45 Minn. 412 | Minn. | 1891
The action is under the statute to determine adverse claims to real estate, the complaint alleging that the plaintiffs are the owners in fee, and that it is vacant. The answer denies the allegations of the complaint, except that defendant claims some right, title, and interest in the real estate; alleges that defendant is the owner; and as a further defence sets forth facts which are substantially found by the court below. That court, trying the case without a jury, found the facts, and as a conclusion of law found plaintiffs to be the owners, subject to equities existing in favor of defendant, and ordered that, if plaintiffs within 30 days should file a stipulation agreeing to pay defendant the consideration paid by him on his purchase of the real estate and the taxes paid by him since such purchase, a further hearing should be had to determine the' amount of purchase-money and taxes, and, on payment thereof, judgment should be entered confirming the plaintiffs’ title, clear of all claims of defendant; but, if plaintiffs should fail to file the stipulation or pay such amount, judgment should be entered dismissing the action.
The facts found by the court below were, avoiding too detailed a statement, in substance as follows: December 31, 1855, one Moore was the owner of the N. of the S. E. J and the S. W. J of the N. E. £ of section 9, township 29, range 24, containing 120 acres, and on that day he and his wife executed to one Hall a mortgage thereon, containing the usual power of sale, to secure the sum of $277.37, which mortgage was recorded the same day. About July 10, 1857, Theodore E. French purchased this mortgage and the note it secured,
In the briefs and on the oral argument much space was given to discussing the question whether an action' under the statute to determine adverse claims to real estate is to be deemed a legal action, and the issues tried and determined upon the rules and principles of law, or an equitable action, in the determination of which equitable principles are to be applied. The court below seems to have acted on the latter proposition. Of course, in a strictly legal action involving only legal titles, in which the only question is, which party has the legal title, no such condition to the relief to be granted as was imposed in this ease would be proper. The action is anomalous. No such action could be maintained at the common law; no bill in equity alleging only the facts necessary to a complaint in this statutory action could be supported. The statute does not indicate to which class the action is to belong. Perhaps (though we do not decide the point) it is to be deemed legal or equitable, according as the •issues present legal or equitable rights or titles to be determined. In Morris v. McClary, 43 Minn. 346, (46 N. W. Rep. 238,) where legal titles only were involved, it was spoken of as a legal action. It has also been regarded as equitable. It is not necessary to determine what its character is in this instance, for the facts found make out a defence equally available at law or in equity.
The plaintiffs cannot complain that the court granted them relief conditionally, which it ought to have denied in toto. Upon the facts found the court ought to have decided that the plaintiffs were estopped from asserting their title against defendant. The estoppel arises from the delay of plaintiffs and their predecessors in title to question the validity of the foreclosure of the mortgage to Hall, and their permitting to remain of record apparently perfect evidence of title through that mortgage, for 15 years before the defendant purchased, and from the fraudulent consequences to defendant of that delay, if they are now permitted to assail the foreclosure.
The foreclosure of the Hall mortgage was void for a reason not disclosed by the record. Notwithstanding its invalidity, it might be the basis of estoppel against the owners who held their property subject to the mortgage; or rather they might be estopped to deny its validity. Had they expressly affirmed its validity to one who they knew was about to purchase the foreclosure title, and who, relying on such representation, and not knowing the defect, purchased it, they would not be permitted to assert their title against him. This would be so, not on the ground that they ratified the void act or proceeding, but on the ground that, having failed to assert their title against it when honesty and good conscience required them to assert it if they claimed any, they would be estopped to assert it to the prejudice of the one thus relying on their representation. And this would be so whether they knew of the fact rendering the foreclosure void, or were ignorant of it through their own gross neglect. Silence and acquiescence, when good faith requires a person to speak or act, are, in the matter of estoppel, equivalent to express affirmation.
Standing, in respect to the property and the mortgage, in the relation that they stood in, was it the duty of the owners Bausman and Britton, if they intended to protect and hold their title against the mortgage, to know whether an attempt was made to foreclose it, and, if so, whether the attempt was valid or voidable or void, and seasonably to object that it was voidable or void by proceedings to clear from the record the evidences of it ? If the record evidence did not disclose any defect in the foreclosure, but made an apparently perfect title under the mortgage, we think it was, not merely because they were owners of the land. It must be conceded that an owner of land is not necessarily bound to clear from the record a cloud put upon his title by the unauthorized act of another. This is so where he has done nothing to give apparent color of right to such act.
Judgment affirmed.
Vanderburgh, J., took no part in this decision.