Dundee Realty Co. v. Leavitt
This text of 127 N.W. 1057 (Dundee Realty Co. v. Leavitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff and defendant both derive their claims to the real estate in question through one Miles Moore; the plaintiff through an unrecorded contract of purchase and alleged possession and improvement of the property, and the defendant through a warranty deed duly recorded. The'defendant claims to be an innocent purchaser without notice of plaintiff’s rights. The trial court found against him, and lie has appealed.
In Bowman v. Griffith, 35 Neb. 361, the third paragraph of the syllabus states the law as follows: “Where a claim [713]*713to real estate can be sustained only upon the ground that the person asserting it is a subsequent purchaser in good faith, such person is required to show affirmatively that he purchased without notice of the equities of another, and relying upon the apparent ownership of his grantor.” And in the body of the opinion it is said: “The burden was upon him and he was bound to prove both payment in ignorance of defendant’s equities and that he relied upon the title of his grantor.” To support this proposition decisions are cited from Iowa, Michigan and New York. The defendant argues that these statements of the court are dicta merely, and says in his brief that the rule thus stated is undoubtedly correct, but that “the question as to whether the plaintiff would not have sustained his burden of proof and made a prima facie case if he had shown the purchase and payment of the consideration, after having examined and relied upon the record title appearing in his grantor,” was not involved in the case. This language concedes that the burden of proof was upon the party who alleges that he purchased without notice of outstanding equities, and assumes that that burden is sustained by making the proof suggested in the above quotation from the brief.- The above holding in Bowman v. Griffith is referred to with approval in Baldwin v. Burt, 43 Neb. 245, and Phœnix Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Brown, 37 Neb. 705, and is expressly approved in Pfund v. Valley Loan & Trust Co., 52 Neb. 473. It may be that some of the cases holding a contrary doctrine can be distinguished on account of the legislation upon this subject in those jurisdictions. Our statute provides that deeds and other instruments not recorded “shall be adjudged void as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers without notice whose deeds, mortgages and other instruments shall be first recorded.” It would seem that one who expects to bring his claim within this statute should allege and prove all of the statutory requirements, including that he was without notice of the outstanding deed. This requires him to allege and prove a negative, and undoubt[714]*714edly the ordinary rule would obtain as to the sufficiency of the proof offered to make a prima fade case, and as to the necessity of the opposing party to produce such evidence as was in his possession or under his control; but, when the evidence upon this point is all before the court or jury, there must be a preponderance in favor of the party alleging purchase without notice, or the issue cannot be found in his favor.
The defendant insists that this grading of the lot was not such an act of possession as required him to make any inquiry in regard to the rights of the parties who were doing the grading or procuring it to be done. He insists that the same parties were grading other lots at the same time that did not belong to them nor to this plaintiff, and that he had the right to assume that Mr. Moore still owned the lot and was procuring this grading to be done. We think the defendant is wrong in this position. When he saw unequivocal acts of ownership being exercised over the property, lie was under obligations to inquire who was thus assuming to be the owner of the property, and under such circumstances he could not presume without inquiry that Mr. Moore was expending about $200 in improving the lot, and immediately thereafter would sell to him for $250 a lot that before the improvement was worth $300. If the defendant was innocent in the transaction, his neglect to follow up the inquiry so plainly suggested by the circumstances will bring the loss, if any, upon him, rather than upon the plaintiff, who was at least equally innocent.
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
127 N.W. 1057, 87 Neb. 711, 1910 Neb. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dundee-realty-co-v-leavitt-neb-1910.