity for the possession of, or for asserting any claim to,
the land. The cause was heard in the Supreme Court upon a demurrer
to the bill of complaint, which was overruled (37 Wash.Law Rep.
14), and, the defendant having elected to stand upon his demurrer,
a final decree followed as of course. The decision of the Court of
Appeals is reported, 38 Wash.Law Re. 374, 35 App.D.C. 159.
Both parties claim under Samuel Blodget, Jr., who owned the
property in the early days of the federal Capital. The bill of
complaint sets forth the full history of the title, with copies of
the instruments of conveyance and other documents necessary to a
complete understanding
Page 229 U. S. 532
of the controversy. All the facts hereinafter stated respecting
the title are derived from the averments of the bill and from the
documents filed with it and by reference made parts of it.
The property in question is described as:
"Original lot numbered twenty, in square numbered two hundred
and fifty-four, in the City of Washington, in the District of
Columbia, as the same is laid down on the ground plan or map of
said city."
This square is bounded by E and F Streets, and by 13th and 14th
Streets, in the Northwest section, Lot No. 20 being on the
southerly side of F Street.
Under the Act of Congress entitled "An Act for Establishing the
Temporary and Permanent Seat of the government of the United
States," passed July 16, 1790 (1 Stat. 130, c. 28), three
Commissioners were appointed by President Washington, and they in
the following year made a friendly agreement with the original
landholders which resulted in laying out the city in squares and
streets and the subdivision of the squares, and, in the year 1792,
a partition of the lands was made between the original proprietors
and the Commissioners. In that division, this lot was amongst those
set off to the Commissioners, and it, with some adjoining lots, was
sold by them to Blodget in the same year. But no conveyance was
made to him, and he therefore acquired only an equitable
interest.
Blodget about that time organized a lottery under the sanction
of the Commissioners, and advertised it as done
"by the Commissioners appointed to prepare the public buildings,
etc., within the City of Washington, for the reception of Congress,
and for the permanent residence after the year 1800."
It was announced as "a lottery for the improvement of the
Federal City." It was stated that the sole design of the lottery
was to facilitate other improvements, together with the public
buildings. The capital prize announced was -- "One superb hotel,
with
Page 229 U. S. 533
baths, outhouses, etc., etc., to cost $50,000," with cash prizes
aggregating $300,000 in addition. The advertisement stated that
"the keys of the hotel, when complete, will be delivered to the
fortunate possessor of the ticket drawn against its number," and
that "$100 will be given for the best plan of an elegant and
convenient hotel or inn, with hot and cold baths, stable," etc. The
advertisement was subscribed, "S. Blodget, Agent for the Affairs of
the City." Large sales of tickets having been made by Blodget, and
by Colonel William Deakins, Jr., who appears to have been his
partner in the scheme, and some time having elapsed without a
drawing's being made, the Commissioners became uneasy because of
their real or supposed responsibility for the prizes, whereupon
Blodget and Deakins gave them a written declaration under seal,
dated September 20, 1793, agreeing to indemnify the Commissioners
from all claims and demands by reason of any prize to be drawn.
Afterwards, and at the request of the Commissioners, Blodget, who
appears to have been a large landowner in the District, made a
mortgage or deed of trust, under date of January 28, 1794, to
Thomas Johnson, Jr., and Thomas Peter, as trustees, for securing
the payment of the prizes and for the indemnity of Thomas Johnson,
David Steuart, and Daniel Carroll, the Commissioners, their
successors, etc. By the mortgage, Blodget transferred in fee to
Thomas Johnson, Jr., and Thomas Peter
"all the lands and real estate and property of him, the said
Samuel Blodget, situate and being within the Territory of Columbia,
with their . . . appurtenances, and all the estate, right, title,
etc., in law and in equity"
of Blodget therein. The defeasance clause provided that Blodget
should
"pay all prizes and sums of money with which he is or may be
chargeable, or for which he may be liable for or on account of the
said lottery, and shall in all things save, indemnify, and keep
harmless the said Thomas Johnson, David
Page 229 U. S. 534
Steuart, and Daniel Carroll, their successors, etc., against all
suits,"
etc.
Thereafter, and in the year 1801, Blodget made three leases of
as many several parcels of Lot 20. The lot has a frontage of 51
feet, 11 inches, upon the southerly side of F Street, and a depth
of 159 feet running to an alley. One lease was dated April 13,
1801, and demised to James Daugherty the easterly portion of the
whole lot, having a frontage of 20 feet upon the Street, and
running the full depth to the alley; the second lease was to Edward
Frethy, dated April 14, 1801, and covered the westerly portion of
the lot, having a frontage of 19 feet, 11 1/2 inches, and running
of that width to the alley; the third lease, covering the
intervening portion of the whole lot, having a frontage of 11 feet,
11 inches, on the Street, and running the full depth, was dated
April 15, 1801, and made to Edward Fennell. The Daugherty and
Frethy leases were recorded within the year. The Fennell lease, for
some reason, was not promptly acknowledged or recorded, and
therefore a new lease was made by Blodget to Fennell, dated April
20, 1804, and recorded a few days later. These leases all ran for
ninety-nine years from their respective dates in 1801, the terms,
however, "to be renewable forever." They were sealed instruments,
elaborate in form, signed and acknowledged by lessor and lessee in
each instance, and recorded in the Land Records of the District of
Columbia. A copy of the Daugherty leases is set forth in the
margin.
*
Page 229 U. S. 535
The Frethy lease was substantially like it. The Fennell lease of
April 20, 1804, contained a recital of the previous lease to him
and the failure to record it, and the making
Page 229 U. S. 536
of the present instrument in the place of it; the demise then
proceeded in substantially the same form as in the other
leases.
The Daugherty lease reserved a yearly rent of $40,
Page 229 U. S. 537
payable annually, with an option of purchase in fee at the price
of $500; the Frethy lease was the same in these respects; the
Fennell lease called for a rent of $24 per annum and a purchase
price of $300. The leases were alike in that they provided for
terms of ninety-nine years each, with a right of perpetual
renewals; with right of reentry by the lessor for forty days'
default in payment of the rent, or distress at his option; two of
them provided that for sixty days' default in the payment of the
rent the lessor might reenter and terminate the lease; each lease
contained an option for a purchase in fee at a price of which the
annual rent was equivalent to eight percent; each required the
lessee to erect a dwelling house upon the premises during the year
of the making of the lease. The Fennell lease differed in
containing no provision for forfeiture of the term on nonpayment of
the rent, and in some minor particulars.
