19 Minn. 44 | Minn. | 1872
By the Court.
This is an action brought by the plaintiffs for the partition of certain real estate or a sale thereof if partition cannot be made, &c. The premises which are alleged to be subject to partition or sale are the east half of lot ten in block twenty-six, St. Paul proper, being twenty-five feet front on Third street by one hundred and fifty feet deep, the value of which is alleged to be $ 12,500.
The answer for a first defense denies that plaintiff ever had, or now has, any title whatever to any portion of the premises, and avers that the title in fee to the entire premises for a long time previous to the commencement of the action has been, and still is in the defendant, Alexander Ramsey.
For another and separate defense the answer sets up the facts, upon which the defendant claims title in fee to the entire premises.
For a further and separate defense, the answer avers title in fee to the premises in Ramsey, and possession thereof by him, and that the plaintiff claims some estate or interest therein adverse to said Ramsey, and demands judgment that the adverse claim of plaintiff be determined and adjudged to be without foundation, and void, and that Ramsey be adjudged to be the owner in fee-simple of the premises, and the title quieted and settled in him; that the plaintiff, and all persons claiming under him, be enjoined from setting up any adverse claim, and that the plaintiff be adjudged to convey to Ramsey, &c., or that the judgment stand in place of such conveyance, &c.
The title to the premises is the paramount issue in the case. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the facts found by the court are fully set forth in the written findings. There is no dispute about the fact that, on and prior to the 7th of April, 1849, one Lucretia M. Curtis was the owner in fee and possessed of lot ten, block twenty-six, St. Paul proper, and that on the 7th of April, 1849, by warranty deed of that date filed for record on the 21st of April following, the said Lucretia M. Curtis conveyed the said lot, (of which thepremises involved in this action are the east half,) to Samuel- Gilbert, Jr., James
The fact is established beyond controversy that Gilbert acquired his interest in the premises by the deed from L. M. Curtis to Gilbert, McBoal and Lull on the 7th of April, 1849, and both parties find in him a common source of title. The plaintiff claims title under him by virtue of the following conveyances :
1st. A quit-claim deed, dated July 30th, 1857, recorded the 8th of August, 1857, executed by Samuel Gilbert, Jr., and Jane Gilbert, his wife to C. P. Y. Lull, in consideration of five dollars, releasing to said Lull all the interest of said Gilbert and wife in said lot 10, block 26.
2. A quit-claim deed, dated July 29th, 1869, executed by C. P. Y. Lull to the plaintiff, by which, in consideration of $500, he released and quit-claimed said property to the plaintiff, Matthew Groff.
The defendant, Alexander Ramsey, claims to have acquired the equitable title to the undivided half of Gilbert’s undivided third of the lot on the 4th day of June, 1852, by virtue of
We do not deem it necessary to comment upon the specific objections by the appellant to certain findings of the court, on the ground that such findings are not supported by the evidence. We deem it sufficient to say' that all the findings, which are material to the decision of the case in the view we take of it, áre fully sustained by the evidence. We may advert, however, to the fact that the partition deed between Wilkin and Ramsey, executed on the 6th of September, 1864, •although offered in evidence is not embodied in the case before us •,. and the presumption in its absence is that the recitals therein show the fact, stated in the finding of the court, “that in pursuance of an agreement made some years before, (and which had been partly executed by exclusive possession being taken by the parties in accordance with its terms,) on' the 6th day of September, 1864,” the partition deed between Wilkin and Ramsey was executed.
Assuming, as we will for the present, that the evidence was properly received, we will determine, first, whether, upon the facts found, Ramsey acquired an equitable title to an undivided half of Gilbert’s undivided third of lot 10 in block 26, St. Paul proper. Second: If he did, had Lull and the plaintiff Groff sufficient notice of Ramsey’s equitable title at the time of the respective conveyances to them, under which plaintiff claims title.
Third: We will consider objections to the testimony.
The letter under which Lull acted in the negotiations carried on by him and McBoál with Ramsey, was -as follows:
“ Mr. C. P. Y. Lull :
“ Respected Sir,—
“ I received your letter yesterday, in answer to which I write you the present. .1 do hereby constitute youj C. P. Y. Lull, my power of attorney, to act as he may see proper in relation to-a certain house and lot in the town of St. Paul, against which there is a mortgage in favor of a Mrs. Curtis; the said C. P. Y. Lull is hereby authorized to close said mortgage, or sell said house and lot. I hereby acknowledge the receipt of ten dollars, the sum total of all I claim in said house.
