Bennett v. Keehn

15 N.W. 776, 57 Wis. 582, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 339
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 N.W. 776 (Bennett v. Keehn) 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
Bennett v. Keehn, 15 N.W. 776, 57 Wis. 582, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 339 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

Lyoh, J.

It is alleged in the answer .that when the tax certificates were issued which are the basis of the tax deeds to Smith, Mr. Rogers held the record title to the lots covered by such certificates and deeds; that is to say, he was the legal owner of such lots. This allegation is understood to be direct and positive. It is also averred, on information and belief, that when such lots were conveyed by Rogers and Burnham to the mortgagor —• the defendant Emma A. [587]*587Hewitt — Mr. Rogers owned such certificates. If these are the facts (and on demurrer they stand admitted) the interest in the lots which Rogers held by virtue of the tax certificates, passed with the legal title by his conveyance to Mrs. Hewitt, for by that conveyance he released and quitclaimed to her all his estate, right, title, interest, and claim whatsoever in and to the lots. The interest created by the tax certificates thus became merged in the legal title, and no valid tax deeds could be issued upon the certificates. Especially could no valid deeds issue to Smith, because he had knowledge of all the facts which rendered the certificates inoperative for any purpose, except to show that the tax had been paid or the lots redeemed from the tax sale. This ¡result must follow without any regard to the alleged agreement of Burnham and Rogers with Mrs. Hewitt, that the tax certificates should be canceled and surrendered for her benefit.

On this subject the language of DixoN, C. J.,— the present chief justice concurring,— in Smith v. Lewis, 20 Wis., 350, is closely applicable. He says: “I think.Lewis, as the owner cf the equity of redemption, could not receive and. hold the certificates of sale as liens, upon the mortgaged premises. A man cannot have a lien upon his own estate unless, under peculiar circumstances, it is kept alive by a court of equity. The lien of the certificates, and all interest under them, were merged upon the transfer to Lewis, or upon his acquiring the title to the mortgaged premises. The title to the certificates and the lands being united in the same person, the lands were practically redeemed. It terminated the sales and restored the estate exactly as it was before the sales took place, except that the taxes for which the sales were made were satisfied. As the successor of the mortgagor, the transfer of the certificates to Lewis was in effect the same as if they had been transferred to the mortgagor himself [588]*588before Lewis purchased. No valid deed could, therefore, be issued.”

We conclude the answer sufficiently shows that the tax deeds to Smith were absolutely void, and hence, although there is no allegation that Smith executed to Mrs. Hewitt any conveyance of the lots covered by such deeds, the legal title thereto was held by her when she executed the mortgage in suit thereon, under her conveyance from Burnham and Rogers.

It does not follow, however, that the mortgage executed by Mrs. Hewitt to Mrs. McDonald is also void, although she may avoid it for fraud or want of consideration. If it was executed with knowledge of all the facts, in settlement of a claim to the lots made in good faith by Smith under his tax deeds, it is valid, and Mrs. Hewitt cannot avoid it merely because the claim of Smith was not in fact well founded. This doctrine is elementary. But the averment is, in substance, that Smith knew his tax deeds were invalid and conveyed no interest in the lots, and hence his claim was not made in good faith. Again, notwithstanding the criticisms by the learned counsel for the plaintiff of those portions of the complaint in which it is sought to charge Smith with fraud in obtaining the mortgage, we think the complaint sufficiently charges that Mrs. Hewitt was induced to execute it under the false pretense that Mr. Rogers was not the owner of the tax certificates at the time alleged. Almost necessarily that must be the significance of his claim to Mrs. Hewitt’s agent, Mr. "Wildish (whose integrity in the matter no one questions), that he owned the lots by valid tax deeds, and which claim Mr. Wildish communicated to Mrs. Hewitt (whoresided in Minnesota), at the request of Smith. No diligence which the law required of Mrs. Hewitt would have been likely to disclose the falsity of such claim. Smith took the mortgage as the agent of Mrs. McDonald, and his knowl[589]*589edge of the fraud practiced on Mrs. Hewitt is imputable to the principal, Mrs. McDonald. Besides, it is alleged that neither Mrs. McDonald nor her assignee, the plaintiff, ever paid any consideration for the mortgage.

¥e think these averments, if true, would entitle Mrs. Hewitt to have the mortgage annulled and declared void for fraud and want of consideration in its inception.

It remains to be determined whether the appellant, who is the grantee of Mrs. Hewitt of the mortgaged lots through mesne conveyances, can defend against the mortgage on the same grounds, or, in other words, whether the defense to the mortgage which Mrs. Hewitt might have interposed, is available to her grantee, under the circumstances stated in the answer. To this question the arguments of counsel were principally directed.

Counsel for plaintiff strongly relies upon the case of Crocker v. Bellangee, 6 Wis., 645, to support the proposition that the alleged fraud upon Mrs. Hewitt in procuring the mortgage in suit, and the want of consideration for such mortgage, are not available to the appellant as defenses thereto. In that cause one Casey, the owner of the land in controversy, conveyed the same to Bellangee. It is alleged that the latter obtained such conveyance by fraud. Hpon discovering the fraud Casey conveyed the same land to Crocker by deed containing full covenants of warranty. Crocker thereupon filed his bill in equity against Bellangee, stating the above facts, and praying among other things that the deed from Casey to Bellangee might be declared fraudulent and void, and' decreed to be delivered up and canceled. This court affirmed an order of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to the bill on the ground that it showed no right in Crocker to maintain it. The opinion of the court was written by Chief Justice WurroN, and it appears therefrom that the judgment went upon the grounds that the conveyance to Bellangee was not void, but at most only voidable; [590]*590that it passed to Bellangee the whole of Casey’s title to tho land which it purported to convey; that the subsequent deed to Crocker did not avoid such conveyance and divest Bellan-gee’s title; and hence that Crocker acquired no title by virtue of Casey’s deed to him. It is there said: The cases referred to by the defendant have satisfied us that the proper course for Casey to pursue was to avoid the deed by a bill in equity against Bellangee. But we do not see how the complainant Crocker can be permitted to set up the fraud of Bellangee in obtaining his deed, for the reason that he acquired no title to the land by his conveyance, if the views above expressed are correct.” The turning point of the case seems to have been that Crocker, .the complainant, had no' title to the land in question. In view of the cases there cited by counsel, to which reference is made in the Opinion,, it is manifest that had the court regarded (as it evidently did) the warranty deed to Crocker as an assignment by Casey to him of the right to maintain a bill in equity to set aside the conveyance to Bellangee, the decision would have been the same.

One of these cases is Prosser v. Edmonds, 1 Younge & C., 481, decided by the court of Exchequer in 1835.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W. 776, 57 Wis. 582, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-keehn-wis-1883.