Heinselman v. Hunsicker

79 N.W. 23, 103 Wis. 12, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 153
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 N.W. 23 (Heinselman v. Hunsicker) 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
Heinselman v. Hunsicker, 79 N.W. 23, 103 Wis. 12, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 153 (Wis. 1899).

Opinion

BardeeN, J.

We attempt the solution of the questions presented in this case with considerable vexation of spirit. The numerous mistakes in the printed case,— the failure to make an index to either case or record, and to note in the case, as the rule requires, the page of the record where the printed matter could be found; the rambling, desultory, and contradictory character of the testimony; and the failure of counsel to cause witnesses to so connect their testimony with the locus in qtio as to make it intelligible when produced in print,— has greatly increased our labors, and rendered a satisfactory conclusion difficult. The action is ejectment. The printed complaint calls for a strip of land 2.36 chains wide at one end, and twenty and one-half at the other. The complaint in the record demands a strip 2.36 chains wide at the north end, and two and one-half chains at the other extremity. The case makes the surveyor swear that this strip contains 44.06 acres,— a mistake, as shown by the record, of about forty acres. These are instanced to show the unreliable character of the printed case.

On June 12, 1849, William Swift entered the S. W, of section 19, T. 21 N., R. 15 E. This, it appears, was a fractional quarter section, containing, according to the government survey, 168.36 acres. Under the rules of the government land office, under sec. 2395, R. S. of U. S. 1813-74, the fractional subdivisions are thrown to the west and north of the sections bordering on the township and range lines. Section 19 borders on the range line, and the government plat offered in evidence shows that the N. W. of the S. W. \ contains 44.25 acres, and the S. W. J of the S. W. J con[15]*15tains 44.11 acres. January 15, 1851, Swift conyeyed the .E.' of the S. ~W. ^ to Michael Smith, and the deed described it as containing eighty-two acres. December 19,1870, Swift conveyed the S. "W. of the S. W. J to McClellan, and described it as forty acres. February 10,1877, McClellan conveyed the same land to Hunsicker, defendant in error, describing it as forty acres, more or less. On April 24, 1880,. Swift exeóuted a deed to Smith, to correct the deed before-mentioned, in which he describes the land as the E. eighty-two acres of the S. "W. and recites that it was his intention to convey that amount of land by the former deed. This deed, it will be perceived, includes a strip, about two-rods wide, from the east side of the S. ~W. -J of the S. W. J.. February 5, 1881, one Jacob E. Diley made a deed to William Heinselmcm, the plaintiff in error, containing the following description: “ Commencing at the northwest corner of the southwest quarter of section 19, town 21 north, of range-15 east; thence running east, along the quarter line, eighty-six rods, to the corner of lands owned by Michael Smith thence south, parallel with the quarter line, 160 rods, to the-center of the highway; thence west, along the center of the highway, six rods; thence north, along the line of the land, owned by John Hunsicker, eighty rods; thence west, along the line of land owned by John Hunsicker, eighty rods;, thence north, along the center of the highway, eighty rods, to the place of beginning,-— containing about forty-six acres-of land, be the same more or less, according to government survey. The land not to interfere with Michael Smith’s-east eighty-two acres.” The record, so far as we are able to discover, fails to disclose any title in Diley; but, inasmuch as counsel for defendant in error, in his brief, admits the existence of a deed from Swift to Diley, we shall assume that such a deed was in evidence. The conditions before referred to require us to take some things for granted in this-[16]*16case. On Jnne 15, 1882, Smith deeded the east eighty-two acres of the S. W. \ to the plaintiff in error.

Eliminating, for the time being, the question of the sufficiency of the description in the Diley deed as a foundation for color of title, we may summarize the condition of the claim of title, as affecting the land in dispute, as follows: Under the deeds from Swift to McClellan, and. from the latter to Hunsiclcer, he became invested with the fee-simple title to all the land in the S. W. of the S. W. containing 44.11 acres. Under the claim of title through Swift’s alleged “ corrected deed,” Hemselman had a claim of title to a strip, two rods wide, on the east side of Hunsicker's land, and, under the Diley deed, to a strip, six rods wide, immediately west. It was to recover the possession of these two parcels that this action was brought. The plaintiff in error claims color of title and possession. Except in the particulars hereinafter noted, there is no serious dispute but that he went into possession of this strip in 1882, and continued such possession to the time of the trial. He claims that he entered into possession of this land under claim of title, exclusive of any other right, founding such claim upon both the Smith and Diley deeds as being conveyances of the premises, and •that there has been continual occupation and possession of the same for more than ten years. In other words, he claims that he has brought himself within the provisions of sec. 4211, R. S. 1818, and that no recovery can be had against him. Lampman v. Van Alstyne, 94 Wis. 417. So far as the east two rods of this strip are concerned, no question seems to be raised but that the deeds under which Heinselman claims purport to convey that land; but, as to the Diley deed, it is urged that the description is so imperfect and uncertain, when applied to the actual conditions, as not to convey even color of title. There is some force to this contention, but it is thought that the whole description, taken together, can be [17]*17construed so as to cover the disputed tract without doing violence to established rules of construction. There can be no doubt but that a description which is hopelessly uncertain renders the deed void, and such a deed cannot be used as a basis for adverse possession under the statute cited. See Newell, Ejectment, 541. A cardinal rule of construction is that a conveyance of real estate will not be declared void for uncertainty of description when it is possible, by any reasonable rule of construction, to determine what property it was intended to convey. A rational intention must be sought for, and the construction must be consistent with reason and common sense.

The elements of the description which control are: (1) Enumeration of monuments; (2) enumeration of courses and distances; (3) statement of the quantity of the land conveyed. Their relative value in determining the estate is in the order named. In determining inconsistencies between the different elements of the description, the court will give preference to that element or part in which there is the least likelihood of a mistake; hence the monuments will control courses and distances, and courses and distances will control as to the quantity of land stated to be conveyed. Newell, Ejectment, 547, 548, and cases cited. Applying these rules to the Diley deed, we reach the following results: The starting point was the northwest corner of this quarter section; “thence running east, along the quarter line, eighty-six rods, to the corner of lands own by Michael Smith.” So far as the record discloses, the correction deed ” from Swift to Smith, in 1880, conveyed to the latter a strip two rods wide on the east side of the N. "W. -j- of the N. W. and the call in the description would carry the stopping point to the land of Smith, whether it be eighty-six rods, more or less. Lampman v. Van Alstyne, supra.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 N.W. 23, 103 Wis. 12, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heinselman-v-hunsicker-wis-1899.