King v. Carpenter

37 Mich. 363, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 268
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 37 Mich. 363 (King v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Carpenter, 37 Mich. 363, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 268 (Mich. 1877).

Opinion

Campbell, J.

This is a bill filed by complainant as the alleged holder of a title to certain lands in Lapeer county, defective of record because of the failure to record a deed in the chaiu of title, to compel a release by defendant of a claim set up under a conveyance from the original source of title, but alleged to have been obtained fraudulently, with notice of the true title. The bill also sets up certain tax titles as held by complainant, — and avers possession.

These tax titles were made the subject of a certain stipulation whereby it was provided that they should be withdrawn from consideration on the hearing in the circuit court, but might be used on appeal in this court.

The jurisdiction of this court in equity cases is eo'nfined to the rehearing of the case upon the record presented in [366]*366the circuit court. We cannot decide a case upon facts which were not submitted for decision there. To pass upon new facts would be to exercise original and not appellate jurisdiction. Bailey v. De Graff, 2 Doug. (Mich.), 169; Adams v. Field, 25 Mich., 16; Studwell v. Palmer, 5 Paige, 166.

Those deeds must be treated for the purposes of this hearing as if they did not exist. The rights of both parties must be determined upon the other titles.

A preliminary question is raised upon the jurisdiction. The defendant claims that this is a bill of peace, filed under the statute to quiet title; and that it can only be filed by a party in actual possession. This it is said the complainant is not shown to have secured. And it is claimed a party out of possession must bring ejectment.

Undoubtedly where a party holding a legal title seeks to enforce it as against a person in possession claiming under an invalid title, or one which the party complaining claims to be such, the only proper remedy is ejectment, and that remedy is perfect. But where a party has an equitable cause of action against another, coming within any recognized rule of equity jurisdiction, such right can be enforced in equity, whether the complainant is in possession or not. The statute (Comp. L., § 5072) was designed to enlarge the powers of equity in regard to quieting title by allowing a decree in favor of a party in possession without the necessity of repeated trials at law. Where complainant’s rights are strictly legal ho has no means of enforcing them at law against a party out of possession, and cannot compel him to bring an action. If therefore the party not in possession neglects or refuses to bring an action, and prefers to wait for the chances of loss of testimony or other casualty, to gain an advantage over the possessor, the statute enables the latter to bring him in as a defendant and compel him to establish his claims or be barred.

But no statute was needed to enable any one to sue in equity upon an equitable cause of action, and in such case possession is not important and has never been required. [367]*367Salisbury v. Miller, 14 Mich., 160; Ormsby v. Barr, 21 Mich., 474; and 22 Mich., 80; Jones v. Smith, 22 Mich., 360.

The bill in the present case — if established — is very clearly -within ordinary principles of equity. It avers complainant to have a title which may be treated as a legal title, but which not being recorded as to one of the early muniments of title is in danger of being clouded by the assertion of a recorded title fraudulently obtained from one of complainant’s remote grantors. It shows that the defendant has 'an apparently perfect title of record. Under our recording laws it is beyond question that a record title, whether honest or dishonest, always prevents a title which is imperfect of record from having full marketable value, and is presumptively the better title. It creates a cloud upon the unrecorded title in the strictest as well as plainest sense of that expression, and renders it almost certain that no prudent man will purchase it, at a fair price.

The facts set forth are in substance that one George A. Sornborger received the United States patent for the land in controversy (being the east half of the northeast quarter of section 7, in town 8 north of range 10 east) on or about the 5th day of August, 1837, — the location having-been made in his name in June, 1836, by^his brother Edwin Sornborger, — and that the patentee on or about October 1, 1837, sold and conveyed the land.to one Whitman Corbin, by a deed which was not recorded. October 30, 1839, Corbin sold and conveyed to Henry E. Selden, whose deed was recorded, but is objected to by defendant as irregular.. From Selden the chain of title is complete through several mesne conveyances to complainant, who purchased in 1871, and on the 19th of April, 1872, received a conveyance from George W. Hanna.

In 1870 complainant was negotiating with Hanna for the lands, and applied to John Abbott who was register of deeds for an abstract of title, informing him of his purpose. Mr. Abbott gave him no intimation of any defect in the title. In April, 1871, Abbott drew up the contract between Hanna and King, and made no such suggestion.

[368]*368Iii December, 1870, Abbott, acting on behalf of James S. Johnson, wrote to George A. Sornborger, asking at what price he would quit-claim the land. Edwin replied to this letter that George had never held the title except for his benefit, and asked what Abbott would give for a quit-claim. Abbott replied, offering $100 for a deed from the two brothers to be made to Mary E. Rogers, a sister of Johnson. Edwin Sornborger procured a deed from George to Edwin’s wife, and came to Lapeer with a deed from Mrs. Sornborger executed in blank, with no grantee’s name inserted. On his way to Lapeer he obtained the original patent at the Detroit Land Office, from which it had never been taken. He then negotiated with Abbott, demanding $500, while Abbott offered him $200. He at last agreed to accept $250, and Abbott paid him that sum. Sornborger then inserted the name of Mrs. Rogers in the deed and it was recorded. Mrs. Rogers had no personal agency in the matter. Her brother, Mr. Johnson, acted throughout in buying and selling on her behalf, and the money came from him. She evidently — from the testimony — was not in any ivay concerned except for such purpose as suited Mr. Johnson. Mr. Sornborger says he informed Mr. Abbott that the land had been already sold many years before, and swears he supposed the papers were necessary to complete a title in the real owner of the land. Abbott denies any such statement, but swears that he knew all that was on record, and informed Johnson of it. He was perfectly aware of Hanna’s claim of ownership. Johnson admits this fully. The deed was taken February 3, 1871. The defendant Carpenter in June, 1871, obtained a deed from Mrs. Rogers through the agency of Johnson. He paid $300 and admits he had knowledge of King’s claim before he paid it.

Hpon the undisputed facts of the case the claim that any of these parties was a Iona fide purchaser is out of the question. It was a clear attempt to get a fraudulent advantage over an unrecorded title.

But the question is presented whether King has shown his own title. Objection is made to the deed from Corbin [369]*369to Selden, as not proved. This deed was made in 1839 in-New York, and had no witnesses. It was acknowledged before a commissioner of deeds in a way shown by the statutes of that state to have been legal, and it was also executed according to those laws.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Mich. 363, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-carpenter-mich-1877.