Lakelands, Inc. v. Chippewa & Flambeau Improvement Co.

295 N.W. 919, 237 Wis. 326, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 204
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 295 N.W. 919 (Lakelands, Inc. v. Chippewa & Flambeau Improvement Co.) 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
Lakelands, Inc. v. Chippewa & Flambeau Improvement Co., 295 N.W. 919, 237 Wis. 326, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 204 (Wis. 1940).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 328

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 329 Action by Lakelands, Inc., against Chippewa Flambeau Improvement Company, to recover damages for breach of covenants of seisin, for quiet possession and for title under a warranty deed, commenced March 10, 1938. From a judgment for plaintiff entered December 8, 1939, the defendant appeals.

The defendant on April 3, 1926, executed to the plaintiff its deed with the usual covenants of seisin, for quiet possession and for title describing the land conveyed as government lots 4 and 7 of section 9, township 42, north of range 5 east. The land bordered on a lake and was so shown on the government plat based on the original survey. The defendant at the time held the title to the land described under patents from the government and mean conveyances from the patentees and their assigns to it. When the deed was executed one Ilg was in possession of a part of the land within the calls of the deed. The plaintiff brought action to eject Ilg. The defendant was notified of this suit and participated in its trial. Judgment was entered in the suit ejecting Ilg, and holding that lot embraced the land between the lake shore as then existing, the section line between sections 9 and 16, and the north and south quarter line of section 9. This judgment was not appealed by the defendant Ilg.

Thereafter Ilg applied to the United States government for a resurvey and platting of the land in said section bordering on said lake, and such proceedings were had thereon that the land was resurveyed and replatted and the greater part of the *Page 330 land embraced in original lot 7 by said judgment was awarded to said Ilg and others as equitably entitled thereto under the rules governing the rights of parties in possession of and claiming lands resurveyed and replatted by the government.

Lot 4 as described in said deed from defendant to plaintiff by the original government survey comprised the land bounded by the lake shore and the east and west quarter line and the west eighth line of said section and a part of this land was by said resurvey and replatting and allotment proceedings of the government land department also awarded to persons other than the plaintiff. Pursuant to the resurvey the entire west shore of the lake was taken from the seven lots of the original survey bordering on the lake and cut up into nine lots ranging in area from 1.5 to 13.30 acres and added to the seven.

The instant case was tried to the court without a jury. The court held that the resurvey and reallotment proceedings of the United States government constituted breaches of the covenants for quiet possession and title contained in said deed from defendant to plaintiff and awarded as damages therefor the following items of damage: Value of the land taken from plaintiff by the government proceedings stated with interest; value of improvements made in good faith by plaintiff on the land taken away from it by the said government action with interest; the costs and attorney's fees of plaintiff incurred by the plaintiff in contesting both the said suit with Ilg and his application for resurvey and allotment of the land conveyed by the defendant. The judgment is for $9,518.50, the aggregate of these items and costs. The following opinion was filed January 7, 1941: *Page 331 As appears from the foregoing statement the action is to recover damages for breaches of the covenants of seisin and for quiet enjoyment and title contained in a warranty deed in ordinary form executed and delivered by defendant to plaintiff in 1926, which are alleged to have resulted from a resurvey and replatting by the United States government of the land described in the deed subsequent to its execution and the awarding of the greater part of the land to others than the plaintiff.

In a suit for breach of a covenant of warranty of title, the defendant may defend on the proposition that his title was good under the facts existing at the time he executed the covenant; McInnis v. Lyman, 62 Wis. 191, 196,22 N.W. 405; 15 C.J.p. 1239, and cases cited in note 25; and on the proposition that the plaintiff yielded to an inferior title; 15 C.J.p. 1297, and cases cited in note 59. The instant case involves alleged breaches of covenants of warranty of title to the two parcels of land bordering on a lake designated as lot 7 and lot 4. We are of opinion that under the propositions above stated, the defendant has established a defense as to lot 4 and a partial defense as to lot 7, as hereinafter indicated, and that the plaintiff yielded to an inferior title.

The plaintiff bases its right to recover on the proposition that the allotment of the United States government pursuant to the proceedings instituted by Ilg for resurvey and replatting of the land bordering on the lake gave good and paramount title to the allottees. This would doubtless be correct if the title so passed were established by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. But no such result follows from a determination of the land department of the United States government, or from a resurvey by such department, or from patents issued pursuant to such a resurvey. When a second patent is issued pursuant to a resurvey covering land covered by a prior patent based on the original government survey, the question which patent conveyed the title to the land covered *Page 332 by the later patent must be determined by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction. There never has been such a determination by any court respecting the instant patent. The trial court did not determine that question. It assumed that the proceedings before the land department determined that question and that the patents issued pursuant to those proceedings conveyed a title superior to the title conveyed by the deed in suit. This appears from the opinion of the trial court contained in the record wherein it is said: "The resurvey took away from the plaintiff all of lots 13 to 17, inclusive, from the lands the defendant had warranted to it in lots 4 and 7." This also appears from the findings of the court wherein it is said: "That by the decision of the general land office of the United States it was held and determined that said lots 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17 [of the resurvey] were unplatted land [and] had never been conveyed by the United States."

That the United States land department cannot determine the question of title here involved is plain. In Moore v.Robbins, 96 U.S. 530, 24 L.Ed. 848, decided in 1878, Mr. Justice MILLER wrote the opinion and wrote the, headnotes thereto. Headnote 1 is to the effect that a patent from the United States government carries with it the legal title to the land, and with the patent all control of the land department of the government. Headnote 2 declares that if any lawful reason exists why the patent should be canceled the appropriate and only remedy is by a bill in chancery in a court of competent jurisdiction, and there exists no power in the land department of the government to reconsider the facts on which the patent was based or rescind it or to issue another patent for the same land. There was no dissent.

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Bluebook (online)
295 N.W. 919, 237 Wis. 326, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakelands-inc-v-chippewa-flambeau-improvement-co-wis-1940.