Allen v. Brooks

60 N.W. 253, 88 Wis. 265, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 38
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 60 N.W. 253 (Allen v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Brooks, 60 N.W. 253, 88 Wis. 265, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 38 (Wis. 1894).

Opinion

ORTON, C. J.

A brief statement of the facts is as follows: Peter Dean, of the city of Duluth, Minn., died on the 4th day of January, 1884, seised of the following lands, to wit: The east half of the southeasfquarter of section 13, town 48, range 13 west, and the southeast quarter of section 34, town 49, range 14 west, situated in Douglas county, Wis.; also twenty lots in the city of Duluth, Minn. His sole heirs at law were his two brothers Thomas Dean and Dennis Dean; [266]*266bis sister, Mary Duryea; John J. Dean, Swrah A. Teasdale, and Catherine L. Allen, the children and sole heirs of his deceased brother John Dean; Johanna D. Hayes, Mary T. Saddler, and William Dean, the children and sole heirs of his deceased brother Alexander Dean. He left his last will and testament, which was afterwards admitted to probate, by which he bequeathed to his sister, Mrs. Mary Dur-yea, in copper and bank stocks and money, to the amount of $25,000, and devised to the city of Superior, Wis., the above-described eighty acres and 160 acres of land, situated at or near that place, to be used for public purposes, and to the village or city of Duluth the said lots situated therein, to be sold after one year and a half, and the proceeds thereof used by said city of Duluth for the purchase and beautifying of small parks, from five to ten acres in extent, throughout said city, for the use of the inhabitants thereof.

At the time said will was made, there was no such municipal corporation as the city of Superior in Wisconsin in existence. The heirs knew the provisions of the will, and that there was at least a question whether the bequest to the city of Superior was valid for that reason. There was, however, at the time, a community commonly called the “ City of Superior ” within the corporate limits of the town of Superior, which was afterwards incorporated as the city of Superior by an act of the legislature in the year 1889. If the title" had been unquestionable, said real estate in Wisconsin was reasonably worth the sum of $80,000; but, as the title was then involved in doubt, it had no marketable value whatever.

The said Dennis Dean was the father-in-law of the defendant, George L. Brooks, and they resided near where the lands were situated. In the year 1889, the said Dennis Dean, being desirous of having proceedings instituted to test the legality of the will, called upon the said John J. Dean, who resided in Milwaukee, and who was the brother [267]*267-of the plaintiffs, and suggested to him. to write to the defendant, whom he had requested to take an interest in the subject of this claim of the heirs, for the purpose of having ¡such proceedings instituted. On the 27th day of March, 1S89, the said John J. Dean, being fully authorized to act ■on behalf of the plaintiffs, wrote to the defendant on behalf of himself and the plaintiffs, and requested him to take the matter at once in hand and push it through, and that all the heirs would join therein, and expressed the hope that he would take it and realize something out of it for the heirs as well as for himself, and offered to settle in any way he and his uncle Dennis might arrange it. On the Sth day of April, following, the said defendant wrote to the said John J. Dean, in reply, that Dennis Dean had said something about his purchasing some interest in the property for the purpose of contesting said bequest and making arrangement to sustain the suit; that as to the value of the interests, in the present shape it is in, it is impossible to determine; that the Wisconsin land is wild, and about six miles from town, and has been platted and many of the lots sold; and that, as he had requested it, he would make him a proposition to pay $300 for his and his sisters’ interest in the lands, to be conveyed Jjy quitclaim deed, and if he perfects the title he will pay to each one $300 more, making $1,200 in all. On April 15th following, John J. Dean wrote the defendant, in reply, that his sisters (the plaintiffs) and himself agree to the proposition if he (the defendant) thinks that nothing better can be done. This is the effect of this correspondence, but not literal. John J. Dean communicated this arrangement to the plaintiffs, and thereupon the sale was consummated by their conveying to the • defendant by quitclaim deed all their right, title, and interest in said Wisconsin real estate, and $200 was paid thereon to the plaintiffs; and on the 20th day of April, 1889, the defendant gave to the plaintiffs- an agree[268]*268ment in. writing in effect that, if he can and do acquire a title to the lands conveyed by them at this date by quitclaim deed, he will pay them each $300 more.

The plaintiffs tendered to the defendant the money so paid and said agreement, and demanded a reconveyance of their said interests; and, upon his refusal so to do, they commenced this action to have said deed declared void on the ground of fraud, covin, and misrepresentation.

The above facts were in effect found by the circuit court, and appear to have been established by the evidence. The false representations chárged in the complaint are as follows: (1) That there was some property that belonged to Peter Dean that was not disposed of by the will, of the value of $100. (2) That he could so manage the property as to make for the heirs <$300 to each, and that it was not worth more than $400. (3) That the other heirs had disposed of their interests at the same rate. (4) It is charged that the defendant knew that the will was void, and that the interest of each heir was of the value of $40,000. (5) That the defendant concealed the true state of the title and made said misrepresentations for the purpose of inducing the plaintiffs t'o execute the deed. (6) That the plaintiffs were ignorant of the true state of the title, and of the value of the Wisconsin lands. The learned judge of the circuit court found “ that the plaintiffs intended, by the conveyance made by them to the defendant, to sell and convey to him all their right, title, and interest in the real estate in question; that they were not induced to make said deed by any fraud or trick on the part of the defendant or any other person; that they knew, when thej7 made said conveyance to defendant, the condition of the title of said land substantially as well as the defendant; knew the conditions of said will by which the said Peter Dean attempted to bequeath said land for public purposes, and that, unless said bequests were judicially determined to be illegal and [269]*269void, they bad no interest whatever in said real estate; and they also knew that the defendant, in taking said conveyance from them, proposed instituting legal proceedings to test the validity of said will, and that he depended entirely upon the contingency of success in said proposed legal proceedings to secure any interest whatever in said lands through or under said quitclaim deed.” These findings were clearly supported by the evidence.

The above correspondence and the agreement which the defendant gave the plaintiffs at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed show that the plaintiffs knew the condition of the title to their estates, as it was then, and as well as the defendant. The agreement contemplates that there might be a chance for the defendant to secure a good title by having the- will declared void in respect to the Wisconsin lands, for it provides that in such a contingency he shall pay them an additional $300 each.

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.W. 253, 88 Wis. 265, 1894 Wisc. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-brooks-wis-1894.