Klitzke v. Ebert

12 N.W.2d 144, 244 Wis. 225, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 62
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 144 (Klitzke v. Ebert) 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
Klitzke v. Ebert, 12 N.W.2d 144, 244 Wis. 225, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 62 (Wis. 1943).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

Upon this appeal Ebert contends that during the trial there were errors in several respects which were prejudicial to him. His first contention is that although he expressly denied by allegations in his answer the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint that they owned the eighty acres, on part of which they claimed Ebert committed the alleged trespass, plaintiffs failed to prove on the trial that they had title to that land; and that as it appears from undisputed proof that the land was unimproved, uncultivated, and wild, and there was no proof that plaintiffs were in actual possession thereof, they cannot recover in this action. The contention must be sustained.

The only instruments offered in evidence by plaintiffs in relation to title are a recorded sheriff’s deed to plaintiffs dated December 1, 1927, which describes the land in question and purports to have been given pursuant to a foreclosure sale under a judgment foreclosing a mortgage thereon; and a circuit court order dated December 17, 1927, confirming the sheriff’s sale on foreclosure to plaintiffs. There is, however, no statement or recital in either the deed or the order of any facts which can be considered to show that the mortgagor had any title to the land. In addition there is a warranty deed executed by plaintiffs to convey the land to the United States government, but this deed was admitted in evidence only for the purpose of plaintiffs proving the reservation of the right to recover damages for trespass committed prior to that conveyance. Defendants duly objected to the admission in evi *228 dence of the sheriff’s deed and the order confirming the foreclosure sale, and the court sustained those objections, but finally the instruments were admitted as only part of the chain of title. Likewise the court sustained repeatedly defendants’ objections to questions which plaintiffs’ counsel, ip. examining his client, worded so as to imply ownership in plaintiffs. Finally there were the following proceedings and ruling when the client was again asked by plaintiffs’ counsel, “And you owned that land ever since until you sold it.” “Mr. Eberlein [Ebert’s counsel] : Object to the term ownership, if it is an attempt to prove his title by the use of that word in this question. CourtObjection overruled. They can testify they own it, but it requires further proof. Go' ahead.” In addition the following rulings disclose that the court fairly offered to give plaintiffs sufficient tipie to' produce proper proof to establish title, to wit:

“There is only one way to prove title when an objection is made. I know it is going to take a lot of time; we may have to adjourn tomorrow pnd come back and spend that time, if that is what the objection means and they insist upon it.”

“Well, the objection has to‘ be sustained and I assume you are going to have to bring in some abstractor . . . and prove the process right through, if they insist upon it. We can wait.

I will give you time, of course, to do that, if you are not ready. . . .”

Plaintiffs failed to take advantage of the proffered opportunity to introduce proof of title. Their only additional testimony is that they paid taxes during the years in question.

As the issue as to whether plaintiffs had the land was • duly raised by Ebert’s denial thereof in his answer, and as the land was wild and uncultivated and thére was no proof established that plaintiffs were in actual possession, they cannot recover in this action unless they establish that they had good title to the land. As the court said in Knapp v. Alexander-Edgar Lumber Co. 145 Wis. 528, 530, 130 N. W. 504,—

*229 “That the plaintiff at the time of the cutting was not in the actual possession of the land from which the timber sued for was cut, is too plain to admit of controversy. . . . The action of trespass quare clausum can be maintained only by one in the actual or constructive possession of the premises on which the trespass is committed. Gunsolus v. Lormer, 54 Wis. 630, 634, 12 N. W. 62. ... It is also well settled that a plaintiff in an action quare clausum who is not in the actual possession of the land upon which the trespass is committed, and who is therefore obliged to rely on constructive possession, must establish that possession by showing that he has good title. Stated in another way, the constructive possession follows the title. In Hungerford v. Redford [29 Wis. 345],. supra, the court, after saying that actual possession is sufficient unless the defendant proves an adverse title of a higher character than a possessory one, continues: ‘If the plaintiff is not the real owner of the land, and the defendants shall be compelled to pay the judgment which he [the plaintiff] recovered against them in the circuit court, what rule of law will prevent such owner from bringing an action against them for the same logs and recovering therein ? . . . The fact that a recovery by the holder of a merely colorable title is no bar to a recovery by the real owner, demonstrates that none but the real owner can recover.’ The action was one of replevin to recover logs wrongfully cut on unoccupied lands claimed by the plaintiff, and recovery was denied because he was unable to prove perfect title to the lands.”

In support of those conclusions, the court cited also Stephenson v. Wilson, 37 Wis. 482, 488; McNarra v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 41 Wis. 69, 74; Paige v. Kolman, 93 Wis. 435, 67 N. W. 700. It is true, as plaintiffs contend, that under the provision in sec. 327.17, Stats., in relation to the admissibility in evidence of recorded instruments, which are entitled to' be recorded, the sheriff’s deed on the foreclosure sale and the court’s order confirming the sale were admissible in evidence; and that under the provisions in secs. 328.06 and 328.07, Stats., a recorded sheriff’s deed on a sale by virtue of any judgment “shall be received, as presumptive evidence of the *230 facts therein stated and that the title, estate or interest in the land .therein described, which such conveyance purports to convey, of every person whom it purports to- affect passed to and vested in the grantee therein; . . .” and every certificate of such judicial sale of land “shall be received as presumptive evidence of the facts therein stated.” However, although by those statutory provisions the sheriff’s deed and the court’s order were rendered admissible in evidence, these instruments are insufficient and failed to prove that plaintiffs had good title, because in neither of the instruments are there stated any facts which can be considered sufficient to-show that the mortgagor, who executed the mortgage which was foreclosed and whose rights, title, and interest the sheriff’s deed purports to convey, ever actually had any title which can be held to have become vested in plaintiffs by virtue of the sheriff’s deed. Manifestly, in the absence of any proof that the mortgagor had good title, the presumptive evidence afforded by the sheriff’s deed was of no more significance to establish that plaintiffs had acquired good title than would have been the presumptive evidence afforded by a deed directly to them, executed by the mortgagor.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 144, 244 Wis. 225, 1943 Wisc. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klitzke-v-ebert-wis-1943.