S. Gilbert, Jr.
“ N. B I have tried to do as you requested me. I wish to have nothing more to do with the premises. You have paid me for my part, so you can do with it as you see proper. My. love to all. Receive my best respects.
S. Gilbert, in haste.”
The authority of an agent to sell and to contract for the sale of real estate may be by parol, and if the agent acts within the scope of the authority conferred upon him, the principal will be bound. Fry on Specific Performance, 123,235,228 — 9.
It appears from the testimony of Lull that, at the time this letter was written, there was a house upon the lot, and that he was not concerned with Gilbert in any other property. The existence of the outstanding mortgage upon the lot to Mrs. Curtis is also established.
These facts, in connection with the letter, leave no reasonable doubt that the premises referred to in the letter- are those owned by Gilbert, Lull and McBoal, to-wit, lot 10, block 26. The letter by its plain terms, at the least, constitutes Lull the agent of Gilbert to sell the entire interest of the latter, or any
As appears from the finding of the court, Gilbert having left the then Territory of Minnesota in- the fall of 1849, with the purpose of remaining away, and not having returned, L. M. Curtis, the mortgagee in the mortgage executed by Gilbert, McBoal and Lull upon the premises, in the year 1850, took certain steps towards the foreclosure of said mortgage, and on the 8th of June, 1850, claiming to .act by virtue of the power of sale contained in the mortgage, had the property sold at public sale by Charles Bazille, then acting as coroner of the said county of Ramsey, at which sale the property was sold to the said L. M Curtis for the sum of four hundred dollars; and the coroner, on the 10th of June, 1850, executed a certificate of sale to the said L. M. Curtis, in which it was stated that on the 8th of June, 1852, unless it was sooner redeemed as provided by law, the said L. M. Curtis, as such purchaser, would be entitled to receive a deed of the said property.
Under this state of affairs the court finds distinctly that, in the winter and spring of 1852, McBoal and Lull, fearing to lose the property in consequence of the foreclosure proceedings aforesaid, entered- into negotiations with the defendant Alexander Ramsey, the object of which was to sell to the said Ramsey an undivided half interest in the said property, and thereby to procure an amount of money sufficient to redeem such property from such foreclosure sale aforesaid During the course of the negotiations McBoal and Lull claimed to own the whole of said property in common ; but upon Ramsey’s calling their attention to the record, which disclosed an undivided third interest in said property in Gilbert, Lull claimed to have authority to dispose of the whole of Gilbert’s interest in said property, and showed to Ramsey, as such authority, the letter of February 7th, 1850, from Gilbert to Lull.
The negotiation,- heretofore mentioned as begun in the winter or spring of 1852, was finally concluded on the 5th day of Jiine, 1852, and Ramsey went into possession of the
'[’hese facts show that the negotiations carried on between the parties were for the sale of the undivided half of the lot to Ramsey; that the interest of McBoal, which was one undivided third, and the undivided half .of the undivided third of Gilbert in the premises, were to constitute this undivided half so sold to Ramséy. The fact that McBoal and Lull claimed to own the property in common,' although McBoal. in fact, owned but one-third, affords an explanation of the reason why the deed from Mctíoal to Ramsey was made to embrace the undivided half of the premises.
There was, then, a positive agreement on the part of Lull, acting as the agent of Gilbert under the authority conferred by the letter, to sell to Ramsey the undivided half of the undivided third of the premises,' in pursuance of which the quit-claim deed of Gilbert by Lull to Ramsey, of the 5th of June, 1852, was executed.
Lull, in making the agreement to sell, was acting within the scope of his authority, and, as we have seen, had authority to bind his principal, Gilbert, by’a written contract to sell. Under these circumstances, although the quit-claim deed executed by him as the attorney in fact of Gilbert to Ramsey, was ineffectual as a conveyance of the legal title to the property embraced in it,(because his authority was not given under seal, R may be upheld in chancery as evidence of a contract to sell. Morrow vs. Higgins, 29 Ala. 450; Story on Agency, § 49. “Whenever there exists, under the hand of the party sought to be charged, a written statement, containing either
By this instrument, then, the equitable title to the undivided half of the undivided third of Gilbert in the premises passed to Ramsey.
