Keilly v. Severson

135 N.W. 875, 149 Wis. 251, 1912 Wisc. LEXIS 136
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 N.W. 875 (Keilly v. Severson) 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
Keilly v. Severson, 135 N.W. 875, 149 Wis. 251, 1912 Wisc. LEXIS 136 (Wis. 1912).

Opinions

Marshall, J.

Tbe findings of fact seem to have such basis in tbe evidence as to preclude disturbing them in any material particular. Counsel argue to tbe contrary at some length by a process of reasoning and method of analysis some[254]*254what out of harmony with the rules governing the subject. The clear preponderance of evidence required to warrant condemning a trial court’s findings, must appear so manifestly from the record, — after resolving all. fair doubts in tbeir favor and giving proper weight to those features in evidence below which could not be made to appear here, — as not to depend on any very careful weighing of probabilities. With this we pass the first complaint made without referring to the evidence except as to its general character.

The findings indicate this general situation: When the action was commenced appellant had the legal title to' the property in question with the right of possession as claimed, unless respondent had a superior right, in that she was the equitable owner and was entitled to retain possession as against, appellant and to be clothed with legal ownership.

Since appellant took title from Erickson with efficient notice on his part of the relations of respondent to the property, her rights therein were not affected by the change in legal ownership between the administrator’s deed and the commencement of the suit. If one buys real estate of another while the subject of the transaction is in possession of a third person, he is presumed to act with notice of all facts which such situation would suggest, or which could be obtained by diligent inquiry. Martin v. Morris, 62 Wis. 418, 22 N. W. 525 ; Roberts v. Decker, 120 Wis. 102, 97 N. W. 519.

There can be no question but that respondent violated the-statute, sec. 3914, Stats. (1898), prohibiting an administrator-from directly or indirectly purchasing or being interested in the purchase of any real estate sold by him. It is provided that all sales made contrary to such prohibition “shall be-void.” So respondent committed a wrong in law without, moral turpitude in the particular circumstances of the case. However, absence of any bad intent or actual injury to any one the statute was designed to protect, does not affect the nature of the title created by the improper transaction. By [255]*255the policy of the statute, regardless of the real purpose of the parties, the sale was constructively fraudulent, and efficiently so, if appellant is entitled to the benefit of the statute under the circumstances. The law in respect to the conduct of administrators is very important, and the court in all situations to which it applies must hold to a high standard of accountability.

In further discussing the case it must be appreciated that the word “void,” as used in the statute, means voidable. Until a sale made in violation of it be set aside in a proper action, the purchaser is vested with the legal title to the land and he cannot be divested thereof except in such proper action brought within a proper time by a person entitled to challenge, efficiently, the validity of the sale. McCrubb v. Bray, 36 Wis. 333; Martin v. Morris, 62 Wis. 418, 22 N. W. 525; Gibson v. Gibson, 102 Wis. 501, 78 N. W. 917.

The defect in the sale here, even as to a person the statute was designed to protect, was cured before commencement of this litigation by sec. 3918 of the Statutes limiting the operation of sec. 3914, in the circumstances of this case, to five years next after the sale. Moreover, the sale being voidable only, by force of the policy having for its object the protection of persons who might be injured because of being interested in an estate or claiming in some way under the dev-isee, — persons within the contemplation of sec. 3918, neither Erickson nor appellant is within the saving grace of the law. Eurthermore, appellant does not base his claim of right upon the invalidity of the sale. He claims under it.

So the character of the sale to Erickson does not cut any figure in this case, except as it has to do with the status of respondent in a court of equity. She, in effect, appealed to* that jurisdiction in defense and for affirmative relief because1 of an alleged wrong, made possible by her own violation of law. In such circumstances, under the peculiar facts, did she come into such jurisdiction with clean hands, under the rule [256]*256on that subject? If not, relief should have been denied to her in any event.

It is often, rather illogically, said that a person cannot successfully appeal to a court of equity unless he, himself, is without fault. If that were literally true, great wrongs, cognizable only in that jurisdiction, would go unredressed because of the victim being guilty of some fault of insignificant character as compared with that of his adversary, as in this case. Here there was reprehensible moral turpitude, as doubtless the trial court looked at the matter, — such that appellant, standing in the shoes of Erickson, should not reap the fruits thereof by shielding himself behind the really harmless fault, as to him; in plain violation of a quite dominating rule in equity, that no one can profit by his own wrong. Nemo ex suo delicto meliorem suam condilionem facere potest. All such rules are subsidiary to the all-pervading major principle, “Equity opens its doors whenever necessary to prevent fraud and injustice and where the relief asked conforms to the principles of rectitude and honesty.” Warden v. Fond du Lac Co. 14 Wis. 618, 620.

So, within a broad range, it rests in the conscience of the chancellor, whether, under the particular circumstances of the particular situation, equity ought to reach out its protecting arms in defense or redress. The seeker for such protection may not be wholly without fault and yet be entitled to some consideration. Do the principles of rectitude and honesty which should be the guide of human conduct, require or justify equitable interference? That is the test. There is no such stern rule as would close the eyes and ears, so to speak, of equity to the picture or cry of a distressed petitioner merely because of his hands not being entirely clean.

In the light of the foregoing, it is considered that the trial 'court did not go astray in deciding not to reject respondent’s claim because of her violation of the statute. As said before, substantially, it was a wrong without injury to any one con[257]*257■cerned in tMs litigation. The fault was participated in by both parties to the transaction. There was no real moral turpitude on her part, — no bad intent to injure. The sole purpose, as it seems, on her side was, without real prejudice to others, to acquire the home on which she and her husband had resided for a long time before he died, that she might continue to have a home there for herself and children. Erickson was her brother. He evidently co-operated to enable her, legally, as he probably thought, to avoid losing her home. The agreement to buy in the property and convey it to her, he ratified after the sale by permitting her to pay the consideration into the estate out of her own money. He did not put a dollar into the property, even by payment of taxes, for many years after the transaction. For some five or more years the land was not assessed to him. It was then so assessed by his direction without consultation with her.

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Bluebook (online)
135 N.W. 875, 149 Wis. 251, 1912 Wisc. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keilly-v-severson-wis-1912.