28 Mich. 521 | Mich. | 1874
The plaintiffs brought suit in ejectment to recover a valuable lot in the city of Detroit which they claim as the heirs at law, or grantees of heirs at- law of Catherine Welch, afterwards Willetts, whose title originated in or about the year 1813, by descent from her mother, Bridget Belcher. The defendants claim under Elijah Willetts, who married Catherine Welch in 1817, and to whom in the year last named a deed was made by the administrator of Bridget Belcher, of the lot now in question, the purpose of which was therein declared to be, to carry into effect an order or decree of the probate court in partition. The , evidence appears to establish the fact that ever since the date of this partition deed this lot has been held and claimed by Elijah Willetts and those deriving title from him, and the claim of the plaintiffs would be barred by the statute of limitations were it not that Elijah Willetts was living until 1868, and up to that time would have been entitled to possession in right of his wife if she continued to be owner until her death. If the proceedings in partition are valid and were evidence of title in Elijah Willetts as against his wife, the plaintiffs, it is manifest, cannot recover, as their claim must necessarily be adverse to those proceedings.
The first thing that strikes the mind in taking up such a case is the long delay in taking any proceedings to contest the validity of the partition. This is not wholly accounted for by showing that ejectment could not have been brought by the heirs of Catherine Willetts before the death of Elijah Willetts. If Catherine Willetts in her life time, or her heirs afterwards, had knowledge of the proceedings in partition, it is reasonable to suppose they
Under these circumstances when the plaintiffs come forward to assail a title which has stood undisputed for half a century, and which was founded originally upon a judicial determination, every reasonable intendment should be made in support of the existing possession, and it would be in the highest degree unreasonable and unjust to require defendants to make that strict proof of these ancient proceedings that would be expected had they been recent. And especially is this the case when the proceedings which are called in question were had at a period in the history of Michigan whose judicial records are to a considerable extent lost or destroyed, so that we may almost take judicial notice that at this day it would be impossible in most cases to make a complete exhibit of all the papers and proceedings that were exhibited or that took place in any probate matter of the period in question.
In the present case the parties have made what proofs they could of the probate records, but some of them appear to be lost, and to some of the proceedings in the case of Bridget Belcher there are only brief calendar references, made long after the transactions themselves, to which they refer, took place. We shall not examine in detail .the evidence adduced to show the probate proceedings, as it will suffice for the presentation of our views to state that enough was proved to warrant a jury in finding that George Welch, one of the children of Bridget Belcher, was appointed administrator on the estate of his mother in the year 1814; that he gave bond and took upon himself that trust, and that he filed an inventory showing, as property of the estate, two lots in Detroit (one of which is assumed to be the one in question), valued at six hundred dollars and four hun-
“On examination of the report made by James Abbott, Esq., George McDougall, Esq., and David McKinstry, .it is thereupon adjudged, ordered and decreed, that the said George Welch, in his capacity as administrator to the estate of the late Mrs. Bridget Belcher, deceased, shall make good and legal conveyances to such individuals as named in said report, and that the said George Welch comply with all and every part of said report.”
The recitals in the deed show further that this order was made by Charles Lamed, register of probate for the judicial district of Erie, Huron and Detroit. The deed itself was proved to be in the handwriting of the register of probate, and was witnessed and the acknowledgment taken by him. And at the same time a similar deed was made of the other lot to William Belcher, one of the heirs, purporting to be made under the same partition order.
Now, to suppose that the register of probate drew such a deed, reciting therein an order made by himself when none had in fact been made, and that the administrator executed it with the knowledge he must have had of the facts, would be to assume such malfeasance, if not corruption, in office as should never be assumed from a mere absence of evidence in support of official action after so long a period has elapsed and under circumstances so well calculated to favor the loss of evidence. It is much more reasonable to presume that the register of probate, who at the time was unquestionably exercising jurisdiction over the
That the register of probate had authority to order such a partition can hardly, I think, be disputed. The territorial act of January 19, 1811 (1 Ter. Laws, 160), expressly empowered him “ to make partition, both among tenants in common, joint tenants, co-heirs and devisees.” The act did not prescribe in detail what should be the proceedings, but, as Avas customary in those early times, left nearly everything regarding the procedure, to be determined by the-court itself. And while it is matter of general notoriety that the judicial proceedings of the territory Avere exceedingly informal, it is believed that the rights of parties were not the less on that account kept carefully in vieAV.
The register of probate, then, had authority to make partition of estates, and it only remains to be seen Avhether he acquired jurisdiction to make the particular order which is iu question in this case. It is denied by the plaintiffs that he could have jurisdiction to make this order, unless it first appeared that Elijah Willetts Avas a joint owner with others, of the lands belonging to Bridget Belcher’s estate, and there is no evidence except the order itself, that he Avas such a joint owner. There is consequently, it is said, no proof to sustain the jurisdiction.
To state the reasoning on the part of the plaintiffs on this branch of the case a little more in detail, it is understood to be as follows: The register of probate neither had nor could have jurisdiction to set off any land to Elijah Willets, unless he was a joint OAvner with others of the land to be partitioned. He was not one of the heirs, and he was not shown in any Avay, unless the very assumption of jurisdiction by the court can be held to show it, to have acquired any rights in the land by purchase. But if juris
This view of the case is plausible, but not, we think, sound. The court of probate had undoubted jurisdiction in the matter of the estate of Bridget Belcher, and might order a partition as one of the steps in its settlement. To the proceedings concerning this estate all the heirs were parties, and such other persons as claimed to have any rights derived from the heirs would be px-oper parties to the partition. The jurisdiction of the court would not depend on whether the claim was well founded or not; it had a general jurisdiction as regards the subject matter to be partitioned, and the question of the rights of the respective claimants would be the subject of evidence, and of an adjudication by the court. And even an ex-roneous conclusion by the court in passing upon the evidence would not render its action invalid, but only make it subject to review and reversal by the supreme court, to which an appeal was given. — 1 Ter. Laws, 168. It was not, therefore, the actual existence of a right in Elijah Willets that gave the court jurisdiction to act and make the order in this case, but the court having jurisdiction, must find upon the evidence that he had a right, before it should set off lands to him. And the order is the best, and indeed the only legitimate evidence that such a right was established.
It would of course be necessary that Elijah Willets should be made a party to the proceeding before any order could be made affecting his interest. But the order appearing to have been made in his favor, and he having taken the benefit of it, no other evidence is íxeeded to show that he was before the court. And if any heir whose interest was injuriously affected by the adjudication in favor of Elijah Willits, was dissatisfied therewith, the proper remedy should have been brought by appeal.