We then come to the question of notice. There can be no doubt that Lull, being a party to the entire transaction, was chargeable with notice of Ramsey’s equitable title at the time of the conveyance from Gilbert to himself.
It remains to inquire whether Groff is chargable with notice of Ramsey’S equitable title. These facts, bearing upon the question of notice to Groff, appear by the finding of the court, viz.: That on the 5th day of June, 1852, upon the final conclusion of the negotiations between McBoal and Lull, and Gilbert acting by Lull, of the one part, and Ramsey of the other part, and upon the execution of the respective deeds by McBoal personally, and Gilbert by Lull as his attorney in fact, to Ramsey, and the other papers and instruments referred to in the finding of the court, Ramsey went into possession of the undivided half of lot 10, block 26, aforesaid, and- continued in the possession of the same, through his tenants, from said 5th of June, 1852, till some
It also appears that from June, 1852, Ramsey paid all the taxes due on the undivided half of said lot 10 up to and until his assignment for partition as aforesaid, since which time he has paid all the taxes assessed and due on the east half of said lot.
It also appears that the deed from Gilbert and wife to Lull, under which plaintiff claims title, was made on the 13th of
The plaintiff in his case in chief offered in evidence a quitclaim deed duly executed from C. P. V. Lull and wife to Samuel J. Wilkin, of and to the west half of said lot ten, block twenty-six, St. Paul proper, bearing date Sept. 12th, 1864, recorded Nov. 12th, 1864, so that, as to the west half, Lull had no title whatever, and it appears by the finding of the court that Wjlkin was in the exclusive possession of the west half of the lot and had been for some years prior to the 6th of September, 1864. It also appears that Ramsey, on and prior to the 6th of September, 1864, was in the possession of the several east half of the lot by his tenant Thorwarth, claiming title in himself to the entire east half, and exercising acts of exclusive ownership thereof, having the legal title to a portion,
Lull, therefore, had no actual possession of any portion of the premise?, nor had he constructive possession of any portion thereof as tenant in common with Ramsey, the principle that the possession of one tenant in common is the possession of all having no application to this state of facts.
The actual occupancy of the premises by Thorwarth, under the lease from Ramsey and as his tenant, at the time of the conveyance from.Lull to Groff, the plaintiff, was, therefore, the exclusive constructive possession of Ramsey.
It clearly appears^ then, that at the time of the conveyance from Lull tq plaintiff, the defendant Thorwarth was in the actual occupancy of the 'entire premises, of which partition is sought, as the tenant of Ramsey under a written leáse, which was .duly recorded. There- is no evidence whatever of any inquiry by the plaintiff of Thorwarth as to his rights in the premises.
It has been distinctly held by this court that, “ when a purchaser buys land or takes an; incumbrance on it, when it is in the actual possession of one other than the ^vendor,' he is required to communicate with such tenant or occupant, and find out the particulars of his claim and interest, and also from’ whom he holds; and that ‘ the actual possession of a tenant not only protects him in the enjoyment of hi’s term, but is.notice of his landlord’s title,’ ” Morrison et al. vs. March, 4 Minn. 422. The question was directly presented in the case cited, and the authorities upon the point underwent á considerable examination, the conflict pf decisions thereon being clearly recognized, and the conclusion arrived at was determined by the court to be the better rule. - ’
In addition to the authorities cited in the case in support of the rule laid down by the court, we may refer also to the follow
Principles of law affecting the title to real estate, when once settled, should not be changed except for very-weighty reasons. The decision in Morrison vs. March may properly be regarded as a rule of real property. It was rendered soon after the formation of our state government, and has remained unreversed, and doubtless acted upon, ever since. Under such circumstances we do not feel at liberty to regard the question as an open one. Bidwell vs. Coleman, 11 Minn. 88-9; The Propeller Genesee Chief vs. Fitzhugh, et al. 12 How. 458.
The - possession of Thorwarth,.therefore, was sufficient notice to plaintiff, at the date of his deed from Lull, of Bamsey’s claim to the property, to put the plaintiff upon inquiry thereof; and such inquiry, if it had been pursued with reasonable diligence, would have disclosed to him Bamsey’s equitable interest in the property.' Neither Lull nor Groff, therefore, at the time of their respective conveyances, was a bona fide purchaser for value, without notice of Bamsey’s equitable title.
Whether or not there are other other grounds upon which plaintiff is chargeable with notice of Bamsey’s equitable title, we need not now consider.