In October, 1802, one Robert S. Bickley began suit against
Samuel Blodget and others by bill in chancery in the Circuit Court
for the District of Columbia, setting up the history of the
above-mentioned lottery; the public advertisement of the scheme;
that Bickley, in reliance upon the proposed plan, purchased a
ticket, and that the sale and disposal of the tickets was entrusted
wholly to Blodget and to William Deakins, Jr., since deceased. The
bill set out the making of the indemnity agreement of September 20,
1793, by Blodget and Deakins, and the making of the mortgage by
Blodget on January 28, 1794, to Thomas Johnson, Jr. (since
deceased), and Thomas Peter (still surviving), covering all the
lands of Blodget within the Territory of Columbia. That he,
Bickley, drew as a prize the "superb hotel with baths, outhouses,
etc., etc. to cost $50,000" as offered and promised in the
advertisement, plan, and scheme;
"that the said hotel has never been finished and the keys
thereof delivered to your orator as by the said scheme and plan of
the lottery he was assured and promised it should be. "
Page 229 U. S. 538
That, in the year 1798, he, Bickley, instituted a suit at law in
the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania against
Blodget to recover damages by reason of his breach of undertaking;
that, this suit being at issue, and a jury impaneled to try the
issue joined therein, it was mutually agreed between Bickley and
Blodget, with the leave of the court, that the jury should be
discharged from giving their verdict, and should be empowered to
act as referees, to determine and order what sum of money if any,
should be paid by Blodget to Bickley, and if they thought proper,
to order titles and conveyances and other acts by either party to
the other as justice should require, whereupon the jury as referees
awarded that Blodget should convey to Bickley, in fee simple, the
hotel and the lots of ground belonging to it, and should also pay
to Bickley the sum of $21,500 with costs, for the payment of which,
and the performance of the award, the property in the City of
Washington mortgaged by Blodget to the Commissioners was by the
terms of the award to be first resorted to; that, upon the report
of the jury as referees, the court gave judgment in favor of
Bickley against Blodget for said sum of $21,500 and costs, and that
the report of the jury as referees should be in all its other parts
confirmed and carried into full and complete execution. That, by
virtue of the deed of trust of January 28, 1794, all the real
property which Blodget had within the limits of the Territory of
Columbia was pledged and made answerable to make good to the
fortunate adventures the prizes they should draw in the lottery,
and "that your orator has his claim to be paid out of that property
still further confirmed by the award and the judgment hereinbefore
set forth." The bill then set forth that the "lands and real estate
and property" of Blodget, situate within the Territory of Columbia
"as well in law as in equity, as by the said deed is expressed,
consisted of," etc. following with a detailed enumeration of many
tracts and parcels
Page 229 U. S. 539
of land, among which is:
"the following property which the said Blodget purchased of the
said Commissioners at the times hereinafter mentioned, which being
fully paid for by the said Blodget, certificates in due form have
regularly issued therefor, but the Commissioners meaning to hold
the same as security to themselves and to the fortunate adventurers
in the said lottery, have not delivered the same to the said
Blodget or caused them to be recorded, but, whilst they remained in
office, held the same, and when they went out of office, the same
fell into the hands of Thomas Munroe, Superintendent of City
Affairs, who now holds them -- that is to say, Lots numbered twenty
and twenty-one in Square 254 in the said City, sold to the said
Blodget on the 8th day of October, 1792,"
etc., etc. The bill specified by lot and square numbers those
lots that had been appropriated by Blodget for the hotel, averring
that the legal title to some of them was in Munroe, Superintendent
for City Affairs, certain of them having been conveyed by Blodget
to the Commissioners, others having remained in their ownership,
and the legal title to the remainder being in Blodget. Sundry deeds
of conveyance made by Blodget to various purchasers for portions of
the lands covered by the deed of trust were then set forth. In this
connection, the leases made by Blodget to Daugherty and Frethy,
respectively, in April, 1801, for parcels of Lot No. 20 in Square
254, were set out, and these lessees were made parties defendant.
The Fennell lease was not mentioned, apparently because it was not
upon record at the time of the filing of the bill. The prayer was
that Blodget might be required to convey to Bickley the hotel with
the lots pertaining thereto; that Munroe, as Superintendent of the
City, should be compelled to convey to Bickley that portion of the
lots pertaining to the hotel of which he held the certificates, and
that the residue of the property set forth in the bill of
complaint, or so much thereof as necessary, should be sold
Page 229 U. S. 540
to pay the money adjudged to Bickley by the award and judgment
in the Pennsylvania suit.
Annexed to this bill of complaint as exhibits were copies of the
deed of trust of January 28, 1794, a transcript of the proceedings
in the Pennsylvania suit, and other documents sustaining and
supplementing the averments of the bill. Among the parties named as
defendants were Blodget, Thomas Munroe, Superintendent of City
Affairs, Frethy, Daugherty, and other grantees of Blodget. Frethy
was served with process and filed an answer setting up that he had
assigned his lease to one Betz. Daugherty being a nonresident,
notice appears to have been published against him. Blodget
answered, admitting in part and denying in part the averments of
the bill. Annexed to the answer was a formal admission of "the
execution of the various exhibits at this time filed by
complainant, and that they may be read in evidence." Thomas Munroe,
as Superintendent of the City of Washington, filed an answer
admitting the principal averments of the bill, and setting up that
he, as Superintendent, had in his hands the certificates of sale
evidencing Blodget's purchases of various lots from the former
Commissioners; that the Commissioners had withheld the certificates
from Blodget's possession "as security for the fortunate adventures
in the said lottery who should have claims against the said
Blodget." Lot 20 in Square 254 does not appear among the lots
enumerated in this connection. Thomas Peter, the surviving trustee
under the mortgage or deed of trust of January 28, 1794, does not
appear among the parties named as defendants in the original bill
filed by Bickley, but he filed an answer admitting the execution of
that deed, and that it was made at the instance of the then
Commissioners of the City of Washington to secure the punctual
payment of the prizes drawn in the lottery therein mentioned,
and
"that this defendant knows not what property is included or
comprehended
Page 229 U. S. 541
by the said deed, but this defendant, further answering, admits
that whatever property he does hold in virtue of the said deed is
held by him in trust for the purposes in the said deed mentioned,
and subject to any order or decree which this Honorable Court shall
make respecting the same."
