Curts v. Cisna

6 F. Cas. 1014, 7 Biss. 260
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedAugust 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 1014 (Curts v. Cisna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curts v. Cisna, 6 F. Cas. 1014, 7 Biss. 260 (circtwdwi 1876).

Opinion

HOPKINS, District Judge.

The bill [by John F. Curts and others] in this case charges that one Horatio Curts was in 1SG5 the owner of the land in controversy, being 320 acres of heavily timbered land in Clark county, in this state, and that he employed the defendant [Stephen] Cisna as his agent to pay the taxes thereon, as well as upon other lands owned by him in that vicinity, as he was a non-resideut, and furnished him the funds necessary for that purpose; that the general taxes due in the winter of 1805, were paid by defendant for him, but a special war bounty tax was levied in February, 1805, of about $13, of which he had no notice, and for which the land was sold in May, 1805, without his knowledge; that the defendant Cisna continued to pay his taxes up to the time of his death in ISOS; that on his death his property descended to John Curts, his father, who thereafter continued to employ Cisna to pay the taxes for him, as he had before done for Horatio, his son, and that he furnished the necessary funds to pay all taxes, and to redeem from tax sales as might be necessary, up to the time of his death in March, 1S74; that the defendant Cisna paid the taxes up to the time of his death, either directly or by redemption, and never notified him of the tax deed mentioned in the complaint, or of the existence of the tax for which it was given; that in 1S09 Cisna. discovering that the land had been sold for the special tax in 1SG5, and that the .certificates [1015]*1015•were outstanding, purchased them, and- on' 'the 15th of June, 18G9, took a deed thereon .to himself, which he immediately had recorded; that after the deed to him he paid the; taxes thereon with Mr. Curts’ money the •same as before, and sent receipts to. him;.that on the death of John Curts the claimants1 .in this case succeeded to his interest and title; as his heirs-at-law; that the defendant Cisna,' .on May 29, 1S74, contracted to sell the lands! for $1,509 to the defendant Gage, through the agency of one B. F. French, an attorney residing in Clark county, who acted as Gage's; .agent. The bill then charges that the land! , was worth $8,000, and that Mr. Gage or Mr.' • French, his attorney, had notice of the facts; and circumstances under which defendant! Cisna obtained the tax deed, and that only; a part of the consideration agreed upon had; .been paid, and no deed had been execut-; ed or delivered by Cisna to Gage of the; .premises. .The bill prayed that the defend-1 ants might be required to release all claim; under the tax deed and that it might be de-I creed void against them.

The defendants tile a joint and several answer, in which they admit the ■ land to be; . worth $S,000, as charged in the bill, and that, .Cisna's title was a tax title, as stated in the. bill. They deny that he was the agent of. .either Horatio or John Curts to pay theirj .taxes on the laud as alleged, and they allege; that John Curts had notice of the tax deed,, and deny that either Gage or French, his. agent, in making the purchase had any! knowledge or notice of Cisna’s relations with; the Curtses, or that he was their agent or; owed them any duty ■ whatever. It does not; state when they or either of them first had. •notice of the plaintiff’s claim, nor whether it-was before or after the second payment of $500 in 1S75, nor does it claim that .a deed has been executed to Gage, or that lie has any other right than is derived under the contract set out in the bill-.

Upon those issues testimony has been taken, from which it appears most conclusively that Cisna was the agent of both Horatio and John Curts for the payment of their taxes on, this land as charged in the bill. The defendant's letters t.o them, and the tax receipts sent them by him, place that question beyond all doubt, and convict him of a most deliberate and outrageous fraud in the transaction of obtaining the deed, and also of falsehood in his testimony in denying the agency. It is seldom that parties are enabled to establish the rascality of an adversary so incontrovertibly as the plaintiffs in this case have that of the defendant Cisna.

It appears that on the day he took this deed, he paid all the general taxes due or unpaid on the land, out of Mr. Curts’ money, and sent to him the receipts and his account. including a charge of $5 for his services. and also $5 paid B.F. French for services, and wrote him as follows: “I went to Clark county and paid the taxes; your laud is all clear how, except some that lies back from the river, there is a tax deed on, which was given in 1804,” and again on the 16th of June, 1869, the day.after he had taken and recorded this deed, he wrote him again .about paying the taxes in Clark county, in which he said “the land is all clear now” with the exception of the old tax deed of 1S64, and that he would see if that could not be released for the costs.

In view of these letters and receipts It seems preposterous that he should claim the land under that deed, or attempt to deny his agency. It must have required some courage coupled with a great degree of moral depravity on his part to deliberately write a falsehood of that character to his employer, who •had trusted his interests in his hands. It looks like a carefully contrived scheme to defraud his employer of-this valuable property.

• He paid the general taxes and sent receipts therefor, and took the deed- for the special tax,. which was unknown to his principal, and therefore would not likely be discovered, as there would be no occasion for examination in regard to such a tax. He doubtless thought if he could conceal the existence *and .record of the deed for three years; the principal’s right to impeach it would be barred, as the. statute of this state limits the right of an original owner to three years to bring an action to defend or set aside a recorded tax deed.

But this is not all of his fraudulent conduct. He continued to pay the subsequent ■ taxes out of Mr. Curts’ funds, and to send him the receipts. This became a necessity to avoid inquiry on the part of Mr. Curts, and the consequent investigation, which would necessarily expose him before his scheme had existed three years. It is true, he swears that he told Mi’. Curts of the existence of this deed in 1S70, but his testimony on that point, Mr. Curts being dead, was incompetent. But if not incompetent, it is incredible. A careful examination of the letters written by him to Mr. Curts after that time (and they are numerous) shows that no mention was made of any such deed, although reference is made to tax deeds on other portions of his land. From this silence we are constrained to discredit his testimony upon that point, as well as upon the question of his agency. It is also true that a Mr. Bowman swears that he told Mr. Curts of this deed in 1S70, and so does Mr. B. F. French testify that he spoke to him about it once. But from the whole evidence and conduct, the transactions of the parties, Curts and Cisna, subsequent to that time, we think these witnesses must be mistaken; that their conversation must .have related to some other tax deed, or have been understood by Mr. Curts as relating to some other tax deed.

The position occupied by Mr. French in reference to this matter is not wholly free from suspicion. The evidence may not be sufficient to charge him as a confederate .of [1016]*1016■Cisna, but there are circumstances that require close scrutiny into his conduct, motives and testimony. He swears he had the tax certificates and sold them to Cisna, knowing they were on Curts’ land, on condition that Cisna should take a deed and not let Curts have them, and yet charges $5 for services rendered to Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

First National Bank of Stevens Point v. Chafee
73 N.W. 318 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1897)
Perkins v. Wilkinson
57 N.W. 371 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1893)
Gould v. Sullivan
20 L.R.A. 487 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 1014, 7 Biss. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curts-v-cisna-circtwdwi-1876.