The plaintiff’s attorney urges several objections to portions of the evidence received upon the trial.
The bond and mortgage from McBoal, Lull and Gilbert to Lucretia M. Curtis, “Exhibit D,” Bazille’s affidavit of sale under the mortgage, “ Exhibit E,” his certificate of sale under the same, “ Exhibit E”; the power of attorney from Henry
Exhibits “ I,” being the mortgage from Lull and wife to Whitacre, Starbuck and Chandler, upon the undivided half of lot ten in block twenty-six'; “ K,” the assignment of Chandler of his interest in said mortgage to Whitacre and Starbuck ;, “ L,” and “ M,” the notice of foreclosure sale under the mortgage, and the affidavit of publication of such notice; the affidavit of .sale by Caldwell, sheriff, of the undivided half of lot 10 in block 26, to Thomas S. Whitacre and George C. Starbuck, to satisfy the amount due on the mortgage and taxes paid by the mortgagees, with the-receiptsfor payment of such taxes by Whitacre and Starbuck; “ N,” the sheriff’s certificate of sale to said Whitacre and Starbuck; “ 0,” the assignment, &c., of such certificate of sale, and of the mortgage, mortgage
This brings us to the consideration of the objections to the proofs of the existence of the-original letter of February 7th, 1850, from Gilbert to Lull, under which the sale of the undivided half of Gilbert’s undivided third of lot ten was sold to Ramsey; the loss of §uch letter, and the contents thereof.
We have already determined that the original letter from Gilbert to Lull constitutes Lull, Gilbert’s agent, with full authority to dispose of Gilbert’s interest in lot ten, block, twenty-six, in St. Paul proper, and any part thereof.? The original letter, therefore, would have been competent evidence; but the defendant Ramsey, claiming that the original letter was'lost, sought to' prove it by secondary evidence, to-wit: by a copy of the original.
The instrument offered as such secondary evidence was an alleged copy -of such letter found among the records of the register of deeds of Ramsey county, in Book C of Deeds, on page 431. '
The original letter'not being entitled to record by law, the record of it was extra official, and as an official record was not competent evidence, but the copy thus found among the records could, of course, be authenticated as other private writings, andjyould thereupon be admissible.
For this pufpose it was necessary for the defendant to give evidence of the prior existence of the original letter, that the
As to the sufficiency of the evidence, the rule is, if the instrument is lost, the party seeking to introduce secondary evidence thereof “ is required to give some evidence that such a paper once existed, though slight evidence is sufficient- for the purpose, and that &„bonafide and diligent search has been unsuccessfully made for it in the place where it was most likely to be found, if the nature of the case admits such proof.” Thayer vs. Barney, 12 Minn. 502; 1 Greenl. Ev., § 558.
In determining the sufficiency of such proof upon an appeal to this court, we will not confine ourselves to the evidence upon these points received prior to the admission of the secondary evidence to which they were addressed; but if it appears from all the evidence in the case that facts sufficient to authorize the secondary evidence were before the court, a new trial will not be granted.
Without stating particularly the testimony of the witnesses, we are clearly of opinion that the testimony of Lull, Brunson and Dew.ey, given before the copy was received in evidence, and that of Bamsey received subsequently, sufficiently show the prior existence of the original'letter; that the copy offered was a correct copy of the original, and, in connection with the entry in the reception book of the register of deeds, as
Before the witnesses Lull, Brunson and Dewey testified upon the subject of the letter, Book C of. deeds, containing the alleged copy of the letter was shown to them respectively, and their testimony was received after seeing it, to which the plaintiff objected.
So far as the evidence of the witnesses goes to the fact that the copy offered was a correct copj*- of the original, the exhibition of the copy was clearly authorized. The only doubt can be in regard to its exhibition to them before their testimony as to the prior existence of the original. This was a matter to be determined by the court below in the exercise of a sound discretion, and the action of the court will not be reversed except in case of abuse of such discretion. In this case we see no-reason to suppose that such discretion was not properly exercised, or that any injury, was done to the plaintiff.
The entry in the reception book of the register of deeds was not admissible as an official record, because the entry was not authorized by law. The register of deeds, however, was reí quired by law to keep a reception book of this particular kind, in this particular mode, in which he ivas required to enter, as soon as they were received, in the order of their reception, all deeds and other instruments left for record, and all copies left as cautions or notices of liens. Rev. Stat. p. 62.