Thereafter, Peter seems to have been treated as a party
defendant. On September 24, 1804, a written stipulation was filed
in the cause, signed by the respective solicitors for complainant
and for the defendant Blodget, in the following terms:
"It is agreed by the complainants and the defendants in this
cause, by their solicitors, that a decree shall pass immediately by
consent for conveying to the complainant the hotel and the lots
appropriated for the same. That the execution and truth of all the
exhibits referred to in and by the complainants is hereby admitted,
all form as to the
of [
sic] proceeding waived.
This admission in no wise to give validity or authenticity to the
award obtained in the court of Pennsylvania or the judgment thereon
rendered, but that is to stand on its own merits unaffected by this
agreement. This cause set down by consent for hearing at the next
term."
An interlocutory decree was made accordingly, under date October
1, 1804, requiring Blodget and Thomas Peter to convey to Bickley
Lot 1 in Square 430, with the buildings and improvements thereon,
and requiring Munroe, as Superintendent, to convey and assure to
Bickley Lots 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 in that square, and retaining the
cause as to all other property and as to all other objects and
purposes mentioned in the bill. October 4, 1805, a further decree
was made requiring the defendant Blodget to pay to the complainant,
Bickley, on or before a date in November, the amount of the debt
due to him, being the sum of $26,635.13, besides costs, and
decreeing that, on failure thereof, certain designated sections and
lots of ground, situate in the City of Washington, or so much
thereof as should be sufficient
Page 229 U. S. 542
to raise and pay the said several sums of money, should be sold,
and it was further decreed
"that certain ground rents reserved by the said defendant
Blodget, by indenture made between the said Blodget, of the one
part, and Edward Frithey, one of the defendants, of the other part,
bearing date on the 4th day of April, 1801, and certain other
ground rents reserved by the said Samuel Blodget by indenture made
between the said Samuel Blodget of the one part, and James
Daugherty, one of the said defendants, of the other part, bearing
date on the 13th day of April, 1801, be also sold for the purposes
aforesaid."
Daniel Carroll Brent was appointed trustee for making the sale.
He was directed to sell the property at public auction, after
advertisement, report the sale to the court, and upon confirmation
of it, and payment of the purchase money,
"the said trustee by a deed or deeds good and operative in law,
etc., shall give, grant, bargain, and sell, release and confirm to
the respective purchasers and their heirs, respectively, all the
right, title, and interest therein which was or is in the said
Samuel Blodget, and all the right, title, or interest therein which
the said Thomas Peter derived in and thereto by virtue of the deed
in the said bill of complaint mentioned (referring to the deed of
trust of January 28, 1794) . . . and the purchaser or purchasers
respectively, and their respective heirs, shall thereupon hold the
same by them respectively purchased free, clear, and discharged
from all claims of the said Samuel Blodget and of the other
defendants."
It was further decreed that the defendant Thomas Peter, upon the
request of the trustee, should join and become a party in and to
all deeds to be executed by the trustee in virtue of this decree,
and that, in all cases where the outstanding legal title remained
in Thomas Munroe as Superintendent, he, Munroe, should, at the
request of the trustee, join in and become a party to the deed.
"And lastly, as to all the property in the said bill of
complaint mentioned,
Page 229 U. S. 543
and as to all the objects of the said bill not in and by this
decree specially and particularly decreed upon, this cause is
retained for further proceedings hereafter to be had thereupon, and
for that purpose is ordered to be continued."
Brent accepted the appointment as trustee, gave bond, and, after
advertisement, made a public sale of the property. The notices,
after describing many tracts of land by lot and square numbers,
contained the following: "Also several certain ground rents
reserved by said Blodget, amounting in the whole to $80 per annum."
His report of sale was made under date of January 21, 1806. It
mentions "ground rent on James Daugherty's lease," as sold to Henry
Pratt for $360, and "ground rent on Edward Frithy's lease," as sold
to Robert F. Howe for $400. No mention is made of the remainder of
Lot 20 in Square 254, nor of the ground rent on the Fennell lease.
By decree made under date June 25, 1806, the report was approved
and the sales confirmed (with an exception not now material), and
it was ordered that the proceeds of sale, after paying expenses,
taxes, etc., be paid over to complainant towards the discharge of
the moneys theretofore decreed to be due from the defendant Blodget
to him. It further appears that the purchases made by Pratt
(including the Daugherty ground rent) were made for the benefit of
Bickley, the complainant, and Pratt assigned his bids to Bickley,
October 31, 1806. Brent reported this to the court and asked for
leave to make deeds for the Pratt purchases to Bickley, and the
court accordingly made an order that Brent, together with Thomas
Peter and Thomas Munroe, should convey to Bickley all the property
purchased by Pratt at the sale.
Pursuant to these proceedings, Brent, trustee, Thomas Peter, and
Thomas Munroe, Superintendent, etc., joined in a deed dated April
3, 1807, to Bickley, reciting the decree of October 4, 1805,
ordering, among other things,
Page 229 U. S. 544
"that sundry squares, lots, and portions of ground and ground
rents in the said City of Washington" be sold, reciting the
advertisement and sale made in pursuance thereof, and that, at the
sale, certain lots particularly mentioned
"and the ground rent reserved by the said Samuel Blodget by
indenture made between him and James Daugherty, one of the
defendants, bearing date on the 13th day of April, 1801,"
were sold to Pratt; the assignment of Pratt's bid to Bickley,
etc. Brent, as trustee, thereby conveyed
"all the right, title, and interest of, in, and to the
before-mentioned squares, lots, and portions of ground and ground
rents in the City of Washington aforesaid which was in the said
Samuel Blodget."
Peter conveyed all his right, title, and interest under the
mortgage or deed of trust of January 28, 1794, and Munroe joined in
conveying certain of the lands described in the deed, but not the
"ground rents" in question.
