Dussaume v. Burnett

5 Iowa 95
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 9, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 5 Iowa 95 (Dussaume v. Burnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dussaume v. Burnett, 5 Iowa 95 (iowa 1857).

Opinion

Wright, C. J.

Both parties to this controversy, claim under Bazil Giard — the complainants, Dussaume and wife and Chenevert and wife, as his heirs, and McGregor, by deed from the said heirs of a portion of their interest in said land. On the other hand, the heirs of Burnett and Powell claim under the deeds made by the heirs of the said Giard, in 1836. It is manifest, therefore, that the decision of the case must depend, to a great extent, if not entirely, upon the validity of the conveyances under which respondents claim; for those conveyances being prior in date, and recorded long anterior to the one under which the complainant McGregor, claims, must have precedence against him, as well as the surviving heirs, unless for some cause they' shall be held invalid. To these conveyances and their validity as against the heirs of Giard, several objections are made, which may be appropriately considered under two heads. TIiq first class of objections involve the legal sufficiency of some, if not all, of said conveyances, to divest the title; the second, whether there was such fraud and unconscionable conduct on the part of the grantees, Lockwood and Burnett, in procuring the same, as should induce a court of equity to set the same aside, as against them or their heirs; and if so, then how far the heirs of Powell are affected by notice of such fraud. These objections we shall notice as briefly as possible, consistent with the char[100]*100acter of the case, and the magnitude of the interests involved.

And First. It is urged that the instruments referred to, do not purport on their face to be conveyances or deeds for this land, but agreements to convey, or if not such agreements, then mere powers of attorney authorizing Lockwood and Burnett to take the neccessary steps to pro cure the title for the said heirs. These deeds are all of the same form, and the parts necessary to the full understanding of the question here made, are as follows: after reciting the parties, the interest of the heirs in and to the land — their willingness to sell — the consideration- — the sualwords, “grant, bargain and sell,” — then -follows this language: [We quote from the deed from Chenevert and wife to Burnett.]

“To have and to hold the said tract of land above mentioned and described, and all right, title, interest and estate of the said Francis Chenevert and Lizette, his wife, or either of them, in and to the same, and all the rights, privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging, unto the said Thomas B. Burnett, his heirs, &c., forever; and the said Francis Chenevert, and Lizette, his wife, do here by bind themselves, their heirs, &c., to warrant, and forever defend the right and title thereto, to the said Thomas B. Burnett, his heirs &c., against all claims and demands whatsoever, saving and excepting the claim or demand of the United States. And the said Francis Chenevert and Lizette, his wife, for themselves, their heirs, &c., do hereby covenant and agree to and with the said Thomas B. Burnett, his heirs, &c., that they have good right and power to sell and convey the interest of the said Lizitte in the said land; that at and before the date hereof, she was entitled to one third part of the interest and estate therein formerly owned by the said Bazil Gfiard, deceased, and that they will hereafter make and execute to the said Thomas B. Burnett, his heirs, &c., at his cost, any other deed or conveyance concerning the' said land, and the portion of the said Lizette in the same, that may be re[101]*101quired of them to make; and they do hereby constitute and appoint, without the power of revocation, the said Thomas B. Burnett, their lawful attorney, in their name and stead, to act for, demand, receive, sue for, recover and possess, all their rights, interest and estate, and the right, interest and estate of either of them, in the said land, and to petition Congress, or any other body or authority, respecting the premises, in the same manner and to the same effect, as they themselves cotdd have done, had they retained the said interest in said land.”

That the object and purpose of these portions of the foregoing instrument, may be more clearly understood, it is proper to state, that at the time of its execution, no patent had been issued by the United States, in accordance with the concession and confirmation to B,azil Giard, and that the same wras not issued until the 2d of July, 1844, and was then made to said Giard, “and to his heirs and assigns forever,” and delivered to said Lockwood. and Burnett.

Without, at this point in the case, determining whether Lockwood and Burnett, at the time of their purchases, knew that said concession or grant had been confirmed, we will only say, that the testimony tends pretty strongly to prove, that they purchased in comparative ignorance of the extent of the interest of these heirs, or the true and actual position of the title to this land. But for these facts, it would be difficult to understand what object or purpose the parties could have had, in inserting the agreement for a subsequent conveyance, or the clause giving authority to petition Congress, and do other acts, in order to secure and perfect said title. What effect, then, shall such parts or clauses have upon this instrument ? Shall they operate to defeat the deed, and prevent it from passing the title to the grantees therein? We conclude that they in no manner vitiate the conveyance as a deed, and that under and by virtue of said instrument, (so far as this objection is concerned), the vendees acquired a good and sufficient title to said land. Without these provisions, [102]*102the instrument contains all that is necessary to pass the title; and there is nothing in them tending in the least to show, that the conveyance was a conditional one — that the grantors retained any interest — nor that any subsequent deed or writing was contemplated between the parties thereto, as being necessary to invest the grantees with a perfect title. The fact that the grantors have covenanted or undertaken to afterwards make any other deed that might be required of them, could not vitiate the one already made, nor take from it its validity as a deed.— Neither, in our opinion, does such a covenant warrant the conclusion, that the parties merely entered into a contract for a conveyance. It wordd rather seem to mean, that the grantors had parted with their title, as both parties supposed, but that in view of their want of knowledge as to the true state of the title, this provision was incorporated, looking to a subsequent conveyance, should one become necessary. And these remarks equally apply to the provision giving to the grantees the right to petition Congress, or do any other act, that might be necessary to secure to themselves the full and entire estate and interest of the grantors in said lands. Both of these clauses are in aid and furtherance of the general covenants contained in the deed, and are in no manner inconsistent with them; but, if possible, confer upon the grantees powers, and invest them with privileges, beyond what they would have had under and by virtue of the usual covenants.

We are referred to the case of Caillard v. Bernard, 7 S. & Marsh. 319, to sustain the position of appellants, that these instruments did not divest the grantors of all title to said land. The cases are by no means parallel. In that case, the grantee in a deed conveying the fee, at the same time executed a paper, reciting that he received the property charged with the settlement of the just debts of the grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Iowa 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dussaume-v-burnett-iowa-1857.