Blodgett v. Hitt

29 Wis. 169
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 29 Wis. 169 (Blodgett v. Hitt) 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
Blodgett v. Hitt, 29 Wis. 169 (Wis. 1871).

Opinion

Lyon, J.

The plaintiffs are the twin children of the late Pearley P. Blodgett, of Fond du Lac county, who died intestate in 1847 or 1848, and are the heirs-at-law to one-half of Ms estate.

Pearley P. Blodgett died seized of the northeast quarter of section 23, in town 14 north, of range 16 east, in said county; and after his decease, the northeast quarter of the quarter section (except about two acres) was assigned to his widow as and for her dower interest in the quarter section.

The widow, and one Jonathan Allen, were appointed admin-istratrix and administrator of the estate of Blodgett; but, by the marriage of the widow soon after, Allen became sole administrator.

On a representation to the probate court or judge of Fond du Lac county, that the personal estate was exhausted, and that there were debts against the estate remaining unpaid, the probate judge authorized and licensed the administrator to sell the above quarter section of land, except such dower interest, and the administrator accordingly sold and conveyed the same to the defendant in the year 1848, and the defendant soon after went into the actual and exclusive possession of the land, wMch he has ever since held, and has made valuable and permanent improvements thereon.

[175]*175Tbe plaintiffs brought this action in May, 1868, and witbin six months after they arrived at the age of twenty-one years, to recover the possession of an undivided one-half of the land so occupied by the defendant, and damages for the unlawful withholding thereof, including mesne profits received by the defendant, which are claimed to be two thousand dollars. The complaint is in the usual form of complaints in actions of like character.

The defendant answered to such complaint: 1. A general denial, and an allegation that he is the owner in fee of the lands claimed. 2. That he is such owner by virtue of the proceedings in the probate court of Eond du Lac county in that behalf, and the sale and conveyance thereof to him by the administrator of the estate of Pearley P. Blodgett, as above stated. 8. That he is mortgagee in possession of the lands in controversy, by virtue of a mortgage thereon executed by the intestate in his life time to one Boyd, which mortgage is owned by the defendant and unpaid. The answer admits that Pearley P. Blodgett died seized of the land in controversy, thus dispensing with the necessity for proof of that fact. All of the allegations of the answer are stated as defenses to the action, and none of them were interposed by way of counter-claim. Hence no reply thereto was required.

On the trial, the plaintiffs proved their ages and heirship as above stated; and in addition, introduced certain testimony bearing upon the question of damages, which will be more fully stated hereafter. It also appears by the answer, and the evidence introduced on the trial, that the defendant has been in the actual and exclusive possession of all that part of the quarter section conveyed to him by the administrator, since early in the year 1849, claiming title thereto by virtue of such conveyance, to the exclusion of any interest, title or right of the plaintiffs therein.

This evidence and these admissions contained in the answer clearly made aprima facie case for the plaintiffs, and entitled them to a verdict in the absence of further testimony.

[176]*176To rebut tbe prima facie case thus made out for the plaintiffs, and to maintain the issue on his part, the defendant offered and read in evidence the records in the said probate court of certain papers and. proceedings pertaining to the said estate, and to the sale of the land in controversy by ■ the administrator to the defendant; and also two conveyances thereof by the administrator to him, one bearing date November 18,1848, and the other March 21, 1849; each reciting that it was made pursuant to a license from the probate court or judge, dated September 17, 1848. The deeds are not set out at length in the bill of exceptions, and are not attached thereto as exhibits; but we infer that both were executed upon the same sale, to-wit, the sale of November 18, 1848, for the reason that the administrator’s report of sale, made to the probate court, shows that the sale of the land described in the deeds was made by him to the defendant on that day.

It is quite unnecessary to set out- fully such record evidence. It is sufficient to say that it purports to be a history of the proceedings before the judge of probate of Fond du Lac county, having for their object the sale by the administrator of the real estate in controversy, and that these proceedings are in many particulars exceedingly defective and irregular. As a single example, this record fails entirely to show that any notice of the petition of the administrator for license to sell the real estate was given to the parties concerned, or their guardians, as required by the law then in force. (Ter. Stats, of 1889, p. 817, sec. 29), and this court has held that such notice is jurisdictional, and that the want of it, in a case of this character, is fatal to the whole proceeding. Gibbs v. Shaw, 17, Wis., 197. The record is also silent in relation to other proceedings equally as essential to a valid sale and conveyance of the land.

The answer made by counsel for the defendant, to the objection that this record fails to show a valid sale and conveyance is, that, although the probate court of Fond du Lac county was a court of limited jurisdiction, and hence, at the common law, [177]*177no presumptions could be indulged in support of its jurisdiction wbere its records fail to show it, yet, by virtue of the statute (Laws of 1861, chap. 127), which is claimed to be applicable to the case, such court and its records stand upon precisely the same footing, in respect to presumptions in favor of jurisdiction, as though it was a court of general jurisdiction.

Section 1 of that statute is as follows: “ Every sale heretofore made, or hereafter to be made, of the estate of any deceased person, in pursuance of any order or authority of any county court or court of probate,by any executor or administrator, or any person acting as such, in pursuance of any such order, license or authority shall be deemed and held to be as valid and effectual as if made by the judgment or order of a court having general jurisdiction; and the title of any purchaser at any such sale made in good faith, shall not be impeached or invalidated by reason of any omission or error in the appointment of such executor or administrator, or by reason of any defect or irregularity in the proceedings before such court, or any allegation of the want of jurisdiction on the part of such court, except in the manner and for the causes that the same could be impeached or invalidated in case such sale had been made pursuant to the order or judgment of any court of general jurisdiction.”

There can be no doubt that the sale by the administrator and the purchase by the defendant, were made in the most perfect good faith, the one believing that he was conveying, and the other that he was receiving a perfect title to the land in controversy. The law of 1861, is in terms applicable to the case; and the only objection made to it is, that the legislature lacked the constitutional power to enact it.

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Bluebook (online)
29 Wis. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blodgett-v-hitt-wis-1871.