By indenture dated January 15, 1807, Daniel C. Brent, trustee,
and Thomas Peter conveyed to Robert F. Howe the property purchased
by the latter at the trustee's sale. The deed recites the decree
and the sale made thereunder, and that,
"among other property and ground rent so set up and exposed to
sale was the ground rent reserved by the said Blodget by indenture
made between him and the said Edward Frethy, one of the defendants,
bearing date on the fourth day of April, 1801, when the said Robert
F. Howe, being the highest bidder therefor, became the purchaser
thereof at and for the sum of $400,"
and, in consideration thereof, conveyance is made to Howe of
"all the right, title, and interest of, in, and to the said
ground rent reserved by the said Samuel Blodget by indenture made
between him and the said Edward Frethy dated on the 4th day of
April, 1801, as aforesaid, which was in the said Samuel Blodget
previous to and at the time of making the said decree, and all the
right, title, and interest therein which
Page 229 U. S. 545
the said Thomas Peter derived in and thereto, by virtue of the
deed referred to in the said decree to have been given by the said
Samuel Blodget to the said Thomas Peter and Thomas Johnson, Jr.,
since deceased, bearing date on the 28th day of January, 1794,"
etc.
On May 28, 1810, a supplemental bill was filed reciting that the
sale made by Brent had fallen short of paying the money decreed to
be due to Bickley, and that he had lately discovered other property
not included in the former bill and decree, consisting of sundry
lots particularly described, and
"that the said Samuel Blodget was also, on the said 28th day of
January, in the year 1794, seized and possessed of and entitled to
sundry lots in the said City, which he afterwards let on ground
rent, reserving an annual rent for the said property, to divers
persons hereinafter particularly set forth, which tenants your
petitioner does not wish to disturb on interfere with, but wishes
to leave them in the quiet enjoyment of their leases under the said
Blodget, under the terms and conditions expressed in the said
leases respectively, but wishes and prays of this Court to direct
the ground rents reserved thereon, and the reversionary interests
of the said Blodget therein, whatsoever the same may be, to be sold
for the benefit of your petitioner, which lots so leased on ground
rent are as follows: to-wit, eleven feet, eleven inches, more or
less, fronting on F Street, North, extending in depth one hundred
and fifty-nine feet to an alley, being part of Lot No. 20 in Square
No. 254, leased to a certain Edward Fennell, his executor, etc.,
for a term of years renewable from time to time forever, reserving
the quarterly rent of twenty-four dollars payable to the said
Blodget."
Several other like leases are mentioned, and this averment
follows: "To all of which ground rents, the said Blodget now claims
title, and is in the actual receipt thereof." The prayer was for a
sale of the property thus mentioned, to raise the balance due to
complainant.
Page 229 U. S. 546
Blodget answered, admitting the facts stated in the supplemental
bill, with an exception not now material, and stating that he had
no objection to a decree as prayed. A decree was made accordingly,
under date November 5, 1813, and Washington Boyd was appointed
trustee to make the sale. Some years later, he made a report of
sale in writing, and afterwards represented to the court that, in
consequence of ill health, he would be required to leave the
District for some time, and requested the court to appoint some
other person to make conveyances, suggesting John Davidson for this
purpose. The court appointed Davidson accordingly.
By indenture dated May 8, 1818, Davidson, as such trustee,
conveyed to Charles Glover, in consideration of $405.50, "all the
interest, claim, and right of the said Samuel Blodget" in certain
lots sold by Boyd as trustee, pursuant to the decree of November 5,
1813, and, among others,
"part of Lot 20, in Square two hundred and fifty-four, fronting
eleven feet, eleven inches on North F Street, leased to Edward
Tennell [
sic] for ninety-nine years, renewable forever,
under the annual ground rent of twenty-four dollars."
This completes the recital of the proceedings in the chancery
suit of Robert S. Bickley against Samuel Blodget and others, and of
the sales and conveyances made pursuant to the decrees therein so
far as they pertain to the interest of Blodget in the land now in
controversy. We proceed to a statement of the subsequent transfers,
so far as necessary for a determination of the questions
presented.
By indenture dated May 1, 1813, Bickley, in consideration of
$400, conveyed to James Daugherty, his heirs and assigns, "all that
part of Lot No. 20 in Square No. 254, fronting on F Street North,
twenty feet," which was leased by Blodget to Daugherty. The deed
mentions the date of the lease, and recites that
"all the estate, interest and claim of the said Samuel Blodget
in and to the said part
Page 229 U. S. 547
of a lot and premises was afterwards sold and conveyed by Daniel
C. Brent as trustee, under a decree of the said circuit court of
the District of Columbia for the County of Washington, to the said
Robert S. Bickley."
This deed contained a covenant of general warranty.
Assuming the above-mentioned deed from Brent, trustee, and
others to Bickley had the effect to vest in Bickley all the
reversion that was in Blodget, subject to the Daugherty lease, this
deed from Bickley to Daugherty brought about a merger of the
leasehold and the reversion.
By mesne conveyances, all of Daugherty's interest came to be
vested in one Benjamin F. Isherwood in the year 1852.
As already pointed out, the ground rents under the Frethy lease
were conveyed by Brent, trustee, and Thomas Peter, by deed dated
January 15, 1807, to Robert F. Howe. It appears that Frethy had
assigned his lease to one Frederick Betz, by recorded deed dated
September 19, 1801; Frederick Betz assigned it to George Betz by
recorded deed of January 24, 1803, and George Betz assigned it to
John Thorp by recorded deed of February 15, 1804. Each of these
instruments transferred all right and interest of the assignor in
the land, describing it by measurements and abuttals, and referring
to the lease thereof made by Blodget to Frethy for "ninety-nine
years, renewable forever."
It is admitted that William Dowling probably succeeded to the
ownership of this leasehold by an unrecorded assignment of Thorp's
interest. Dowling claimed in a deed made by him to Robert F. Howe,
presently to be mentioned, that he was the owner of the leasehold
interest.
In 1830, the corporation of the City of Washington made a tax
deed to Dowling for "part of Lot 20 and the improvements in Square
254" for unpaid taxes assessed against it "as the property and in
the name of Robert F. Howe," for the years 1819 to 1824, inclusive.
Dowling,
Page 229 U. S. 548
by a deed made in 1831, reciting this tax title, conveyed to
Howe and his heirs "all the right, title, interest, and estate of
him, the said William Dowling," in the part of the lot conveyed to
him by the tax deed, "except the leasehold right belonging to him
in the same," the deed declaring it to be the intention of the
parties "that the said William is not to surrender his leasehold
interest in the said part of lot and premises." Robert F. Howe, by
his will, dated in 1830, authorized his executors to sell all his
estate for the purpose of paying certain legacies, and thereafter
his executors, by deed dated in 1835, conveyed this plot to William
Dowling, the deed reciting that Robert F. Howe
"held under a deed of conveyance to him from Daniel C. Brent,
trustee, and Thomas Peter, made the 15th day of January, in the
year of our Lord 1807,"
and that, at the time of the making of that deed, the property
"was subject to a lease for ninety-nine years, renewable forever,"
as will appear "by reference to a indenture of lease dated April
4th, 1801, and recorded," etc.
