Jones v. Billstein

28 Wis. 221
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 28 Wis. 221 (Jones v. Billstein) 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
Jones v. Billstein, 28 Wis. 221 (Wis. 1871).

Opinion

Lyost, J.

This is an action to recover the possession of certain real estate. The plaintiff claims the same as heir-at-law of Harvey Jones, late of Winnebago county, who died in 1849, intestate, leaving surviving him three children, of whom the plaintiff is one. Afterwards Loyal H. Jones and Erastus W. Drury were appointed administrators of the estate of the deceased by the county court of said county, and drily qualified as such. In May, 1852, upon petition of such administrators, license was granted to them by such county court to sell certain of the real estate of which the said Harvey Jones died seized, including that described in the complaint, for- the purpose of paying claims against the estate. Pursuant to such license, the administrators sold the premises in controversy to one Edward Smith, and conveyed a portion thereof to him in 1853, and the balance in 1856, by the usual administrators’ deeds. This sale was confirmed by the county court, August 27th, 1858. It does not appear that the administrators ever went into possession of said premises, but Smith took possession immediately after the same were conveyed to him, and he and those claiming under him have been in the actual possession and occupancy thereof ever since, claiming title thereto by virtue of such administrators’ deeds. The defendants are in possession of the premises as tenants of the grantee of Smith. November 10th, 1864, such county court made an order discharging Jones and Drury as administrators, and ajipointing new administrators of such estate de bonis non. It does not appear that the estate has ever been fully settled. The plaintiff was a minor when his father died, but became twenty-one years of age in December, 1858; and this action was commenced November 9th, 1869. The plaintiff has been a resi[225]*225dent of the county of "Winnebago from the time he became nineteen years of age.

It is conceded that, by reason of certain irregularities in the proceedings preliminary thereto, the deeds executed by the administrators to Smith "were invalid, and did not convey to Smith the title to the premises in controversy.

The circuit court gave judgment for the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

The defendants insist that the plaintiff is barred from recovering these premises in this action by two statutes of limitation, either of which, they claim, constitutes a complete bar to such recovery. One of these statutes is contained in chapter 188 of the Revised Statutes, sections 6. 8 and 10, which provides substantially that an adverse possession of lands of ten years under claim of title, founding such claim on some written instrument as being a conveyance thereof, shall be a bar to a recovery of the lands thus held adversely. The other statute is as follows: “No action for the recovery of any estate sold by an executor or administrator under the provisions of this chapter, shall be maintained by any heir, or other person claiming under the deceased testator or intestate, unless it be commenced within five years next after the sale; and no action for any estate sold in like manner by a guardian, shall be maintained by the ward, or by any person claiming under him, unless it be commenced within five years next after the termination of the guardianship.” R. S., ch. 94, sec. 60, which is a re-enactment of sec. 50, ch. 65 of the Revised Statutes of 1849. The next section makes an exception in favor of “ minors or others under legal disability to sue at the time when the right of action shall first accrue,” and gives to such persons the right to commence the action within five years after the removal of the disability.

The general statute of limitations before mentioned (chap. 188, R. S.) also makes an exception in favor of those persons entitled to commence an action for the recovery of real property, or to make an entry or defense founded on the title to-[226]*226real property, who at the time such title' shall first descend or accrue are either minors, or insane, or prisoners in certain cases, or married women; and gives to such persons five years after such disability ceases, or after the death of the person entitled who shall die under such disability, within which to commence the action. ' ‘

Of conrse the plaintiff can claim nothing, under either of these statutes, by reason of having been a minor when the administrators sold the premises, because he became twenty-one years of age nearly eleven years before this action was commenced. But it is claimed by the plaintiff that neither of these statutes could commence to run against him until a right of action accrued to him to recover the land, and that no right of action did accrue to him until the administrators who made the sale were discharged. We have already seen that they were discharged less than five years before the action was commenced.

It is doubtless a correct legal proposition, that until the plaintiff had a right of action to recover the premises in controversy, the statutes of limitation did not commence to run against him ; and if he could not have maintained such action until the administrators who sold the premises were discharged, then this action is not barred by those statutes, or by either of them. I think that this proposition was fully demonstrated on the argument by the counsel for the plaintiff.

The controlling question then is, At what time did the plaintiff’s right of action accrue? As before stated, the theory of the plaintiff is, that it accrued when the administrators were discharged; and the theory of the defendants is, that it accrued when the administrators sold and conveyed the premises to Smith, in 1853 and 1856.

The question has been argued with great ability by the learned counsel for the respective parties, and they seem to have cited all the authorities which have any direct bearing upon it.

In the light of those arguments and authorities we have •endeavored to bestow upon the question that investigation and [227]*227deliberation winch its importance seemed to demand; and we have reached the conclusion that the theory of the defendants is the correct one; that the plaintiff’s right of action accrued when the administrators sold and conveyed the premises in controversy to Smith ; that this action is barred by either of the statutes of limitation before mentioned; and that, therefore, the judgment of the circuit court was correct and should be affirmed.

I will now proceed to state, in a general way, some of the reasons that have impelled our minds to this conclusion.

There can be no doubt but that by the common law the real estate descended to the heir immediately upon the death of the ancestor, and that his right of entry was then perfect. The personal representative of the deceased — the executor or administrator, as such — had nothing whatever to do with the lands of which the deceased died seized, or with the rents and profits thereof These belonged absolutely to the heir.

The only changes that have been made in the common law in this respect are made by the provisions of our statutes, which are: 1st. That the executor or administrator shall return to the proper court an inventory of the real estate of the deceased. R. S., ch. 100, sec. 1. 2nd. If the personal estate is insufficient to pay the debts of the deceased and the expenses of administration, the executor or administrator, upon being licensed by the court so to do, may sell the real estate. Chap. 94. 3d.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Wis. 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-billstein-wis-1871.