186 P. 254 | Idaho | 1919
Lead Opinion
On April 15, 1901, John H. Patten, who was the owner of land in a forest reserve, relinquished it to the United States and thereby acquired a right to select from the public domain land in lieu thereof. (30 Stats, at L. 36.) In the exercise of his right, and in conformity to the usual practice in such cases, he issued two powers of attorney, one of which authorized and directed his attorney in fact to select land in lieu of that relinquished, and the other, which was irrevocable and was executed by Patten and his wife, authorized the attorney in fact to sell and, in their name, place and stead, to convey the land to be selected. The attorney in fact was not named, but spaces were left blank, in order that the purchaser of the right to select land might designate whoever he saw fit.
The right to make this lieu selection found its way into the hands of a scrip broker, who sold it to John E. Irvine, whose name was inserted as attorney in fact. He caused the power of attorney authorizing the sale and conveyance of land to be selected, as above stated, to be recorded in the office of the county recorder of Kootenai county. Thereafter, having abandoned the purpose to make a lieu selection, he sold the right to do so back to the broker and delivered the powers of attorney to him. H. C. Culver then purchased the right and the name of Irvine was erased from, and that of Culver written into, the powers of attorney. The latter made selection of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter, section 20, township 57 north of range 2 west of Boise meridian, and on- June 22, 1904, United States patent was issued conveying the same to John H. Patten. On December 22, 1913, Culver, as attorney in fact of, and in the name of, Patten and his wife, conveyed the land to respondent.
On August 18, .1915, Irvine, as attorney in fact of Patten and his wife, executed and delivered a quitclaim deed purporting to convey the land above described to H. B. Davis. He did not, at the time of making this deed, claim any interest in the land, nor did he make any claim as attorney in fact, or otherwise, by reason of Patten’s right of selection.
Appellant contends that after the power of attorney to sell and convey the land to be selected'had been completed by filling in the name of Irvine as attorney in fact, the subsequent erasure of his name and‘the substitution of that of Culver was a material alteration, and vitiated the document as an executory instrument and rendered invalid the deed subsequently executed by Culver; that by erasing the name of Irvine and writing in that of Culver a substitution of attorneys in fact was not accomplished, and that the power of attorney authorized the former to, and he did, convey the property i to H. B. Davis.
That contention cannot be sustained. The substance of this transaction was the purchase of the right to make selection of, and to acquire title to, land in lieu of that relinquished by Patten, incidental to and aceonipanying which was the right to designate the attorney in fact. The right to make that selection and to sell and convey the land, and to designate the person to transfer the title, belonged to whoever bought and paid for it. Patten so understood and intended when he issued the powers of attorney and delivered them to the broker. That right belonged to Irvine when he bought it and became again the property of the broker when it was sold back to him. It was the property of Culver when he bought it, and after that neither Patten, the broker, nor Ii’vine had any interest in it. Under these circumstances the erasure of the name of Irvine from the powers of attorney and the insertion of that of Culver in its stead constituted a substitution of attorneys in fact. When the land had been selected and the United States had issued its patent therefor,
The authority of Irvine to act as attorney in fact for .Patten was terminated when he sold the right to make the lieu selection baek to the broker, and that he so understood and desired clearly appears from his testimony. His deed purporting to convey the land in question to H. B. Davis was a nullity, and her deed and that of her husband to appellant conveyed no interest therein.
A number of assignments of error have been made, but in view of the conclusion reached, we deem a discussion of them unnecessary.
The judgment is affirmed. Costs are awarded to respondent.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring. — I concur, in the conclusion reached that the judgment should be affirmed. The evidence in this case is clear that Irvine, for a valuable consideration, returned to Murphy the power of attorney to select and the power of attorney to sell, intending to, and he did thereby, renounce the rights which he had under these instruments.' He is, therefore, in no position to object to any subsequent alteration in the power of attorney to sell, and regardless of the fraud attempted to be perpetrated upon him by F. E. Davis, as a result of which he executed and delivered to H. B. Davis, a quitclaim deed covering the property in the name of Patten, the deed was a mere nullity for want of authority in Irvine at that time. Nor is the appellant here a bona fide purchaser, inasmuch as the deed from Patten by Culver, as his attorney in fact, to the Sandpoint Lumber & Pole Company, dated December 22, 1913, was filed for record on December 29, 1913, while the deed from the Davises to appellant was not executed and delivered until August 30, 1915. In the words of the learned trial judge who heard this ease, there is not a glimmer of equity in appellant’s contention.