Under the will of William Dowling and by mesne conveyances
thereafter, whatever estate Dowling had in this parcel became
vested in Benjamin F. Isherwood in the year 1865.
As already pointed out, the ground rents of the Fennell lease --
for the word Tennell in the deed is obviously a mistake -- became
vested in Charles Glover; but that deed likewise included "all the
interest, claim, and right" of Blodget in that part of Lot 20 that
was covered by the Fennell lease, thus evidently conveying the
reversion. The bill avers that this part of Lot 20 was conveyed by
Abraham Bradley's heirs to Benjamin F. Isherwood in 1852. It does
not appear when or how (if at all) Fennell's leasehold became
merged in the reversion. Nor does it seem to be material, for, if
not merged, it lapsed on the expiration of the ninety-nine year
term and failure to renew, and this
Page 229 U. S. 549
before the ejectment suit was commenced. Respecting this parcel,
the contention of appellant is that the bill of complaint of the
appellees shows no reason for equitable relief because, if they
have the title they claim to have, it is a sufficient title to
constitute a good defense to an action at law.
Whatever interests Benjamin F. Isherwood may have acquired by
the above-mentioned conveyances in the several portions of Lot 20
admittedly became vested in Caleb C. Willard, the devisor of the
appellees, in or about the year 1882.
On the other hand, whatever reversionary rights (if any)
remained in Samuel Blodget have admittedly become vested in the
appellant.
The bill of complaint herein avers that the defendant, now
appellant, claims to be the assignee of the heirs at law of
Blodget, and that he claims that, after the execution of the
leases, there remained in Blodget and his heirs a reversion in fee
in Lot 20; that only a rent charge passed under the proceedings in
Bickley v. Blodget; that, as the leases have expired without
purchase or renewal by the lessees, the reversion has come into
possession, and that therefore, as plaintiff in ejectment, he has
the right to recover possession and title in fee simple.
These contentions are in fact made here in behalf of the
appellant with respect to so much of Lot 20 as was leased to
Daugherty and to Frethy, respectively.
As to the Fennell lot, it is insisted that, by the very language
of the supplemental bill in the Bickley suit, and the decree for
sale made pursuant to it, and the terms of the deed made by
Davidson, trustee, thereunder, the purchaser acquired a legal title
to the reversion, and not merely to the ground rents, and that
therefore, on the theory that the averments of the bill are true,
the appellees have an absolute fee simple title to the Fennell lot
such as to constitute a plain, adequate, and complete defense
Page 229 U. S. 550
to the ejectment suit. And it is pointed out that, under the
local practice (D.C.Code, §§ 993, 1000), defendants may
separately defend as to that parcel.
The question for decision, therefore, is whether the appellees
have a good title as against the appellant, and if so, whether the
nature of their title is such as to render it unavailable at law
and to require the intervention of a court of equity for their
relief against appellant's claims.
It is suggested, rather than urged, as a ground of equitable
jurisdiction that, because Blodget never received a deed of
conveyance from the Commissioners for Lot 20 in Square 254, his
title was never more than an equitable title, and that since both
parties claim under him, the controversy is a matter proper for the
cognizance of a court of equity, whatever be the grounds of
controversy as between the parties. We doubt whether this view is
tenable. There is no question that Blodget and those claiming under
him have openly asserted title to the property at least from the
year 1801 down to the present time, and, while the bill herein
contains no averments respecting possession, it may be assumed
that, for a long time, at least, possession has followed the title.
Assuming Blodget and those inheriting from him, and under whom
appellant claims, were equitably entitled to the reversion, subject
only to the ninety-nine year terms, any possession of the lessees
has been, as against the outside world, the possession of the
appellant and his predecessors in title. Therefore, it is more than
probable that any legal title remaining in the Commissioners has
become barred by long possession. Besides, it might, perhaps, after
one hundred and twenty years, be presumed at law as well as in
equity that the Commissioners had made a deed or deeds to Blodget
that had since been lost. And, since both parties to the present
controversy claim under Blodget, and would probably in an action of
ejectment be required to trace title no further back than the
common source, it is better, we think, to lay aside for
Page 229 U. S. 551
present purposes the theory that the equitable jurisdiction in
this action can be supported upon the ground that Blodget derived
only an equitable title from the Commissioners.
This brings us to the real controversy, which is the effect of
the proceedings and decree in the Bickley suit, and the deeds made
thereunder by Brent, trustee, to the purchasers of the "ground
rents."
For present purposes, we may accede to the contention of
appellant that the bill of complaint herein shows, with respect to
the parcel that was covered by the Fennell lease, the title to
which passed under the supplemental bill and decree in the Bickley
suit, that the effect of the proceedings, and the language of the
decree, and of the deed made by Davidson, trustee thereunder, was
such as to pass to the purchaser a legal title to the
reversion.
Assuming this, however, it does not follow that the appellees,
if they have the
equitable as well as the legal title to the
Fennell parcel, and if, at the same time, they have the
equitable but not the legal title to the Daugherty and Frethy
parcels, may not properly invoke the aid of equity against the
ejectment suit. If the appellant had limited his action at law to
the Fennell parcel, his contention that, if the Willard title to
that parcel is good at all, it is as good at law as in equity, and
therefore available as a defense in the ejectment suit, would
demand consideration.
But appellant brought the action of ejectment for an entire lot
made up of three parcels, of which the Fennell plot lies between
the other two. The appellees, if driven to invoke the aid of equity
against that action because they had an equitable, and not a legal,
title to the Daugherty and Frethy parcels, were fairly entitled to
bring the entire controversy into the court of equity, so that it
might be adjudicated in a single suit.
A court of equity ought to do justice completely, and not by
halves.
Decker v. Caskey, 1 N.J.Eq. 427, 433;
Page 229 U. S. 552
Williams v. Winans, 22 N.J.Eq. 573, 577;
Knight v.
Knight, 2 Eq.Cas.Abr. 169, pl. 25, s.c., 24 Eng.Rep. 1088,
1089; Story Eq.Pl. §§ 72, 174.
