48 Wis. 509 | Wis. | 1880
The defense in this case rests entirely upon the title acquired or claimed under the mortgage given by the plaintiff and her former husband to Linus IT. Mooney, in 1858. It is practically conceded that Mooney was a resident and citizen of New Jersey. For the purpose of showing the death of Mooney, and the foreclosure of the mortgage by his executor by advertisement, under the statute, the defendant offered in evidence a record of the office of register of deeds for La Crosse county, which was the record of a certified copy of the probate of the will of Mooney. It was claimed on the part of the defendant, that this record of the copy of Mooney’s will, and of its probate in New Jersey, was sufficient evidence of the death of Mooney and of the official character of the person who assumed the right to foreclose the mortgage by advertisement in this state. The final ruling of the circuit court as to the effect of this record was, that it did not establish these facts. The correctness of that ruling is the only question we have to consider. That it was essential to show the right or authority of the person foreclosing the mortgage to act in the matter, seems to us too plain for argument. If the rule were otherwise, then a mere stranger, one who had no earthly right to represent the owner of the mortgage, might go through the form of foreclosure by advertisement and sale, and give a good title.
The able counsel for the defendant would not argue in sup
We do not think this section was intended to have the application claimed for it. The provision doubtless has a purpose — a practical object in view. But that object was not to prescribe a rule of evidence, nor declare what should be legal proof of death, and of the authority of an executor to act. The legislature were treating of the subject of wills of realty, instruments which have the effect of conveyances proper, and were providing a method by which the claim of title of lands might be preserved and made known. And hence it provides that a duly certified and properly authenticated copy of a will, devising lands in this state, or an interest in lands, which will has been duly proven and allowed by the proper court of another state, may be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county where the lands are situated. When such copy has been so recorded, it is as valid and effectual to pass the title to such lands as though the will had been duly proven and allowed by the proper court of this state.
So far as the devise of real estate is concerned, the provis
But it is further insisted that, if the foreclosure proceedings were void, they nevertheless operated as an assignment of the mortgage to the purchaser at the sale. But the difficulty with that position is, that the purchaser was the very party who" assumed the right to foreclose the mortgage. If he had no authority to act for the owner of the mortgage in the matter, it was very plain that he could acquire no title to anything, either the debt or the land, by going through the formality of an unauthorized sale. Had the mortgagee, or a person law
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.