Johnson v. Ashland Lumber Co.

9 N.W. 464, 52 Wis. 458, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 176
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 9 N.W. 464 (Johnson v. Ashland Lumber Co.) 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
Johnson v. Ashland Lumber Co., 9 N.W. 464, 52 Wis. 458, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 176 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

This action is brought to recover damages for cutting and carrying away the pine timber upon the plaintiffs’ land. The plaintiffs recovered, and the defendant appeals from the judgment. The only cpestions upon this appeal are: 1. Did the respondents show title to the lands upon which the timber was cut? 2. Did the court err in rejecting certain evidence offered by the appellant upon the trial?

The first question was, we think, settled by this court in its [460]*460decision upon a former appeal to this court in this action, and settled in favor of the respondents. "Whether the respondents showed title in themselves to the lands upon which the timber was cut by the appellant, depends wholly upon the construction which must be given to the deed offered in evidence, from Steven Butterfield and wife to Lawrence Earley, dated October 26, 1860. The evidence clearly establishes the fact that whatever lands were conveyed by said deed to Farley, were owned by the respondents at the time the timber was cut and removed therefrom, unless said title had been divested by virtue of a tax deed which was offered in evidence by the appellant. The description of the premises conveyed to Farley, as set out in said deed, is as follows: “Land lying and being situated in the county of Ashland and state of Wisconsin, and described as follows: Lots 3 and 4 and N. of the N. W. J of section 5, in township 48 N. of range 4 W., excepting thirty-two acres mortgaged to Schuyler Goff, adjoining the town line, and also seven acres which I reserve for myself, and to be taken on the east side of said described land, and leaving the amount of acres now deeded in this deed about thirty-four, more or less.”

It is insisted upon this appeal, by the learned counsel for the appellant, that it was the duty of the plaintiffs to either produce the mortgage referred to in the description in order to locate the 32 acres not conveyed, or, if it was out of their power to produce such mortgage or the record thereof, then to give other evidence of the exact location of the land described in such mortgage, in order to establish the bounds of the lands conveyed to Farley by such deed, and which came to them afterwards by inheritance from said Farley. It is said that upon the face of the deed the description of .the land not conveyed is so indefinite and uncertain that it cannot be located, and therefore the description of the lands in fact conveyed is also so indefinite and uncertain that the plaintiffs cannot found any right thereon to any part of the lands described in the deed. The same contention -was made on the former [461]*461trial; and, as we understand it, on such, former trial the court below held that the description of the lands not conveyed was so indefinite and uncertain that the whole exception was void, and the title to all the lands first described passed to Earley. On appeal from the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs upon that trial, this court reversed the judgment of the court below, and held that the descriptions of the lands excepted and not conveyed by the deed to Earley were certain, and that such lands could be located from the deed itself, without the aid of any extrinsic evidence. 47 Wis., 326. Justice Lyon, who wrote the opinion in t^at case, says: “We think there is no uncertainty or ambiguity in the description in that conveyance of the excepted parcels. It was conceded in the argument of the cause, and the government plat shows, that the N. -sf of the N. W. £, and lots 3 and 4 of section 5, constitute the northwest fractional quarter of that section; lot 3 being the southeast and lot 4 the southwest fractional quarter of the quarter section. The exception of 32 acres adjoining the town line, mortgaged to Schuyler Goff, must, in the absence of that mortgage, be presumed to be a parcel of land extending the whole length of the north side of the quarter section (which is the only town line abutting it), of sufficient uniform width to include 32 acres; and the exception.of seven acres to be taken on the east side of the fractional 'quarter section is an exception of a parcel of land extending along the whole east side of the quarter section, of sufficient uniform width to include seven acres.” This "construction seems to be sufficiently supported by the authorities cited by Justice Lyon in his opinion. The construction as to the location of the seven acres is criticised by the learned counsel for the appellant upon this appeal, and it is insisted that the seven acres should be taken from the east end of so much of the entire tract as is left after the 32 acres is taken from the north side of the same. There is, perhaps, some force in this criticism; and yet, upon the language of the deed, and construing it [462]*462most favorably to the grantee, the construction given it by this court is fully sustained.

For the purposes of this case, the construction given to the deed upon the former appeal is res adjudioata; and, if we were fully convinced that an error had been committed, it would now be too late to remedy the same. Upon the new trial, the plaintiffs and the court below were bound to give the deed the construction given to it by this court, and make their proofs in accordance therewith. It is settled by the former decision that there is no ambiguity or uncertainty on the face of the deed itself, as to the boundaries of the land conveyed thereby; but if the mortgage referred to in said deed had been produced on the trial, and the land mortgaged had not been 32 acres of uniform width along the north line of the tract, then there would have been an uncertainty as to the description in the deed. It would have presented a latent ambiguity, made patent by the mortgage, and the description of the deed, in that, case, would give way to that afforded by the production of the mortgage referred to therein. We think we were right in holding that the plaintiff made good his title to the land in dispute by the production of the deed alone. The deed must be construed, nothing appearing to the eon-trary, as though it had read, “excepting 32 acres of uniform width taken from the north side of said quarter section, being the lands heretofore mortgaged by the grantor to Schuyler Goff.”

In such case the description of the excepted land is made definite and certain without the production of the mortgage, and the grantee has the right to suppose the description in the mortgage, if produced, would correspond with the exception in the deed. The presumption is in his favor, and if it be alleged that the lands mortgaged to Goff were not those described in the deed as construed by the court, the proofs must be produced by the party who relies upon such fact. The plaintiff was not bound to verify the description contained in [463]*463his deed by the production of the mortgage. Had the exception been simply 32 acres heretofore mortgaged to Schuyler Goff, without in any way describing the location of the land so mortgaged, then in order to make out his title the plaintiff would have been compelled to prove what tract was, in fact, so mortgaged, in order to make out the description of the land conveyed to him. The plaintiffs on their part proved their title to a certain portion'of the northwest fractional quarter of section 5, township 48, rangé’ 4 W. They also proved that the defendant had cut and removed a certain quantity of pine logs from said land so owned by them, and the value thereof. They made out a perfect case, and, unless the circuit court erred in excluding the evidence offered by the defendant, they were entitled to recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.W. 464, 52 Wis. 458, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-ashland-lumber-co-wis-1881.