Messenger v. Miller

2 Pin. 60
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 Pin. 60 (Messenger v. Miller) 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
Messenger v. Miller, 2 Pin. 60 (Wis. 1847).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The bill in this suit is for the foreclosure of a mortgage given to secure the payment of a promissory note, bearing date February 23, 1839, and payable to one Milton Charles. Said mortgage is in the usual form, upon a quarter section of land, describing it, with a. covenant to pay the amount to said Charles, his executors, administrators or assigns. The bill sets forth that the complainant is not certain that the defendant Miller was the owner in fee of the land at the date of the mortgage, but believes he was, and charges that, if he was not the owner thereof, he did subsequently acquire a good title, which complainant claims, should in equity operate as a confirmation of said mortgage, inure to his benefit, and be vested in him. Said mortgage was assigned, first to Merrill, then by Mm to Lane, and by him to the complainant. It is stated also in the bill that Miller afterward sold or mortgaged said mortgaged premises to Loomis, one of the defendants, and that Loomis mortgaged or sold the same premises to William Bowen, another of the defendants, and that said Bowen sold or assigned his interest to William B. Elliott, the remaining defendant. The said defendants Miller and Loomis filed their answer to said bill. In their answer the mortgage is confessed, and it is alleged that, in the year 1837, said Miller purchased of said Charles a claim to tracts or-pieces of land, including the land mortgaged, for the consideration of $400; that at that time said Milton Charles did not own the land, but that it belonged to the United States, and that this claim belonged to tbe brother of said Charles, who had abandoned it and left the country. There was no house or improvement of any kind on the land, except a small patch which had been broken, not fenced nor cultivated ; that said Charles had agreed to get out about two thousand rails for said Miller, wMch agreement had not been performed. Defendants further state that they did at Various times make payments to said Charles on account of said purchase, until the said sum agreed to be paid was [62]*62reduced to $150, the amount of the note and mortgage; that at the date of the mortgage the land had not been sold by the government, and that all the interest they then had was a bare possession, which was liable to be defeated by a government sale; that there was no covenant of warranty in said mortgage of the title which they might acquire. After the execution of said note and mortgage, the said premises were sold by the government to said Miller, when said Miller, for the sum of $1,000, mortgaged the said premises to Loomis, and afterward, for a valuable consideration, conveyed the premises to him in fee. The other two defendants did not answer.

The suit was tried upon bill, answer, replication, exhibits and proofs. It appeared in evidence, that the land was sold by the government to Miller, on the 26th February, 1839, three days after the date of the mortgage ; also, that the note and mortgage were given upon a settlement of the difficulties then existing between the parties, respecting their respective rights to bid for the land ; and that Loomis, Miller and Merrill were present at, and assisted in the transaction. Merrill paid the note to Charles after it became due, with the approbation and at the request of Miller and Loomis ; and in pursuance of a previous agreement, on his part, to pay the money if they did not. He took an assignment from Charles of the mortgage. When the note and mortgage were given no objection was made on account of the rails; nor no new engagement to get them out was required. It was also proven that all the breaking done was about two acres and worth $50 ; that all that was done on this land, previous to the original contract between Charles and' Miller in 1837, was done by Luther Charles, the brother of Milton, in the year 1836. The man who did the breaking, proved that Luther Charles employed him to break; that he broke about half an acre on this quarter section, for which he was paid by Luther the sum of $10; that there was no fence nor house on the land; that [63]*63Milton Charles made no claim to the land nntil the year 1837, and not nntil after his brother Luther had left the country. It appeared, also, that Miller conveyed the premises to Loomis in the month of October, 1839. The first point presented is want of consideration. It appearsthat the sum of $400 was, in the year 1837, agreed to be paid by Miller to Charles for his claims ; and that in the year 1839, when the land described in this mortgage was about being sold by the government, Miller and Loomis .gave Charles this note and mortgage for the residue of the purchase money aforesaid, upon settlement of their difficulties, which induced him not to trouble Miller at the sale by bidding, in competition, for the land; and that Merrill then, also, came under a verbal engagement or promise to pay the amount if they should fail to do so. It is not pretended that the parties contracted to sell and convey, on the one side, and to purchase, on the other, the fee of the land. It was merely a purchase of a naked claim to or upon public land, or rather a pretense of claim. A moral or equitable obligation is a sufficient consideration for an assumption. Clark v. Herring, 5 Binn. 33. But there must be some benefit arising to the defendant or some injury or loss to the plaintiff. Austin v. McLure, 4 Dall. 226; Waters v. Miller, 1 id. 369; Hemabee v. Eberley, 2 Binn. 509; Doty v. Wilson, 14 Johns. 378; Smith v. Ware, 13 id. 257. Milton Charles, the payee of this note, did not make the improvement or do the work, but his brother, Luther Charles did. The ploughing was done by Luther in 1836, who disappeared, and the year after, Milton sold to Miller. Milton neither worked nor expended money, nor had the actual possession. There was no house or fencing on the land. He had no authority to put Miller into possession or give him seizin ; nor could he legally transfer to Miller any authority, or right to purchase the land at the sale in preference to himself or any other person. There was neither in law or fact the least-loss or injury to the plaintiff, nor accommodation to the [64]*64defendant. Half an acre of broken land in a prairie, uncultivated, without fence or house, cannot be an accommodation or benefit to a purchaser of a half section. of land, for farming purposes, worthy his consideration. The land being vacant, Miller has as good a right to enter upon it as Charles. Neither had any legal right.

The note and mortgage being given two years after the alleged agreement of sale, are not thereby any more obligatory than if given at the time. No additional consideration passed, no additional reason is given, except that Charles was thereby satisfied, and did not bid at the sale in opposition to Miller. This, in law, is no consideration for an assumpsit or undertaking. Miller had the same right to bid at the sale that he had, and if he chose to withdraw all competition as a bidder in opposition to Miller in consideration of this note, he certainly did not thereby add to Miller1 s obligations, or' strengthen the consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Pin. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messenger-v-miller-wis-1847.