Ming v. Foote

9 Mont. 201
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 Mont. 201 (Ming v. Foote) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ming v. Foote, 9 Mont. 201 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

De Witt, J.

This action is in the nature of ejectment. The respondent, as executrix of the estate of John H. Ming, deceased, seeks to recover from appellant lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 417, of the town site of the city of Helena, alleging title [207]*207in herself, and ouster by the appellant. Appellant’s answer admits that he is in possession of the premises demanded, and alleges title in himself, which title he seeks to establish as hereinafter treated of. The action was tried before the court without a jury. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed by the court, and judgment thereon entered in favor of respondent for possession of the lots. A motion for a new trial, made by appellant, was denied. From that order and the judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The facts, as we obtain them from the record, are as follows: In 1869, Helena was an unincorporated town in .Lewis and Clarke County, Montana Territory. In that year Miers F. Truett, probate judge of that county, made due application to the United States for patent for the land on which the town was situated; and afterwards, June 15, 1872, the patent was duly issued by the United States to such probate judge, in trust for the inhabitants of the town, under the provisions of the act of Congress approved March 2, 1867, entitled “ An act for the relief of the inhabitants of cities and towns upon the public lands,” and the acts amendatory and applicable thereto. The land in controversy is within said patent. On December 20, 1872, N. Hilger, then probate judge of said county, made, executed, and acknowledged a bargain and sale deed to John H. Ming and Charles K. Wells of lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 417, a portion of the town site of Helena, granted to the probate judge as above described, and which is the ground in controversy in this action. The grantor in that deed is described as “N. Hilger, Probate Judge of Lewis and Clarke County, Montana Territory;’” and executes it as “N Hilger, Probate Judge.” The lots were described as bounded on the south by Eighth Avenue, on the north by lot 10, and on the east by Hoyt Street. Twelve other lots were included in the deed. The total consideration was fifty dollars. By mesne conveyances, the title so conveyed by the probate judge became and was vested in John H. Ming, by whom this action was commenced, prior to the initiation thereof. During the pendency of the case the original plaintiff died, and respondent, as executrix of his estate, was duly substituted, and the cause thus proceeded. A plat of the said Helena town site was prepared [208]*208by one A. C. "Wheaton, by order of the probate judge, in 1868, and was accepted and approved January 7, 1869, by the board of commissioners of the county, and duly filed at the s'anie tiñie in the office of the county clerk and recorder. On the Wheaton plat are designated lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 417, bounded as above described. It does not appear that there were any field notes made or filed with the Wheaton plat. That in pursuance to the act of the legislative assembly of the Territory approved March 1, 1883, entitled “An act relating to the official survey óf the town site of Helena,” a plat and field notes of a survey of such town site were made by one Mclntire; and accepted and approved on September 12, 1885, by the board of county commissioners, and on the same day filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder. That on said plat and in said field notes appear lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 417, bounded on the south by Eighth Avenue, on the north by lot 10 of said block, and on the east by Hoyt Street. On May 10, 1887, the appellant, George B. Foote, entered upon the land in controversy, claiming under a deed from Harry H. Thale and George Orth, and engaged in fencing it; and that before the fence was finished said John H. Ming was upon the premises claiming the same. That since said day said George B. Foote has been, and now is, in possession of the premises. That he at no time prior to May 10, 1887, made any improvements thereon. It does not appear that when Ming and Wells received their deed from Probate Judge Hilger that they were occupants or in actual possession of the lots, or made any proof to the probate judge of thier right to such possession or occupancy of the sanie. To almost all of this evidence objections were made by the appellant, the reasons for which we will review hereinafter in discussing the specifications of error.

In addition to the above facts, appellant offered to prove on the trial, and were precluded therefrom by the ruling of the court, the following facts: That lots 1, 2, and 3, in block 417, ás the same are described in the Wheaton plat, would occupy a different portion of the surface of the earth than lots 1, 2, and 3, block 417, as described in the plat and field notes of the Mclntire survey. Appellant offered in evidence a quit-claim deed from one Anton EmueHter to himself, dated May 9, 1887, [209]*209acknowledged May 11, 1887, and recorded May 12, 1887, in which the ground purporting to be conveyed is described as lots 1, 2, and 3, block 417, of the town site of Helena; also a deed from Probate Judge Clements to Harry H. Thale and George Orth, dated May 10, 1887, recorded May 11, 1887, and a deed from said Thale and Orth to appellant Foote, dated Slay 10, 1887, and recorded May 11, in which deeds the premises purporting to be conveyed are described by lots and block, as above. Appellant then offered to prove by the then probate judge an application to purchase said lots by said Thale and Orth. The above evidence, so proffered by appellant, was heard by the court under objections, but was stricken out, and not considered. It was, however, in evidence that Emueller, mentioned above, had once a sort of transitory floating possession of the premises for placer mining purposes, and with a cabin, but not since the year 1873.

The District Court found the facts as above recited, and upon such findings, and upon the exclusion of appellant’s proposed testimony, reached the following conclusions of law:—

1. The answer of the defendant does not allege that the premises claimed by the defendant are located elsewhere than the premises described in the complaint, and the pleadings relate to the same parcels of ground.

2. That the Wheaton plat was, from and after its approval in 1869 until 1885, the official plat of the said town site of Helena, under the laws of the United States and said Territory.

3. That the said Mclutire plat and field notes of survey of said block 417, from and after the twelfth day of September, 1885, became and are the official survey of said block No. 417, and confirmed all the rights and interests of plaintiff therein, as shown by the conveyances of title to the plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest from the said probate judge of said county, and cured the alleged incompleteness and inaccuracy of the said Wheaton plat.

4. That the issuance of said deed by said Hilger, as the probate judge of said county, conveyed to said Ming and Wells the legal title to said lots 1, 2, and 3, in said block 417, and that the said J. M. Clements, the probate judge of said county, had no authority, as the said trustee of the said [210]*210town site of Helena, to issue said deed to tlie grantors of the defendant.

5. That the deeds issued to the said defendant by his grantors conveyed no title, right, or interest to the premises in controversy in this action.

6.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mont. 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ming-v-foote-mont-1890.