Chase v. Whiting

30 Wis. 544
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 Wis. 544 (Chase v. Whiting) 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
Chase v. Whiting, 30 Wis. 544 (Wis. 1872).

Opinion

Dixon, C. J.

Ejectment for a tract of land in Winnebago county. The plaintiff sues, claiming title as daughter and heir-at-law of one Samuel Bedient, deceased. Bedient purchased the land from ,the United States, obtaining title by patent issued February 1, 1848, and died within two or three years after, the witnesses say in 1849, 1850 or 1851. The plaintiff having established her relationship and title, rested, whereupon the defendant, for the purpose of showing title in himself, offered in evidence what purported to be an administrator’s deed of the land to one Joel Chandler, executed by one Wood, as administrator of the estate of Samuel Bedient, deceased, which deed bore date Nov. 1, 1858, and was recorded in the office of the register of Deeds Dec. 8, 1863. The deed purported to have been executed by Wood, pursuant to an order of license for the sale of the land granted to him as such administrator by the county court of Winnebago county, in which county Bedient, in his lifetime, resided, and where it appears he died. The defendant likewise announced that he proposed to follow such proof by proof of title in himself under the conveyance to Chandler. The administrator’s deed was rejected, and the principal question raised on this appeal is, as to the correctness of such ruling, with respect to the provisions of section 1, ch. 40, Laws 1869. 2 Tay. Sts. 1610, § 123.

That act provides: “ All deeds purporting to convey real estate or any interest therein, which are duly executed, acknowledged and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the lands described therein are situate, and pm-porting to be made and executed by any sheriff, deputy sheriff, referee or other person in pursuance and by virtue of any judgment, order or decree of any court of record of this state, or in pursuance of any sale made under and in pursuance of any judgment, execution, or order or decree of any court of record of this state, shall be received in evidence in all courts and judicial proceedings in this state, without any proof of the judgment, execution, order or decree of the court, and in pursuance of [546]*546wbicb tbey purport to bare been made, or of tbe sale upon wbicb tbey purport to be founded; and all sucb deeds are here' by declared to be prima fade evidence in all courts and all judicial proceedings, that tbe title of tbe person or persons against whom tbe judgment was rendered, and by virtue of wbicb tbe sale and deed purport to bave been made, or of tbe person or persons whose real estate is directed to be sold by virtue of tbe order of tbe court under wbicb tbe sale and deed purport to bave been made, in tbe lands and real estate described in sucb deeds, passed to and vested in tbe grantee or grantees of sucb deeds.” • '

Tbe second section of the act provides that duly certified copies of the records of the deeds and conveyances mentioned in the first section, shall be received in evidence, etc., and the third section, that the provisions of the act shall apply to deeds and conveyances theretofore executed and recorded, as well as those thereafter executed and recorded. 2 Tay. Sts., supra, §§ 124, 125. It is not contended that the legislature in any manner exceeded its constitutional powers in passing the act, or that it was incompetent thus to change the burden of proof from the party offering and relying upon the conveyance to the party assailing and denying the title claimed under it; and in the quotation above made, we have emphasized those words by which, as we suppose, the act was intended to include, and, as we think, does include deeds made by executors, administrators and guardians, and which are otherwise sucb as the act describes. We have emphasized those words which show the broad scope and plainly intended, general operation of the statute. It will be .seen that the act was carefully drawn and the writer industriously repeated and used general words, so as to give it a general application, .and not to exclude from it any case naturally or properly falling within the principle or rule established by it. Tbe phrase “ or other person in pursuance and by virtue of any judgment, order or decree of any court of record in this, state,” is .of very general import and not to be [547]*547restrained except by the clear context and proper' subjeet matter of the act, or by express words found in it or in some other statute in pari materia. To say that the words “or other person ” signify some ministerial officer of a court of general legal or equitable jurisdiction other than a “sheriff, deputy sheriff or referee ” is to deprive those words of nearly all force and effeet. There are no ministerial officers known to our law accustomed and authorized to execute the decrees, judgments and orders of courts of general law or equity jurisdiction for the sale of lands except those specifically named in the act, unless it nlay be occasionally a receiver, assignee in insolvency or a guardian of a spendthrift, lunatic or other person incapable of the management of his own affairs.

But it is or must be conceded that the county court acting as a court of probate, is a court of record, and when the statute says “any judgment, order or decree of any court of record of this state,” it is impossible upon the words themselves or upon the context' and whole subject matter of the act, to give it a judicial construction which will exclude the judgments, orders and decrees of the county court. There is no sound and legitimate rule of interpretation which would authorize or sanction such a construction. On the contrary, it is expressly prohibited upon well settled rules and principles, as will be seen by examining Harrington v. Smith, 28 Wis., 43, and authorities there cited, Fallass v. Pierce, ante, p. 443.

The objection that there was no proof that Wood, the person purporting to have made the sale and executed the deed as administrator, was in fact such administrator, is met by the decision in Ehle v. Clark, 28 Wis., where it was held under the same act that the production of the recorded deed purporting to have been executed by the sheriff, was presumptive evidence that the person so executing was such officer, until the contrary was shown by the party claiming adversely to the deed. Such is obviously the fair intent and effect of the statute. The deed here offered recited that Wood was administrator of the estate of [548]*548Samuel Bedient, late of the town of Algoma in the county of Winnebago, deceased, intestate, that the sale was made in pursuance of an order of the county court of the same county, made at a court holden at Oshkosh, in said county, on the sixth day of August, A. D. 1853, and that public notice of the intended sale was given, etc., etc. This -was prima fade sufficient to admit the deed under the statute. The deed was, in the language of the statute, prima fade evidence that the title of the decedent had passed to and vested in the grantee named in it, and the same should have been received in evidence.

The objection that Wood did not sign and seal as administrator is untenable. He did not write the words showing that he was administrator after his signature, but that was unnecessary. The deed recited that he executed as administrator, and that was enough; and beside, the acknowledgment showed the representative character in which he acted.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Wis. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-whiting-wis-1872.