One of the duties of such a court is to prevent a multiplicity
of suits, and to this end, a court of equity, if obliged to take
cognizance of a cause for any purpose, will ordinarily retain it
for all purposes, even though this requires it to determine purely
legal rights that otherwise would not be within the range of its
authority.
Oelrichs v.
Spain, 15 Wall. 211,
82 U. S. 228;
Holland v. Challen, 110 U. S. 15;
Reynes v. Dumont, 130 U. S. 354,
130 U. S. 395;
Kilbourn v. Sunderland, 130 U. S. 505,
130 U. S. 514;
Gormley v. Clark, 134 U. S. 338,
134 U. S. 349.
And since there is no question that the equitable title of
appellees to the Fennell lot is good if their equitable title to
the Daugherty and Frethy lots is good, we may proceed at once to
the question of the effect of the proceedings and decree in the
Bickley suit, and the deeds made thereunder, as bearing upon these
two lots.
In strictness of law, the deeds made by Brent, trustee,
purporting to convey the "ground rents" on the Daugherty and Frethy
leases cannot be deemed to have included the reversion. The rule at
law is that, by a grant of the reversion, the rent reserved will
pass, but that by a grant of the rent, the reversion will not
pass.
"The incident, accessary, appendant, and regardant, shall in
most cases pass by the grant of the principal, without the words
cum pertinentiis, but not
e converso, for the
principal doth not pass by the grant of the incident, &c.
Accessorium non duvit, sed sequitur, suum principale."
1 Shep.Touch. 89.
And see 1 Co.Litt. 152a; Broom, Legal
Maxims, 7th ed. 491, 493.
The contention of appellant is that the term "ground rents," as
employed in the decree of the court in the case of
Bickley v.
Blodget, has a plain and clear meaning, ascertainable without
recourse to outside evidence, and it is insisted that the rents
referred to were limited to the
Page 229 U. S. 553
terms of ninety-nine years, because the only rents mentioned in
the leases are the annual rents reserved by Blodget in each demise,
to be paid during the respective terms of ninety-nine years, and
which therefore would cease with the expiration of the term.
The argument elaborates the legal status of the lessor and
lessee under the leases. It is said that the import of the contract
is plain; that a lease for a specific and definite term of
ninety-nine years, and no longer, was created, and that an option
was given in connection therewith to the respective lessees and
their successors in interest for other and further terms of similar
duration, and also an option for the purchase of the demised
premises during the terms created or any future term. And it is
insisted that the leases extended only until the expiration of
their respective terms, and did not,
proprio vigore,
extend or continue such terms for a definite or indefinite period;
that the options made the existence of new leases in the future
possible, but not certain; that the creation of future leases
depended wholly on the exercise of the privilege of a renewal by
each lessee or his successor in interest, and that, the privilege
not having been exercised in either instance, all rights of the
lessees expired at the end of ninety-nine years.
All this may be assumed as matter of law without advancing us
far towards the solution of the real question presented. If the
appellant is entitled to the reversion, the question whether the
appellees or their predecessors in title have lost the right of
renewal or purchase by failure to exercise the option, and whether
equity will relieve them by decreeing a renewal on proper terms,
may require consideration.
But the question must first be answered whether, in the sight of
equity, the appellant is entitled to the reversion. The appellees,
besides showing a title to the leasehold interests of Daugherty and
Frethy, respectively claim
Page 229 U. S. 554
to have acquired also the reversion in fee that remained in
Blodget, and this they claim under the decree in the Bickley suit,
and the deeds made thereunder, in which the interest was
denominated "ground rents." Now while we cannot say that this term
is the recognized equivalent of any legal estate in lands, it is
clear that, as a descriptive term, it has and had at the time of
the proceedings under consideration, some recognized meaning that
may be resorted to as evidence of the intent of the parties, and
from which may be determined what effect ought in equity to be
given to the proceedings and decree in the Bickley suit.
In
Bosely v.
Wyatt (1852), 14 How. 390,
55 U. S. 396,
this Court (by Mr. Chief Justice Taney) said, with respect to a
somewhat similar lease made by a resident of the City of Baltimore
for lands in Baltimore County:
"In the case before us, the interest which the testator had in
this land at the time of making his will was converted into money
by his contract with Armstrong. It was a sale and an agreement to
convey his whole interest in the land. It is therefore unlike the
case of a lease for years, or of ninety-nine years, renewable
forever, in which the lessor retains the reversion, and does not
bind himself to convey it on any terms to the lessee. The form of
the contract adopted in this instance between the testator and
Armstrong is in familiar use in the sale of lands in the City of
Baltimore and the adjacent country. It has nearly, if not
altogether, superseded the old forms of contract where the vendor
conveyed the lands and took a mortgage to secure the payment of the
purchase money, or gave his bond for the conveyance and retained
the legal title in himself until the purchase money was paid. And
it has taken the place of these forms of contract because it is far
more convenient both to the seller and the purchaser. For it
enables the vendee to postpone the payment of a large portion of
the purchase money
Page 229 U. S. 555
until he finds it entirely convenient to pay it, and at the same
time it is more advantageous to the vendor, as it gives him a
better security for the punctual payment of the interest, and while
an extended credit is given to the vendee, it is, to the vendor, a
sale for cash. For if his ground rent is well secured, he can at
any time sell it in the market for the balance of the purchase
money left in the hands of the vendee. It will be observed that the
rent reserved is precisely the interest on the amount of the
purchase money remaining unpaid."
That leases for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, were
common in Maryland, and therefore presumably well understood in
Washington at the time of the Bickley foreclosure, appears from
Banks v. Haskie (1876), 45 Md. 207, 213, 217;
Myers v.
Silljacks (1882), 58 Md. 319, 330;
Ogle v. Reynolds
(1891), 75 Md. 145, 150;
Jones v. Rose, 96 Md. 483, 484.
It is contended that these cases, and especially
Banks v.
Haskie, show a departure from the principles that anciently
obtained in that state, and that the contracts between Blodget and
his lessees were made in view of the law as understood in the year
1801. We need not stop to discuss this, because we are dealing with
the term "ground rents" not as a term of law, but as a term of
description, and we cite the Maryland cases as historical
authorities, irrespective of their authority as law.
The contention of the appellant that the term ground rents, as
used in the proceedings and deeds in question, imported only the
rents that were to accrue during the residue of the ninety-nine
year terms of the Daugherty and Frethy leases, respectively, will
not bear analysis.
