Murphy v. Hall

31 N.W. 754, 68 Wis. 202, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 75
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 754 (Murphy v. Hall) 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
Murphy v. Hall, 31 N.W. 754, 68 Wis. 202, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 75 (Wis. 1887).

Opinion

Cassoday, J.

It is urged that the description of the land in each certificate is so indefinite and uncertain as to be fatally defective. This is virtually conceded to be true, unless the description is aided by the “ Act to regulate the description of real estate for the purposes of assessment and taxation in the city of Oconto.” Oh. 105, Laws of 1881. By that act all the real estate in the city subject to taxation was required to be correctly and fully described, in numerical order, in a book to be kept for that purpose in the office of the register of deeds, to be known and designated as the “ Assessor’s Book of the City of Oconto ” (sec. 1); and to “ be a part of the public records of Oconto county and city, of the same legal force with other public records of real estate, to effect the purposes of this act ” (sec. 2). The city council was required by the act to cause_such book to be written up annually by adding thereto or changing all descriptions of lots or parcels of real estate which should, by subdivision or otherwise, become liable • to taxation subsequently to the times, respectively, when such book should be last so written up. Sec. 3. Each and every parcel of real estate in the city liable to taxation, and which had been conveyed by metes and bounds prior to the time when such book should be so written up, was thereby required to be described therein, as nearly as might be, in the words of the deed by which it had been conveyed of record; and any lot which had not been so conveyed by deed when such book should be so written up, or which was not then numbered upon a recorded plat, was thereby required to be described in such book by a correct and pertinent description, to be obtained if necessary by the employment of a competent surveyor; and no description was to be deemed insufficient by reason of the use of abbreviations or figures or signs commonly used in describing land. Sec. 4. Each and every lot and parcel of land described in such book, as provided in section 4 of the act, was also required to be known and designated [206]*206in said book numbers, thus: “ Part [1 or other number], of lot-[or other government subdivision], of section -, township -, range -or “part [number], of lot-, block-, in-’s addition to the city [or village] of Oconto.” Sec. 5. In all the assessment and -tax rolls, and in all advertisements, certificates, papers, conveyances, or proceedings for the assessment and collection of taxes, and proceedings founded thereon, any such “ description by number” was thereby declared to “be sufficient,” and to “ be held to include and be a part of the description of the same lot or parcel of land written at length upon ” such book. Sec. 6. A map of the city of Oconto was thereby required to be kept in the office of the city clerk, and a duplicate thereof in the office of the register of deeds, upon which every lot or parcel of land in said city was thereby required to “ be correctly drawn and designated,” and which duplicate maps were thereby required to “ be written up and corrected ammally, so as to correspond with ” such newly written up and corrected book; and the same were thereby declared to “ be a public record, in connection with, and as a part of, the records of assessment and taxation in said city.” Sec. 7. Any conveyance or instrument in writing, by which any estate or interest in real estate in the city of Oconto is created, aliened, mortgaged, or assigned, or by which the title to any real estate in said city may be affected, in law or equity, describing such real estate or interest therein by numbers as therein provided, is thereby declared to “ be legal and binding in all respects as if described by metes and bounds.” Sec. 8.

In discussing the question of an alleged indefinite and uncertain description of land in a tax deed, it was said in Meade v. Gilfoyle, 64 Wis. 18, that “ the ambiguity in the description here consists in reference to records, documents, and descriptions outside the deeds, and which were necessarily to be regarded as a part of the description. This was [207]*207a latent ambiguity.” And then, in view of the statute declaring that “in. all advertisements, certificates, papers, or proceedings relating to . . . the assessment and collection of taxes and proceedings founded thereon, . , . any description of lands which shall indicate the land intended with ordinary and reasonable certainty, and which would be sufficient between grantor and grantee in an ordinary conveyance, shall be sufficient ” (R. S. sec. 1047; Laws of 1881, ch. 268), it was, in effect, held that extrinsic evidence was “ admissible in the case of such taw deeds, the same as it would be in the case of an ordinary conveyance between grantor and grantee.” That case was there distinguished from those where the lots, blocks, and addition appeared to be perfectly^ described on the face of the tax deed, but the recorded plat revealed the fact that there were no such lots and blocks in the addition named, although there were such lots and blocks in a different addition; and also from that other class, where there was no complete description given in the deed, nor any reference therein to any other record, document, plat, or description capable of being proved by extrinsic evidence, and thus making certain what would otherwise have been uncertain; as in Johnson v. Ashland Lumber Co. 52 Wis. 458; Campbell v. Packard, 61 Wis. 88.

.Here neither of the certificates contain any complete description of any land, nor is there any reference in either of them to ch. 105, Laws of 1881, or any assessor’s book or map made in pursuance thereof, or any other record, document, plat, map, or description whatever. The contention of the learned counsel for the plaintiff is to the effect that, as the assessor’s book is required by the act to have a complete description of each and every parcel or lot of land (sec. 4), and that each and every lot or parcel of land so described should “also be known and designated in said book by numbers ” (sec. 5), as indicated, and then that “ any description by number” as aforesaid should “be sufficient” [208]*208and' “ held to include and be a part of the description of the same lot or parcel of land written at length upon the assessor’s booh ” (sec. 6), such book and its corresponding map must be regarded as a part of each certificate, and that, so regarded, the description in each would be complete, definite, and certain.

It was not held in Delorme v. Ferk, 24 Wis. 201, nor Meade v. Gilfoyle, supra, that a statute might supply an entire want of description; but merely that any description in a tax deed which indicated the land intended with ordinary and reasonable certainty, and which would be sufficient between grantor and grantee in an ordinary conveyance, would be sufficient. This is on the theory that the law will not declare a description void for uncertainty when the light which contemporaneous facts and circumstances furnish renders it definite and certain. Docter v. Hellberg, 65 Wis. 421. “ It is undoubtedly essential to the validity of a grant,” said Mabshall, O. J., “that there should be a thing granted, which must be so described as to be capable of being distinguished from other things of the same kind. But it is not necessary that the grant itself should contain such a description as, without the aid of extrinsic testimony, to ascertain precisely what is conveyed. Almost all grants of land call for natural objects, which must be proved bj^ testimony consistent with the grant, but not found in it.” Blake v. Doherty, 5 Wheat. 362.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 754, 68 Wis. 202, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-hall-wis-1887.