Keller v. Keller

50 N.W. 173, 80 Wis. 318, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 205
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 50 N.W. 173 (Keller v. Keller) 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
Keller v. Keller, 50 N.W. 173, 80 Wis. 318, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 205 (Wis. 1891).

Opinion

OetoN, J.

Tbe complaint is in substance as follows: Tbe plaintiff is tbe owner in fee and in actual possession of all that part of tbe N. E. J of tbe N. W. ¿ of section 22, Dane county, Wis., lying' north and west of tbe highway leading to tbe Scotch settlement on Sugar river, except that portion thereof conveyed to the Chicago & Tomab Railway Company by two deeds,— one dated August 31, 1880, recorded September 6, 1880, in Yolume 114 of Deeds, on page 9, in the office of tbe register of deeds of Dane county, 'Wis.; and tbe other dated July 19, 1880, recorded August 9, 1880, in Yolume 112 of Deeds, on page 502, in tbe same [321]*321register’s office; and excepting, also, tbe piece of land conveyed to Alpbeus Sykes by deed dated June 20, 1881, recorded in tbe same office, June 21,1881, in Yolume 115, on page 513; and exeepting, also, a piece of land conveyed to Henry Holm by deed dated May 27, 1882, recorded in tbe same office, April 12,1886, in Yolume 131 of Deeds, on page 166; and excepting, also, tbe west two acres of tbe said N. E. of tbe N. ~W. — all in town 6 N., of range 8 E., in Dane county aforesaid. Tbe defendant made some claim to tbe above-described premises, and judgment was demanded that tbe plaintiffs claim to said land be established against any claim of tbe defendant, and that she be forever barred against having or claiming any right or title to tbe land adverse to tbe said plaintiff.

Tbe defendant answered, denying every allegation in tbe complaint, except tbe averment that tbe plaintiff is in possession of the premises, Tbe answer further alleged that tbe plaintiff, on April 7,1881, by a proper deed of conveyance, conveyed to tbe defendant, for a valuable consideration therein expressed, “ tbe nineteen acres of land in tbe northeast quarter of tbe northwest quarter of section 22, town 6, range 8, being the same land described in plaintiff’s complaint; ” and that tbe defendant is tbe owner in fee-simple absolute of tbe premises described in tbe complaint, and tbe whole thereof.

Tbe case was tried by tbe court, and the finding was that tbe plaintiff was tbe owner in fee-simple absolute of tbe real estate described in plaintiff’s complaint, and has a complete legal title thereto, and in tbe actual possession thereof; and that tbe defendant sets up a claim thereto by means of a warranty deed, signed, sealed, witnessed, and acknowledged as a warranty deed, containing covenants of seisin and warranty, reciting a consideration of $1,200, dated April 7,1884, by which tbe plaintiff purported to convey to tbe defendant: “In tbe northeast quarter of tbe northwest [322]*322quarter of section 22, containing nineteen acres more or less, all in town 6 north, of range 8 east, Dane county, Wisconsin; ” and that the defendant has not disclaimed title to said land in this action. The conclusion of law was, in substance, that the deed referred to in the defendant’s answer vested no title in the defendant to the lands described in the complaint; and that the plaintiff’s objection to the testimony offered by the defendant should be sustained, and the plaintiff is entitled to judgment; and that the defendant be forever barred against having or claiming any right or title to the said lands adverse to the plaintiff ; and that she release to the plaintiff all claims, etc.; and judgment was rendered accordingly, and this appeal is taken therefrom.

It is not disclosed in the finding what the real ground was for holding that the said deed of the plaintiff to the? defendant vested no title in her, but it is conceded that the ground was that said deed was void for uncertainty or deficiency of description of the land. The plaintiff proved title, by a succession of conveyances, to twenty-eight acres of said forty; and, by deduction of the parcels excepted in his deed, he showed himself entitled to only nineteen acres of the tract, precisely the number of acres in his deed to the? defendant. The plaintiff introduced parol evidence to help Out the imperfect description in his own deed, by proving its location and identity by means of geographical boundaries given in the deed. This was correct, and not subject to the objection made by the learned counsel of the defendant, and the plaintiff showed himself to be the owner of the nineteen acres in fee, and so far entitled to recover. The imperfect description of the land in the plaintiff’s deed to the defendant is apparent. The nineteen acres of the forty-acre tract are not located or identified by means of anything in the deed itself. The language of the deed itself leaves it uncertain what nineteen acres was intended -to be [323]*323conveyed, and yet it is very suggestive as to bow it may be ascertained. The plaintiff owned just nineteen acres of the forty that is fully described in the deed to the defendant, and that was all he did own of that tract. Those facts appeared by the plaintiff’s own evidence. The only question open was, Was the nineteen acres mentioned in defendant’s deed that same nineteen acres? The introduction of that deed, together with the plaintiff’s evidence, established this fact: That the plaintiff owned and owned only nineteen acres of that tract, and he deeded to the defendant nineteen acres of that same tract. Was it the same? A court of equity would not have to force very much such an inference. ■ The plaintiff showed that this nineteen acres was all the land he owned in that tract, by showing who owned the residue of it by deeds and exceptions. Did not the plaintiff prove by his record and parol evidence just what land, and the only land, he owned in that tract, and the defendant showed by her deed that" he had deeded to her precisely the number of acres he owned in that tract? It would almost seem that the plaintiff by his evidence had supplied the defective description in the defendant’s deed. There is certainly very little evidence wanting to make it absolutely certain that these nineteen acres are the same in both deeds, in a court of equity, and that is, that the plaintiff intended to deed the defendant the identical nineteen acres he owned in that tract. The answer of the defendant supplies the identity of the land by the averment, “being the same land described in plaintiff’s complaint; ” equivalent to an averment that it is the same land he owned or claimed to own.

To prove this allegation, the learned counsel of the defendant called the plaintiff as witness, who testified, under objection, that he owned the land described in the complaint, and that he owned no other land in that section at the time he made the deed to the defendant. This the [324]*324plaintiff had already shown by his evidence. The witness was then asked, “Is that the same land that you described in the complaint that is embraced in this deed? ” and he answered, “Yes, sir; it is in the deed.” And he was asked further, “ The same land as is in the complaint is in the deed ? ” and he answered, “Yes, sir; the same land.” It will be observed that this evidence sustained the averment in the ■ answer. The court finally rejected this evidence. This testimony supplied the defective description in the deed beyond all question, if the evidence of the plaintiff had not already done so.

The learned counsel of the respondent contends that this evidence was improper, and that in this action, where the plaintiff relies upon a perfect legal title in fee-simple, the defendant cannot defeat it by parol evidence or set up an equitable title in defense, unless such equitable title is set up in the answer. But this answer does set up an equitable title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.W. 173, 80 Wis. 318, 1891 Wisc. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-keller-wis-1891.