Beeson v. Comly

19 Mich. 103, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 33
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Mich. 103 (Beeson v. Comly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beeson v. Comly, 19 Mich. 103, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 33 (Mich. 1869).

Opinion

Christiancy, J.

This case comes before us upon a case made, after judgment against the defendant in an action of ejectment commenced in Berrien, but tried in the Circuit Court for Van Burén County.

Plaintiff claimed to derive title through an execution upon a judgment of the Circuit Court for Van Burén County, rendered October 18, 1843, in an action where William B. Beeson was plaintiff, and Joshua Oomly was defendant, upon a promissory note made by said Comly March 2, 1836.

No sale was made by virtue of the execution, but the land (thirty-eight acres, part of a larger tract), was appraised by three appraisers and set off to William B. Bee-son, plaintiff in the execution, February 25, 1845, and accepted by him in satisfaction of the execution.

William B. Beeson conveyed to the present plaintiff by quit claim, February 5, 1849, during the pendency of the chancery suit,' presently to be mentioned, but more than two years prior to the decree. Joshua Comly continued in possession until his death in 1862, and devised the farm, of which these premises are a part, to the present defendants, who have since remained in possession claiming under his will.

Neither the judgment nor the execution, nor the proceedings under it, were introduced in evidence on the trial of the ejectment. The question therefore does not arise, whether the appraisal and set off would be valid as against Joshua Oomly, the cause of the action having arisen upon a contract made prior to the appraisal and set off laws, un[111]*111der the principle settled in Bronson v. Kinzie, 1 How. 311 and McCracken v. Hayward, 2 How. 608.

But to preclude any such question, and to estop the defendants from disputing the title of 'William B. Bee-son, (through whom the plaintiff claimed), the plaintiff was allowed to introduce upon the trial, against the objection of the defendants, the record of a cause in chancery wherein said William B. Beeson was complainant and said Joshua Comly and his son, Milton Comfy, were defendants.

As appears by the record thus introduced, the bill in that cause, after stating the judgment and execution, the appraisal and setting off of the land and its acceptance, alleges that Joshua Comfy had no other property liable to execution ; that he was, and for more than ten years had been, in the occupation of the land, that complainant had offered to take part of said land in payment and satisfaction, which said Comfy refused; that, on the 28th day of November, 1842, said Joshua Comfy and his wife conveyed the quarter section, (of which the premises in question are a part) except about ten acres thereof to their son, Milton Comly, who then, and (the bill alleges) still resides with his father, and is less than twenty-two years of age. That the land so conveyed to said Milton was worth two hundred dollars and more; that said Milton paid nothing for the land and had no means of paying for it; that the description of the land conveyed in said deed was as follows: “a part of the north east quarter of Section twenty-six in township seven south, of range seventeen west, containing one hundred and fifty acres;” charges that said deed is void for uncertainty in the description of the land intended to be conveyed;, alleges that said Joshua yet resides, and for years past has resided, on the land, improving and cultivating it as if it were his own, and has not parted with the possession; charges that said deed to Milton was intended and made to hinder, delay and defraud com[112]*112plainant, and was fraudulent and void; alleges that the title of complainant to the thirty-eight acres of land, so set off to complainant, had become absolute, the time of redemption having expired; that said fraudulent conveyance to said Milton, is a cloud upon complainant’s title. The bill further shows, upon information and belief, and charges the truth to be that, about the month of January, 1846, said Milton did, without consideration, reconvey by deed, to said Joshua, the land so previously conveyed by said Joshua to him, though said deed from said Milton has not been put on record, as complainant is informed and believes.

The prayer for relief is only “ that said deed of conveyance from said Joshua Comly to said Milton Comly may be decreed and declared null and void, and of no force or effect whatever, and may be decreed to be delivered up and cancelled, and for such other relief or such further relief as shall be agreeable to equity and good conscience, etc.

The defendants, Milton and Joshua Comly, appeared and put in a demurrer to the whole of the bill except that portion which alleges that Joshua, at the time of the levy, bad no other property liable, etc., and, for cause of demurrer, insist that it appears by the bill that defendant Milton has no interest i,n the land, and that complainant has not stated such a case as entitles him to the discovery or relief sought.

The defendants answer and take issue upon, so much of the bill as charges that Joshua, at the time of the levy, had no other property.

The demurrer was overruled and the defendants ordered to answer in twenty days after notice of the order; upon failure to do which, the bill was afterward duly taken as confessed; and thereupon, on the 4th day of August, 1851, a decree was entered, which, after the usual caption and recitals in such cases, is in these words:

“On motion of N. Bacon, solicitor for complainant, it [113]*113is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the deed, mentioned and set forth in said bill, made by Joshua Comly and Elizabeth, his wife, on the twenty-eighth day of Novembe,r one thousand eight hundred and forty-two, to the said Milton Comly, is fraudulent and void, as against the judgment and execution in favor of the complainant against said Joshua Comly, mentioned and set forth in said bill of complaint ; and the said deed is hereby ordered, adjudged and decreed to be fraudulent and void; and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said Milton Comly execute and deliver to the complainant a quit claim deed in fee simple of the following described premises, which were appraised and set off to the complainant on said execution and described in said bill of complaint;” [here follows the description], the deed to be prepared by the solicitor of the complainant; and in case of his neglect to execute said deed, then and in such case, it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that this decree stand for and in the place of such deed: and it is farther ordered, adjudged and decreed that the complainant recover against the said defendants his costs in this behalf to be taxed and that he have execution therefor.”

It is manifest from this statement of the case:

1. That the bill alleges no other title in the complainant, William B. Beeson, than that derived from the proceedings under the execution, and no title arising in any other way could have been found by the court under the pleadings and the order taking the bill as confessed:

2. That the Court did not by its decree find or adjudicate upon this title except inferentially, and this only as against Milton Comly.

3. To say nothing of the charge in the bill that the deed from Joshua to Milton Comly was void for uncertainty, the bill shows upon its face, upon the information and belief of complainant that whatever title might have [114]*114been conveyed to Milton by the alleged fraudulent deed, had been reconveyed by Milton to Joshua prior to the filing of the bill.

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Related

McKinney v. Curtiss
27 N.W. 691 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1886)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Mich. 103, 1869 Mich. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beeson-v-comly-mich-1869.