In the first place, it was of the essence of both leases that
the terms were "ninety-nine years,
renewable forever." The
rent was to be the same for the extended terms as for the initial
term of ninety-nine years. It certainly cannot have been within the
contemplation of
Page 229 U. S. 556
the parties that the lessee or his assigns would not find it
advantageous to renew at the end of ninety-nine years. The lessees
were required to put substantial buildings upon the lots. And all
the circumstances show that the parties contemplated that, long
before the expiration of the lease, the lands demised would be in
the midst of a real, and not a "paper," city.
Moreover, the theory that it was intended to separate the right
to the rentals until the year 1900 from the right to those that
would accrue under renewals of the term presupposes that the
parties intended to separate the ground rents from the reversion.
But such a separation is hardly conceivable. The only real security
that the lessor had for the payment of the rents was the right
reserved to him to enter and repossess the land until the
arrearages were paid, or to terminate the lease should they not be
paid. It is obvious that, if the owner of the ground rents had not
right to the estate upon the termination of the lease, his action
in terminating it would benefit not himself, but the owner of the
reversion. In short, this view would leave the payments to accrue
during the residue of the ninety-nine years, no longer entitled to
be designated as "ground rents." They would, in effect, stand as
ordinary choses in action, resting for security upon the personal
responsibility of the lessees, or their assignees in possession,
subject to be rendered valueless by the insolvency of the lessee or
perhaps defeated, so far as the assignee's liability was concerned,
by an assignment to a pauper.
Valliant v. Dodgemede, 2
Atk. 546; 26 Eng.Reprint 728;
Lekeux v. Nash, 2 Stra.
1221.
Nor is it reasonable to suppose that the parties intended to
reserve in Blodget any estate in the lands, present or future. We
say
the parties because, in equity, the decree and the
deed made thereunder must, we think, be deemed to be the act of
Blodget, as well as of Bickley and the other parties to the
cause.
Page 229 U. S. 557
The action was not, as it has been termed by counsel, a
"creditor's suit." It was a foreclosure suit, brought to enforce
the mortgage that Blodget had given for the purpose of securing to
the fortunate holders of winning tickets in his much advertised
lottery the prizes he had promised them. That all of Blodget's
interest in the lands was pledged under the mortgage has already
been stated; that he recognized his equitable obligation is evident
from the record. In the common law action brought by Bickley
against him in Philadelphia, he agreed that the jury might act as
arbitrators not only with respect to the amount of money due from
him to Bickley, but with respect to enforcing the award upon his
lands in the District of Columbia. When the foreclosure suit was
commenced, he aided it by admissions, consents, and stipulations,
showing himself in every way willing to forward the object aimed at
by Bickley -- namely, to subject the mortgaged property to the
performance of his obligations arising out of the lottery
scheme.
It was clearly the purpose to sell all the beneficial interest
that Blodget had in the several plots in question, subject to the
leases. This reserved interest was denominated "ground rents"
(using a phrase evidently in popular use) without distinction as to
their duration, and therefore presumably meaning that they should
be perpetual, as well as the leases under which they were derived,
but subject, of course, to commutation by the exercise of the
lessee's option of purchase at an amount of which the annual rental
was the equivalent of eight percentum.
The proceedings in the Bickley-Blodget suit show beyond cavil or
question that it was the purpose not only of the parties to the
action, but of the court that all of Blodget's right, title, and
interest in Lot 20 should be sold towards paying the debt he owed
to the complainant. The reservation of any interest in Blodget was
inconsistent with
Page 229 U. S. 558
the very object of the suit. The reversion would be practically
valueless for approximately ninety years; its then present
purchase-value would be altogether insignificant. A purpose to
reserve it in Blodget is not supposable. If it had been thought of
as a substantial interest, separate from that described as "ground
rents," it would have been mentioned, as it was mentioned, and in
terms included, in the decree made on the supplemental bill. In no
event would Blodget have been permitted to retain it.
Nor is there any room to doubt that bidders at the sale,
including the successful bidders who became the purchasers,
supposed that in buying the "ground rents," they were buying an
investment security representing the substantial fruits, and the
entire fruits, or ownership reserved by Blodget on the leases, and
not for mere terms of ninety-nine years, but for such terms
"renewable forever." That the interest of Blodget sold for its fair
market value is beyond question, for otherwise the court would not
have confirmed the sales.
After the sales were confirmed, only two things remained to be
done in order to carry the decree of the court into effect so far
as concerned the passing of title. One was "the payment of the
whole purchase money for the respective parts of the said property
so sold;" the other was that
"the said trustee by a deed or deeds good and operative in law,
to be acknowledged, etc., shall give, grant, bargain and sell,
release and confirm to the respective purchasers and their heirs
respectively"
the property sold; with Peter and Munroe joining, in order to
make sure that no legal title should remain outstanding.
There is not doubt that the purchase price was paid; indeed, one
of the purchasers in question was Bickley, the complainant, for
whose benefit the sale was made. Such payment being made, the
purchasers at once became the owners, in equity, of the
reversionary interest of
Page 229 U. S. 559
Blodget. But the decree entitled them to the legal title.
And deeds of conveyance were made in order to carry out the
decree. But one thing was lacking -- the deeds were not "good and
operative in law," because, although they described well enough
according to the common intent what was intended to be conveyed,
they did not define it according to the legal formula. And so the
form of the deeds was undoubtedly defective. This, upon all the
evidence, was a mistake, pure and simple. And it was the mistake of
a public officer. To say that, when such a mistake occurs in
carrying out the decree of a court of equity -- a court possessed
of full jurisdiction over the subject matter and all the parties --
harmful consequences shall be permitted to fall upon the purchasers
who, in reliance upon the apparent regularity of the proceedings,
have paid the purchase money to the officer of the court in the
belief that they would get as good a title as the court could give
them, and as good as the court could require any of the parties
before it to give them -- would be nothing less than a reproach
upon the administration of justice.
The equitable principles upon which our must turn are simple and
fundamental. Equity regards that as done which ought to be done. It
looks to the true intent and meaning, rather than to the form. It
relieves against the consequences of accident and mistake, as well
as of fraud.
In
Lytle v.
Arkansas, 9 How. 314,
50 U. S. 333,
this Court (by Mr. Justice McLean) said:
"It is a well established principle where an individual in the
prosecution of a right does everything which the law requires him
to do, and he fails to attain his right by the misconduct or
neglect of a public officer, the law will protect him."
