21 F. 820 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1884
The complainants insist the relief prayed for should be granted, and the title decreed to be in them by virtue of the deeds
It, may be conceded that the defendants can invoke for their protection chapter 58, Minn. St. 1858, which enacts, in substance, that “a conveyance not recorded shall be void against judgment creditors” unless tiie facts proved in regard to possession are sufficient to warn all persons asserting lions or suggest inquiry into the condition of the title at ttiat time. Banner, after his purchase, sent one Sutherland as his agent from England to make improvements and manage the property; and the evidence is clear that he took all the necessary steps to hold the S. E. |r of section 13, town 101, range 29, and his possession as Banner’s agent was notice of the latter’s rights. Morrison v. March, 4 Minn. 422, (Gil. 325.) The defendants have no better standing in court than a bona fide purchaser without actual knowledge of Banner’s possession; and the failure to make inquiry to obtain knowledge of the facts about the land is willful neglect, and equivalent to actual notice of possession to the extent of this quarter section, which was embraced in the deed of March 6, 1874. The W. of this section is prairie land, unineloscd, and was conveyed to .Banner by deed executed March 23, 1874. Sutherland, as agent, has asserted ownership for the grantee over this land since 1874; he authorized grass to be cut, planted slips or cuttings of the cottonwood tree at the corners as early as 1875, and after a house and barn were built in 1877, upon the S. E. \ of the section, leased the W. \ , in connection with the first tract, to tenants for pasturage and cutting hay. Bork, Arnold, and Sliepardson were successively tenants; and the latter two cut grass and pastured sheep upon the W. of the section. It was recognized in the sparsely-settled neighborhood as “ Sutherland’s land ” and has been occupied in this manner from 1874 to 1882. These facts show possession sufficiently notorious and exclusive, when the condition and character of the land is taken into consideration, to
The judgment creditors never saw the land. It was located many miles' from their residence, in a sparsely-settled part of the country, and the nearest cultivated tract, except the adjoining S. E. £ of the section, was three or four miles distant; so that the least inquiry of the farmers and laborers in the vicinity would have put any one, who desired to ascertain the ownership, in the way of obtaining the information. It should have been made; and if the defendants had exercised ordinary care, this litigation would have been avoided.
The cases cited by defendants’ counsel are not in point. In Dutton v. McReynolds, 16 N. W. Rep. 468, the land was conveyed to three persons as tenants in common; one went into possession and subsequently purchased the interest of his- co-tenants, but failed to record the deed executed and delivered to him, before a judgment was docketed against one of his grantors, and the court held that the continued possession of the grantee was not notice of his claim of title or possession under the unrecorded deed from one of his co-tenants.
It is my opinion that -the defendants gained nothing by the sale under the judgment, and the complainants are entitled to a decree, which is granted.