There is no dispute as to the fact that the book containing the entry in question was the official reception book kept at the time by the register of deeds of Ramsey county, in pursuance of the statute referred to,-nor that such entry was found in its proper order among the official entries'in the reception book in the usual form of such official entries. It appears
These facts established prima facie the verity of this unofficial entry.
. This entry, noting facts which transpired about nineteen years previous to the trial, being thus verified, and found'in the place where it would have been made by the register of deeds if he had supposed, as it appears he did suppose, he was authorized to record the letter, and where Lull- would have made his signature after receiving the paper, if it had been delivered to him after being recorded, is a circumstance tending to show that the paper was delivered, and under all the circumstances, was admissible upon the preliminary question addressed to the discretion of the court, in connection with the testimony of Lull upon the question of the delivery to him by the register of deeds, of the letter in question after it was recorded.
But further, we are clearly of opinion -that, independent of the entry in the 'reception book, the testimony of Lull is entirely sufficient, upon the preliminary inquiry, to show that-the letter was delivered to him after it was recorded.
Testimony having been received as to the prior existence of the original letter from Gilbert to Lull, its loss,.and the
The only purpose for which it is claimed this testimony was admissible was to corroborate the testimony which had already been given as to the 'execution of the original letter from Gilbert to Lull, which was Jost.
This is certainly the only purpose for which it would be admissible, and we are inclined to think it was not admissible for that purpose, since it tended to show not that -Gilbert had given up his interest in the property to Lull individually, but to Lull and McBoal jointly. But as we are áatisfied that the other evidence in the case establishes the letter to Lull, and since it distinctly appears from the written findings of the court that this letter and the deed of Lull, as attorney in fact of Gilbert to Ramsey, constitute the only basis upon which the title of the defendant Ramsey-to any portion of Gilbert’s interest in the lot rests, if this evidence were excluded the result must be the same. Therefore, if the evidence was improperly received, it is not ground for reversing the case.
The plaintiff, Groff, being upon the stand, was asked by his counsel the following question: “State whether or not you had auy knowledge of any verbal agreement between Alexander Ramsey and Samuel Gilbert, Jr., acting by O. P. V. Lull, or of any such agreement between Ramsey and McBoal and Lull, or either of them, in reference to the purchase by said ■ Ramsey of the property in question, prior to July 20th, 18691”
The plaintiff objects that the defendant is not entitled to the affirmative relief granted. The only ground upon which the plaintiff’s counsel bases this objection here, is that no facts are stated in the answer, which would entitle Bamsey to á specific performance of the alleged contract of sale as against either Gilbert or Groff.
The defense numbered three in the answer states that, on the 7th of February, 1850, James McBoal, Samuel Gilbert, Jr., and C. P. Y. Lull were the owners in fee simple of all lot ten, in block twenty-six, in St Paul proper, &c., as tenants in common m equal shares, each of them being so the owner in fee simple of an equal undivided one-third part thereof; that on that day Gilbert, “for a valuable consideration paid to ■him, agreed to give Lull full power of disposition over all his interest in said lot, and, for the purpose of carrying out said agreement, on that day executed and delivered to Lull an instrument in writing, of which a copy marked Exhibit ‘A,’ (being a copy of the letter from Gilbert to Lull,) is hereto annexed and made part of the answerthat the lot referred to in the instrument is the same lot ten above mentioned; that afterwards and- on the 4th of June, 1852, Gilbert being still. vested with the legal title of the undivided third of the lot, Lull,'acting in the name of Gilbert, and . the said Gilbert, agreed with said Bamsey to sell and convey to said Bamsey in fee simple one equal.undivided half part of the said undivided one-third part so vested in said Gilbert, for a full and
The findings of the court sustain these allegations. We have already determined that the letter from Gilbert to Lull conferred on the latter the power to sell and contract for the sale of the premises, and that the deed from Lull, attorney in fact of Gilbert, to Ramsey, operates as a' contract to convey. Here then is a written contract by Gilbert, through Lull his attorney in fact, with Ramsey, to sell. Groff, by reason of notice on the part of Lull his grantor, and himself, stands in exactly the same position with Gilbert, and Ramsey is entitled to enforce the written contract against the plaintiff.
We think the facts stated in the answer altogether sufficient to entitle the defendant Ramsey, to a specific performance of the contract. The contract being in writing, the
We think this disposes substantially of all the points raised in the case. The order denying a new trial affirmed.