Furlong v. Garrett

44 Wis. 111
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 Wis. 111 (Furlong v. Garrett) 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
Furlong v. Garrett, 44 Wis. 111 (Wis. 1878).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

This action was brought to recover the posses[115]*115sion. of a parcel of land described in the complaint, being a part of lot 2, sec. 25, T. 34, R. 29 E. The defendant was in possession at the time the action was commenced. The plaintiff produced no evidence of title in himself derived from the United States or from any other acknowledged source of title, but claimed to recover upon two grounds: First, that he and his grantors had held the land sought to be recovered, adversely, under claim of title exclusive of any other right, founding such claim upon a deed conveying said land to his grantors, for more than ten years. Second, that the defendant held the possession of the land under him as his tenant, which tenancy had expired previous to the commencement of the action. Upon the trial, the circuit judge directed a verdict for the defendant.

If the evidence produced on the trial was insufficient to sustain a verdict in favor of the appellant upon either of thé grounds above stated, the direction of the judge was right, and the judgment must be affirmed; otherwise, it must be reversed.

The following evidence was introduced by the appellant: First, a quitclaim deed, bearing date November 7,1864, from William J. Nolan to W. P. and D. E. Ranney, purporting to convey to the grantees, amongst other tracts of land, said loj; 2. In this deed it was recited, immediately after the description, that “ they are the same lands and premises conveyed to me by Joseph B. Clark, by contract bearing date the eighteenth day of May, A. D. 1853.” Second, a deed bearing date August 26, 1873, from the said W. P. and D. E. Ranney and their respective wives, to the plaintiff, conveying the same lot 2, with other tracts. • This was also a quitclaim deed, with a covenant that the “ grantors have not committed, suffered or done any act or thing by means whereof the premises conveyed, or any part thereof, now or at any time hereafter, shall or may be impeached, charged or incumbered, in any manner or way whatsoever.” This deed contained, immediately after [116]*116the description of tbe land, the following exceptions: “Except that part of lot No. 2 heretofore conveyed by the parties of the first part to Peter Uscord, being about five acres; and except that part of lot No. 3, being about one acre, heretofore conveyed by Peter McBride to school district; excepting and reserving, also, to the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns, all and all manner of buildings upon the premises hereby conveyed, except the frame building known as the Turner House, and a log building known as the Sensaba House.” The evidence of the adverse possession by the Ranneys under the first deed is contained in the testimony of one of the grantees, D. E. Ranney, and is as follows: I received that deed from Nolan. I entered into possession of the premises at the time the deed was given, and at its date. Under this deed I managed the property — all of it, including the dock; took possession of lot 2 under this deed; remained in possession until we sold to Fv/rlong in 1873. I think Furlong has been in possession since that time. I know Furlong has been in possession since that time. I refer to lot 2. While I had the property, we occupied lot 2, and paid taxes on it. I had tenants in possession of lot 2 — four or five houses with tenants and their families. No one disputed my right and possession while I was there.” On the cross examination, he said: “ I collected rents from tenants; can’t tell from whom, without referring to my books; from the Nolan House on beach, and Sensaba House on hill. Mrs. Gilgers, I think, was one tenant. I refer to lot 2. I am not sure the Nolan House is on lot 2. The Sensaba House is the only one I am sure of; four or five other houses have been on that lot, and from these four or five I have not collected rent after I sold the houses to them. Not certain that I never collected •rent from those four or five. I don’t remember who occupied the house now occupied by the defendant, at the date of the Nolan deed, November 7, 1864. Mr. Gunderson paid me for two houses. He took possession of these premises in 1866. [117]*117One of the two he bought and paid me for, is the house described in the complaint, the log house covered with cedar bark. I don’t think I gave him a deed for the house. "When Gunderson paid me for the house, I don’t remember any arrangement about occupying the land. I only gave him the house ■ — ■ nothing said about occupying the land. It was understood he could live there when he bought the house.” To the question as to ground rent, he testified that he had received no such rent. lie also says: “ These houses were sold to be occupied by the purchasers; no limit to the term. I intended to let them occupy the house as long as they pleased. This was the understanding between myself and the purchasers. If I sold land with the house, it was so understood, and then I gave a deed. I considered the title as good as any we could get. I did not consider there was a better title. I had not looked up the record; was not particularly informed about the title. I did not believe the quitclaim deed gave me a title in fee simple to the land. I did not understand that Nolan had a perfect title. I entered into possession under the deed from Nolan, and claimed title under it. I understood Nolan had been in possession twelve or fifteen years before his deed to me. I found all these houses on the land. I sold or rented the houses, not the land. They went into possession under me, and never claimed adversely, or that they had title from any other source. Nolan claimed to have a contract under which he -could get a title. I rented to Gunderson first, and afterwards sold him the house now occupied by defendant, on the premises in dispute in this action. When I sold to Furlong, I told him we had sold the houses. _ I told him we should not disturb them as long as we had the property.” When recalled after the defendant had put in his evidence, he says: I used the dock on lot 2 for cedar posts and poles, and shipped them therefrom. Loici drew wood and timber to that dock by my permission. I never rented any lands on lot 2 that I know of — land without a house, I mean, — ■ unless [118]*118part of the land sold to McBride. When I rented houses, nothing was said about land.”

The defendant gave evidence showing that Ranney did not have possession of airy part of lot 2 after he purchased of Nolan, unless he had possession by virtue of the possession of the persons who bought the houses of him on this lot. He also gave evidence that Nolan, of whom the Ranneys bought, did not claim to own the land. One of the defendant’s witnesses, Henry D. Miner, who lived on the island from 1857 to 1862, and from 1867 down to the time of the trial, and was well acquainted with lot 2, swears that since Ranney bought lot 2 and dock from Nolan, he had not used it to the knowledge of the witness; that it was suffered to go out of repair; that part of it was used for a fish house; that the Sensaba House was also suffered to go out of repair; that for two years the Ranneys owned no house on lot 2, from 1870 to 1872, and during that time they did not use the lot at all; that the Ran-neys never occupied any portion of lot 2 except the Sensaba House and one other, and that they sold the warehouse, dock, etc., ten years ago; that the warehouse and store were changed into a dwelling house and sold to G-underson by the Ranneys.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Wis. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furlong-v-garrett-wis-1878.