Arper v. Baze

9 Minn. 108
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Minn. 108 (Arper v. Baze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arper v. Baze, 9 Minn. 108 (Mich. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court

Emmett, C. J.

The record in this case shows that on the 7th of October, A. D., 1850, one John R. Fish located a military land warrant upon the land which is the subject of this action, and on the 9th of November following transferred his certificate of location to Amherst Willoughby and Simon Powers, and accompanied said transfer with a warrantee deed of the land so entered. This deed was immediately placed upon record, but owing to the defective acknowledgment (it having been acknowledged before a judge of probate, see Arper vs. Baze, 6 Minn. Rep., 220,) the record thereof was unauthorized, and was not therefore notice to any one. This defect, however, did not vitiate the deed itself.

On the 31st of May, 1852, Willoughby and Powers conveyed the land to the Plaintiff by deed, which was recorded June 2, 1852.

On the 12th of November, 1850, Henry M. Rice brought an action against said Fish and attached said land as his property. [112]*112On the 19tli of June, 1852, Rice, having recovered a judgment against Fish in said action, and issued an execution thereon, purchased said land at the sale by the sheriff, receiving a deed therefor on the 1st day of December, 1852, which was duly recorded the same day. Afterwards by deed dated June 24, and recorded June 27, 1853, Rice conveyed the same property to the Defendant.

In the meantime Willoughby and Powers, as the assignees of the said certificate of location, obtained a patent for the land in their own names, but not until after they had conveyed to the Plaintiff. The patent bears date August 25, 1852, and was duly recorded of that date, in the Land Office at Washington, but it does not appear ever to have been recorded elsewhere.

These facts all appear from the pleadings or stand uncontra-dicted, and show conclusively that both parties must eventually resort to Fish as the common source of title.

Quite a number of interesting questions were raised on the trial, but the main, if not indeed the only question of fact submitted to the jury was that of fraud in the transfer from Fish to Willoughby and Powers. The Defendant insisted that said conveyance was without adequate consideration; that it was made with intent to defraud creditors; that Willoughby and Powers were cognizant of said fraudulent intent; that the deed was therefore void as to creditors, and as to Rice under whom he claims.

The evidence produced to sustain this charge of fraud was to this effect. That Rice had furnished Fish with the land warrant by which the land was located, and was by the arrangement to be secured by a lien on the land; that Fish had neglected to give this security, and Rice’s attorney had threatened to commence proceedings against him unless the matter was at once attended to; that Fish thereupon promised to come down from St. Anthony, where he resided, to St. Paul, and attend to it in a day or two; that instead of so doing he shortly afterward came to St. Paul on a Sunday, in the night time, and without going near Rice gave the deed to Willoughby and Powers, which was executed about three o’clock on Monday morning following, and then fled the [113]*113country; that said Powers himself called upon the judge of probate, who drew the deed, about nine o’clock P. M. of said Sunday, and engaged him to be or remain up, so that said deed could be made as soon as Monday arrived; that about midnight Powers, Willoughby and Fish came to the office of the said judge of probate, when it was found that Fish did not have with him the said certificate of location; that thereupon he went to St. Anthony-after it, returning with it about three o’clock A. M., when the deed was executed and ¿the certificate transferred; that when he so returned, Fish remarked to Powers that “they were all up and at work in Rice’s office,” being the office of the attorney who had threatened to commence proceedings against him as before stated; and that in a conversation about the matter subsequently, Powers told Lambert, said judge of probate, that they were getting out an attachment against all of Fish’s property, and he wanted to protect himself.-

In answer to this, and to explain the midnight character of the transaction, said Powers was called as a witness and testified that they knew nothing of Rice’s claim, nor of any fraudulent intention on the part of Fish towards his creditors; that Fish came to them, in great perturbation of mind, stating that one Northrup, of St. Anthony, had threatened to kill him, and had actually followed the stage down in which he (Fish) came to St. Paul, and attempted several times to shoot Mm on the road; that he was leaving the country for fear of Ms life, and wanted them (they being engaged in the livery business) to take Mm out of the country, and also to buy his land, so that he might pay them what he owed to them, and be enabled to get away; that accordingly they made the purchase, paying him the money therefor, all except about $40, which went to pay their account against him and for sending him away at that time; and that Fish did not say to him, on his return from St. Anthony with the certificate of location, that “ they were all up and at work in Rice’s office,” or any thing to that effect. He also stated that Fish’s statements about Nor-tM-up were corroborated by Northrup himself, though at what time does not certainly appear-.

[114]*114It was further shown that after the parties left the office where the deed was drawn, Fish and Powers, about four o’clock in the morning, called up the register of deeds of the county of Ramsey, went with him to his office, and had the deed filed for record.

This is substantially the evidence introduced in relation to the question of fraud, and had the jury been left entirely free to decide upon its credibility and effect, in all probability the verdict would have been correct. But there were various questions of law raised by the parties, upon which the court was constrained to instruct the jury, which in our opinion materially interfered with the determination of the simple question of a fraudulent intent on the part of Fish, and a knowledge thereof on tbe part of Willoughby and Powers. We cannot, therefore, give to this verdict the effect which otherwise it would most certainly be entitled to.

The court amongst other matters held, and in effect so instructed the jury, that notwithstanding Fish may have made the conveyance to Willoughby and Powers with intent to defraud his creditors, and that fradulent intention known to his grantees; yet, if .the Plaintiff was not shown to have been cognizant of the fraud at the time of Ms purchase, he would not be affected by it; and that neither constructive nor actual notice even, of the previous j>roceedings in attachment, could make any difference as to him; that he was not limited to the same right or title as against Rice or the Defendants, wMch Willoughby and Powers had.

This, it will be perceived, cast upon the Defendant the whole burthen of proving that the Plaintiff had knowledge of the alleged fraud, and, in the event of failure, rendered it entirety unnecessary to consider whether any fraud had been committed at all. As regards the first of the above propositions, we cannot say that it was improper so to charge the law, although the Appellant has made that a prominent point for reversing the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Minn. 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arper-v-baze-minn-1864.