Coy v. Coy

15 Minn. 119
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 Minn. 119 (Coy v. Coy) 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
Coy v. Coy, 15 Minn. 119 (Mich. 1870).

Opinion

Ripley, Ch. J.

By the Court The lands comprising the township of Mankato were entered on the 6th of March, 1858, and the patent therefor issued on the 10th of J une, 1858. The entry was made on application and proof submitted March 21st, 1856, and the entry related back to that time, and the judge to whom the patent was issued, became thereby seized of said town site in trust for the then occupants thereof within the meaning of the act of Congress of May 23d, 1844, to their several use, according to their respective interests, their heirs or assigns. Davis vs. Murphy, 3 Minn. 119. Leach vs. Rauch, 3 Minn., 448. Castner vs. Gunther, 6 Minn., 119. Weisberger vs. Tenny, 8 Minn., 456. The execution of which trust was by said act, as to the disposal of the lots in said town, and the proceeds of sales [124]*124thereof, to be conducted under such rules and regulations as the Territorial Legislature might prescribe.

The Territorial Act of March 3d, 1855, passed under this authority, required the trustee, within 30 days after the entry, to give three weeks public notice thereof. In the case at bar this is said to have been done in March or April, 1858. By section 2, he is required, by a good and sufficient deed of conveyance, to grant and convey the title to each and every block, lot, share, or parcel of the land, to the persons having the right of possession or occupancy thereof, according to their respective interests as they existed at the time of the entry, or their heirs or assigns.

By section 4, claimants are required, within sixty days from the first publication of such notice, in person, or by a duly authorized agent or attorney, to sign and deliver to the trustee a statement in writing of the nature and extent of their claims, and all persons failing to do so within such time, “shall be forever barred the right of claiming, or recovering such land, or any interest or estate therein, or in any part, parcel, or share thereof, in any court of law or equity.” By the Gen. Stat. ch. 42, see. 4, the words “ as against adverse claimants,” are inserted after “ shall,” which, however, leaves the provision the same, in principle; and if otherwise, plaintiffs’ rights must be determined with reference to the act then in force. After the expiration of the sixty days, the trustee, on request and payment or tender by the claimants entitled to any lot, or share, of the proportionable share of his charges falling thereto, shall execute and deliver to such claimant a deed of conveyance thereof, as prescribed in the 2d section, and according to said statement. Peter Frenzel, being on said 21st March, 1856, such occupant as is contemplated by the act of Congress of lot one in block ten in said Mankato, continued so to occupy [125]*125till May 29th, 1856, -when he sold the same for $250 to Ariel Coy, and executed and delivered a quit claim deed thereof to him, who entered thereon, and occupied it with his family till his death intestate, on the 28th May, 1857, leaving- a widow, the defendant, Julia A. Coy, and the plaintiffs, his children, with two others deceased since 1859. The widow and children continued to live on the premises till September, 1860, up to which time, all said children were minors, and of those since deceased one was two and a half years, and one three months old, at their father’s death. If Frenzel had not sold to Coy, the trustee would have been seized of said lot in trust for him, as, but for Coy’s decease, he would have been for the latter. Coy’s interest descended to his heirs-, and the patent vested the title in the trustee in trust for them. See cases cited above.

The required statement was not filed by plaintiffs, or by any one for them, but Mrs. Coy on the 27th April, 1858, filed a statement by which she claimed to be entitled to receive a conveyance of the title in fee of said lot.

Defendant Branson then judge of the county court of the county of Blue Earth, on the 18th September, 1858, executed and delivered to her a deed purporting to convey said lot to her in fee, and in execution of the trust upon which he held the same as such judge. Mrs. Coy on the 23d April, 1859, executed and delivered a warranty deed thereof to defendant Paddock. ITe on the 30th of October, 1859, executed and delivered a warranty deed thereof to defendant Boynton, who on the 7th January, 1865 executed and delivered a warranty deed thereof to said Branson, who on the 13th October, 1865, executed and delivered a warranty deed of the northwest third thereof to defendant Heinze. Mrs. Coy’s occupation was not adverse to plaintiffs, but if it were, she had acquired thereby no title [126]*126to the lot, as it commenced subsequent to March 21st, 1856. Leach vs. Rauch, 3 Minn., 449. Castner vs. Gunther, 6 Minn., 119.

As widow of the cestui que' trust, she had an equitable claim to dower, but her filing in so far as it claimed the fee, was simply an assertion of a groundless claim. Bran, son’s deed to her was therefore in contravention of the trust upon which he held the lot. Her filing did not change his duties in this respect. The law required him to convey to the person entitled, (Act March 3d, 1855, sec. 2,) and though by.section 11, the deed is to be “according to the statement” filed, there is nothing whatever in the statute that makes the statement conclusive on the trustee, or that warrants the inference, that after the expiration of sixty days he is at liberty to convey to any person who may have filed on the land, notwithstanding such person may have no right to it.

And there is nothing in the act of March 3d, 1855, to prevent the trustee from conveying to the person entitled, after the expiration of the sixty days, (there being no adverse claimant,) though such person might not have filed within the time.

As all are presumed to know the law, Branson, and all claiming under him, must be deemed to have known, at the time of the several conveyances in question, that the trust upon which he held the land, as expressed in the patent, was for the person having the title by occupancy on the 21st March, 1856, his heirs or assigns. Having express notice of this fact, they were bound to inquire who that person was, and Frenzel’s occupancy of the land on the date referred to, was, as it were, his title deed, to which the law referred all persons whatsoever.

In this view, it is immaterial whether or not the defen[127]*127dants, or any of them had any actual notice of Frenzel’s, or Coy’s, or plaintiff’s occupancy, or of Frenzel’s deed, or of the effect of that deed as constructive notice.

To say that purchasers from Mrs. Coy, were at liberty to rely on the recitals in Branson’s deed to her, (to the effect, that she had been duly determined to be the person entitled,) or on her filing, or on the fact, that she lived on the lot at the time of the filing, and were not bound to enquire who the occupant was, on the 21st March, 1856, is as unreasonable as to say, that a recital that the vendor in a deed is unmarried, will Bar his widow from claiming dower as against a purchaser who bought, relying upon such recital, and in ignorance of her existence. That the description of the land in the patent is by government sub-divisions, and not by lots, is immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Minn. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coy-v-coy-minn-1870.