42 Minn. 386 | Minn. | 1890
November 5, 1856, one Dunwell, being then the owner of an undivided half of lots 10, 11, and 12, in block 13, of the town of Brooklynd, in Dakota county, executed a bond to convey the lots (not merely the undivided half) to John EL Byers, upon being paid the sum of $525, with interest, according to the conditions of two promissory notes, (when they were to become due does not appear,) and upon the vendee making improvements on the lots within one year from that date to the amount of $800. The bond was recorded January 9, 1857. Byers and wife, on February 3, 1857, executed to one Pollock a quitclaim deed of the lots, which was recorded the same day, and April 9, 1859, Pollock and wife executed to Virginia Byers, the wife of John EL, a quitclaim deed of the lots, which was recorded April 23, 1859, September 3, 1860, Dunwell and wife executed to Virginia Byers a deed of lots 11 and 12, which
The plaintiffs claim, apparently, that, the record of a contract to convey being constructive notice of the right it gives the vendee,— that is, of the right to a conveyance of the fee upon his complying with its terms, — the notice puts any subsequent purchaser upon inquiry to ascertain if such terms have been complied with, or if the conveyance has been made, and charges him with notice of any subsequent acts in performance of the contract, including a conveyance, if any has been made, which might have been ascertained through such inquiry; and that the record notice will continue to have that effect indefinitely, no matter how long afterwards a purchaser may have occasion to examine the record, to ascertain the condition of the title and determine whether he will purchase. The record of such a contract is, of course, notice to subsequent purchasers or mortgagees of the rights it gives the vendee in or to the land. And for the pur
Under a stipulation of the parties,'the testimony of a witness on behalf, of plaintiffs was taken on interrogatories and cross-interrogatories. Upon the trial the defendant asked leave to withdraw his second cross-interrogatory, and the answer thereto, and the court permitted him to do so, and, on plaintiffs offering to read them, held that they had no right to do so. In deciding against plaintiffs’ right to read them in evidence, the court was in error. A party putting an interrogatory to a witness in such a case need not read it and the answer, if he chooses not to, but, in that event, the other may read them. In re Smith, 34 Minn. 436, (26 N. W. Rep. 234.) But the exclusion of them did not prejudice. They related only to whether the contract had, as between D unwell and Byers, been, in fact, re
Order affirmed.