Holcombe v. Richards

35 N.W. 714, 38 Minn. 38, 1887 Minn. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 23, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 N.W. 714 (Holcombe v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcombe v. Richards, 35 N.W. 714, 38 Minn. 38, 1887 Minn. LEXIS 315 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Action to determine adverse claims to real property. Both parties claim under Edwin Y. Holcombe as their common source [40]*40of title. The history of the title, as far as here important, is as follows: September 9, 1859, Edwin V. Holcombe and wife, to secure the payment of a note for $5,000, executed a mortgage upon 40 acres of land in Eamsey county, in this state, to one John Maltby, a citizen of Penobscot county, and state of Maine. This mortgage contained a power of sale, authorizing Maltby, “his heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns,” in case of default in the conditions of the mortgage, to sell the mortgaged premises at public sale,' and convey the same to the purchaser. Maltby died at his residence in Maine in May, 1860, the note and mortgage referred to being then in his possession in that state. After his death, proceedings for the due administration of his estate were had in the probate court of Penobscot county, in which letters of administration were duly issued to his widow, who subsequently resigned, and one Eeuben A. Prescott was by the same court appointed administrator de bonis non in May, 1861. Default having been made in the conditions of the mortgage, Prescott, as such administrator, proceeded to foreclose by advertisement under the power of sale, and the premises were sold at public auction by the sheriff of Eamsey county, on March 22,1862, to Charles Hayward, for the sum of $3,500, and the usual certificate of sale issued ;to him, dated the 24th of the same month. The premises not having been redeemed, a sheriff’s deed was executed to Playward after the expiration of the time of redemption.

In October, 1863, Hayward and wife, by deed, “sold, remised, released, and forever quitclaimed” the premises to William C. Stiles, his heirs and assigns, forever. This deed contained, immediately following the description of the land, the following recitals and covenant of non-claim: “Being the same premises conveyed in the mortgage by Edwin V. Holcombe and wife to John Maltby, bearing date the ninth day of September, 1859, and recorded, [giving date and place of record;] the same having been sold for for eclosure by the sheriff of said county on the twenty-second of March, 1862, as per certificate by the sheriff, bearing date the twenty-fourth of said March, and recorded, [giving date and place of record;] the said Hayward being the purchaser at said sale, and the said premises having since been conveyed to him in pursuance thereof..” “To have and to hold the prem[41]*41uses, with all the privileges and appurtenances thereof, to him, the ■.said William C. Stiles, his heirs and assigns, forever, so that neither ■ toe, the said Hayward and wife, or either of us, nor any person claiming from, hy, through, or under us, or either of us, shall have or claim any ■right or title to said premises, or any part thereof."

By deeds from Stiles and various mesne conveyances under him, the land was conveyed in different parcels to numerous persons, (having been laid out and platted into town lots,) among whom were the • defendant and one Bryant. Some of these owners having been advised by men learned in the law that there was some doubt as to the validity of the foreclosure of the Holcombe mortgage, they applied to the plaintiff to obtain for them from Edwin Y. Holcombe (his father) • a curative deed, quitclaiming to their common remote grantor, Charles Hayward, all interest in the land. They prepared and furnished plaintiff a deed of that purport, which he sent to his father. The father executed it, and returned it to his son, who, at the request and ■with the consent of his father, delivered it to Bryant in January, 1884, ■who, for the benefit of all the owners, had it recorded, but not until • July, 1885. Hayward, however, had no personal knowledge of the deed until August, 1885, soon after which he executed to Stiles a -deed, for the purpose of vesting in him all the interest in the land • conveyed by this curative deed from Edwin Y. Holcombe. Intervening between the delivery to Bryant -of the curative deed to Hayward and the actual acceptance of it by Hayward, Edwin Y. Holcombe, in June, 1885, executed to his son, the plaintiff, quitclaim deeds of the same premises, which are the conveyances under which he now claims. The court finds (and the evidence abundantly supports him) that ■plaintiff paid.no consideration for these deeds, and that at the time he received them he had full notice and knowledge of all the conveyances .and proceedings affecting the title to this land, and particularly of the curative deed executed by his father to Hayward, already referred do, and of the reason of its execution and delivery.

Passing by a point made as to the regularity of Prescott’s appoint■ment as administrator of the estate of Maltby, and another as to the validity of the title acquired by Hayward at the mortgage sale, by .reason of his being described in the certificate of sale as “trustee, [42]*42etc.,” (neither of which, in our opinion, are well taken,) plaintiff’s^ grounds of attack on defendants’ title are two: First, that the foreclosure of the Holcombe mortgage by Prescott, under the power of' sale, was void, for the reason that a foreign administrator had no-such authority in this state prior to the passage of Laws 1876, c, 41,. (Gen. St. 1878, c. 83, § 25;) second, that the curative deed from Edwin Y. Holcombe to Hayward, as grantee, could not take effect as a. conveyance until its acceptance by him; that until such acceptance,, the title remained in and was subject to disposition by the grantor,, and hence that the intervening conveyance from Edwin V. Holcombe to plaintiff took precedence. We shall consider these in their order.

1. It is true, as contended by appellant, that our courts take no-notice of a foreign administration, and will not recognize a foreign, administrator or executor in his representative capacity until clothed, with authority under our laws. But the exercise of the power of sale-by Prescott rested upon the convention of the parties, and not upont the authority of the probate court in Maine. It was a matter of contract, and not of jurisdiction. The mortgage authorized the exercise-of the power of sale by the mortgagee, or his executors or administra-tors. This description of the persons who might exercise this powerfully covers personal representatives appointed at the domicile of the-mortgagee, and where the principal administration of his estate must, be had. The note and mortgage were bona notabilia in the state where > the mortgagee resided, and were the proper subject of administration! in that state, although the mortgaged premises were situated in this. state. Neither did he hold by assignment, within the meaning of' Gen. St. 1878, c. 81, § 2, and hence the provision of the statute requiring all assignments to be recorded has no application. The act-of 1876 is therefore not a grant of authority to a foreign executor or-administrator to exercise the power of sale in a mortgage, but merely-regulates its exercise by requiring, for manifestly wise reasons, as so condition precedent, that evidence of the fact of his -appointment should be first made a matter of record in this state. Doolittle v. Lewis, 7 John.Ch. 45, (11 Am. Dec. 389;) Hayes v. Frey, 54 Wis. 503, (11 N. W. Rep. 695.)

[43]*43The foreclosure was therefore, in our judgment, valid, and upon-that ground alone the order of the court below might be affirmed.

2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 N.W. 714, 38 Minn. 38, 1887 Minn. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcombe-v-richards-minn-1887.