In
Williams v. United States, 138 U.
S. 514,
138 U. S. 517,
the Court (by Mr. Justice Brewer) said:
"It cannot be doubted
Page 229 U. S. 560
that inadvertence and mistake are, equally with fraud and wrong,
grounds for judicial interference to divest a title acquired
thereby. This is equally true in transactions between individuals
and in those between the government and its patentee. If, through
inadvertence and mistake, a wrong description is placed in a deed
by an individual, and property not intended to be conveyed is
conveyed, can there be any doubt of the jurisdiction of a court of
equity to interfere and restore to the party the title which he
never intended to convey? So of any other inadvertence and mistake,
vital in its nature, by which a title is conveyed when it ought not
to have been conveyed."
See also Morrison v. Stalnaker, 104 U.
S. 213;
Ard v. Brandon, 156 U.
S. 537,
156 U. S. 541;
Duluth & Iron Range R. Co. v. Roy, 173 U.
S. 587,
173 U. S.
590.
In our opinion, the averments of the bill herein, admitted by
the demurrer, show that, with respect to the Daugherty and Frethy
lots, the appellees have a good title in equity, but not at law, as
against the appellant, and therefore are entitled to restrain him,
and those claiming under him, from prosecuting an action of
ejectment, or otherwise asserting title to those plots. And, with
respect to the Fennell plot, the same result follows, for reasons
above given, although appellees' title, besides being good in
equity as against that of the appellant, is also good at law, and
therefore might have been availed of as a legal defense.
Decree affirmed.
"[COPY OF LEASE -- SAMUEL BLODGET TO JAMES DAUGHERTY.]"
"This indenture made the thirteenth day of April in the year of
our Lord one thousand eight hundred and one Between Samuel Blodget
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, of the one part, and James
Daugherty, of the City of Washington in the Territory of Columbia,
of the other part, witnesseth that the said Samuel Blodget, for and
in consideration of the payment of the rent and performance of the
Covenants hereinafter mentioned on the part of the said James
Daugherty, his executors, administrators, and assigns to be paid
and performed, Hath demised, granted, leased, and to farm lett and
by these presents Doth demise, grant, lease and to farm lett unto
the said James Daugherty his executors administrators and assigns.
All that Lott of twenty feet front on F. Street in Lott number
twenty in Square number two hundred and fifty four in the City of
Washington aforesaid, Together with all improvements, alleys, ways
water & water courses privileges, easements and emoluments
belonging or appertaining to said Lott. To have and to hold said
lott of ground with the appurtenances unto the said James
Daugherty, his executors, administrators, and assigns, from this
the thirteenth day of April above mentioned for and during and unto
the full term of Ninety-nine years from thence next ensuing and
full to be compleated and ended, yielding and paying therefor
yearly and every year during said term unto the said Samuel Blodget
his heirs and assigns the yearly rent or sum forty dollars current
money of the United States free and clear of all taxes assessments
or public dues nor or hereafter to be laid taxed or assessed on sd.
demised premises in annual payments on the said thirteenth day of
April in each and every year, the said term of ninety nine years to
be renewable forever. Provided always, and it is the true intent
and meaning of these presents that, if it shall happen that, if the
said yearly rent shall be in arrear and unpaid by the space of
forty days next after the time on which the same is above reserved
to be paid, then it shall and may be lawful to and for the said
Samuel Blodget his heirs or assigns unto the said demised premises
or any part thereof in the name of the whole to reenter and the
same to have again repossess occupy and enjoy as in his or their
former estate until all such arrearages of rent with legal interest
thereof and all and every cost charge and expenses incurred by the
said Samuel Blodget his heirs or assigns by reason of the
nonpayment of said rent shall be fully satisfied and paid, or make
distress therefor at his or their option, and also if the said
yearly rent Shall be in arrear and unpaid by the space of sixty
days next after the time on which the same is above reserved to be
paid, then it may be lawful to and for the said Samuel Blodget his
heirs and assigns unto the said demised premises or any part
thereof in the name of the whole to reenter and the same to have
again repossess occupy and enjoy as in his or their former estate,
and that then, in such case, this Indenture and every clause matter
and thing therein contained shall from henceforth be utterly void
and of no effect, and the said James Daugherty, for himself, his
executors, administrators and assigns doth covenant and agree to
and with the said Samuel Blodget his heirs and assigns well and
truly to pay the above reserved yearly rent or sum of forty dollars
at the time before within mentioned and also that he the said James
Daugherty his executors administrators and assigns shall and will
erect and build a good and substantial dwelling house to be
compleated and tenantable in the course of the present year at
farthest which, if not complied with, he, the said James Daugherty,
binds himself his heirs executors and administrators to satisfy and
pay unto the said Samuel Blodget, his heirs and assigns, the
damages which shall or may accrue to him or them for such
complainance, and moreover, in case of a defalcation shall be made
in payment of the rent as above mentioned, then and in such case,
the improvements which shall be made on the above demised premises
shall belong unto the said Samuel Blodget, his heirs and assigns,
and the said Samuel Blodget, for himself, his heirs, and assigns
doth covenant promise and agree to. and with the said James
Daugherty, his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns that
he, the said James Daugherty, his heirs or assigns, at any time or
times during the continuances of this present or future demise, on
the request and at the proper costs and charges of the said James
Daugherty, his heirs, or assigns, and on his or their payment or
tending in payment to the said Samuel Blodget, his heirs, or
assigns, the principal sum of five hundred dollars, shall and will
make and execute a deed in fee simple for said Lott and premises
above demised to the said James Daugherty, his heirs and assigns,
forever with such clause of General Warrantee as he or they may
require. It is further agreed that the said James Daugherty, his
heirs or assigns, may pay unto the said Samuel Blodget, his heirs
or assigns, any proportion of the principal of five hundred dollars
not less than one-tenth of that sum and so much of the principal as
shall be paid so much in proportion of the rent shall be lessened
reserving unto the said Blodget his heirs or assigns all penalties
and forfeitures within before mentioned until the whole sum of five
hundred dollars is paid, when the whole rent shall cease. In
witness whereof, the said parties have hereunto interchangeably set
their hands and seals the day and year first above written."
"SAM BLODGET [SEAL]"
"JAMES DAUGHERTY [SEAL]"
"Signed, sealed, and delivered, etc."