38 Wis. 643 | Wis. | 1875
There is an irreconcilable conflict in the testimony as to what was the consideration of the notes and mortgage. The court below found that they were given to secure the payment of part of the purchase money agreed to be paid for the lands which were conveyed by Bradley to the defendant Jeremiah M. Day. We are not disposed to dissent from this view of the effect of the testimony. We shall not discuss the facts at all, but state the result at which we arrived upon an examination of the evidence. The court also found the fact set up in the answer to be true, namely, that the mortgagor and wife were infants when they executed the notes and mort- • gage. It appears, however, that the defendants are in possession of the mortgaged premises, claiming to own them The
The doctrine of these cases is both reasonable and just, and is decisive of the one before us. Treating the deed of the land and the notes and mortgage as parts of the same transaction, there can be no doubt that the contract was one quite beneficial to the infants. They have elected to affirm it by retaining the possession of the premises and claiming them as their own. It would be most inequitable to allow them to repudiate the notes and mortgage given for part of the purchase money and also to keep the land. In the language of Shaw, C. J., “ If the infant, after coming of age, retains the property for his own use, or sells, or otherwise disposes of it, such detention, use or disposition — ■ which can be conscientiously done only on the assumption that the contract of sale was a valid one, and by it the property became his own — is evidence of an intention to affirm the contract, from which a ratification may be inferred.” Boyden v. Boyden, supra.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.