Oliver v. Sanborn

27 N.W. 527, 60 Mich. 346, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 588
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 N.W. 527 (Oliver v. Sanborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Sanborn, 27 N.W. 527, 60 Mich. 346, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 588 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Champlin, J.

This is an action of replevin for lumber manufactured from logs cut from section 15 in township 29 N., range 8 E., being in the township of Ossineke, in the county of Alpena, Michigan.

The plaintiff’s claim to the lumber is based upon his ownership in fee of the land from which the logs out of which it was manufactured were cut. His proof was a patent from the State of Michigan to Oliver Goldsmith; the’ record of a deed from Goldsmith to Lorenzo M. Mason ; the record of a warranty deed from Mason to William Oakes; the record of a warranty deed from Oakes to John Johnston; and a quitclaim deed from Johnston to the plaintiff, dated December 10, 1881, and recorded August 2, 1882.

The defendants also claim title to the logs, and introduced [350]*350in evidence a warranty deed from John Johnston to Isaac L. Lyon, of the city of Detroit, Michigan, dated June 1, 1871, but not recorded until November 5, 1882; and also introduced evidence tending to prove that Lyon sold all the timber on section 15 to the firm of L. K.. Sanborn & Sons, in the fall of 1878, and the defendants claimed title through this purchase.

The controversy is embraced in very narrow limits. It is between a subsequent purchaser from a common grantor, who has placed his deed upon record, and a person claiming under a prior unrecorded deed. Plaintiff must therefore prevail, unless the defendants have shown that plaintiff either had knowledge or actual notice of the prior unrecorded deed, which is equivalent to, and takes the place of, notice by registration.

The counsel for the defendants requested the court to instruct the jury as follows :

“ Under all the testimony in this case, plaintiff had sufficient notice of the rights of the defendants to render his quitclaim deed ineffectual and inoperative ”; and, under all the testimony in this ease, your verdict should be for the defendants, and the only question for you to consider is, what was the market value of the lumber taken from defendants, under and by virtue of the plaintiff’s writ of replevin ?”

The first question proper to be considered, therefore, is whether plaintiff had sufficient, notice of defendants’ rights as to deprive him of the protection accorded to a subsequent purchaser who is ignorant of a prior unregistered deed.

The bill of exceptions states that it contains, in substance, all of the testimony given on the trial of the cause. Hence, the question is fairly raised upon the record before us, from which it appears that the plaintiff has resided in Alpena county mostly since 1810, and has had experience in looking lands, which was a part of his business, and in buying and selling lands ; that he had bought and sold considerable land in the town of Ossineke; that he claimed to hold a tax title on the lands in question, and went and examined the [351]*351records of Alpena eounty to ascertain who owned the original title, and found that the title of record appeared to be in the name of John Johnston; that he immediately commenced efforts to ascertain the whereabouts of Mr. Johnston, and was informed by the postmaster of Port Huron that he resided in Chicago, Illinois; that on February 1, 1881, he wrote a letter to Johnston, and mailed to him directed to Chicago, to which he received no reply, and wrote again November 7, 1881, and received a reply dated November 28, 1881, in which he stated that these lands were not inventoried in his bankruptcy proceedings, and he had no recollection of selling them to any one, and did not know what the value of the lands was, and wished plaintiff to make him an offer; he thought he could sell them.

Plaintiff then got a letter from Johnston in the spring of 1882, and on May 9, 1882, plaintiff telegraphed Johnston, and went to Chicago, and met him at the Douglass House, June 1, 1882; and at this interview Johnston told him that he had got a discharge in bankruptcy, and if there was anything outside that he had not sold it reverted to him, and he rather depended upon the plaintiff for the record. Plaintiff represented to him that he had a tax title on some of the lands, and there was a large amount of taxes, and the timber had been mostly stripped off of them, and that he could pay him about fifty cents an acre. Plaintiff told him that parties had been stripping the lands for a number of years; they had stripped plaintiff’s lands, and had stripped Johnston’s with them; that some of the lands had been burned over, and some was good farming land, and some was nearly worthless. At this time plaintiff knew that parties had been generally cutting on those lands.

At this interview plaintiff agreed for the purchase of the land, but the matter was not closed up by payment of the purchase money and delivery of the deed until August 2, 1882. The purchase embraced, and the deed included, in all, about 920.21 acres, and the whole price paid was $160.11.

It appears from the reeord, and there is no dispute about [352]*352tlie fact, that defendants, under their purchase of the timber from Lyon, growing on this land, cut and took off pine saw-logs in the winter of 1878-79, and again in the winter of 1881-82, when they took off over 100,000 feet. The plaintiff testifies that he never knew before he purchased that defendants had cut and removed pine from these lands, and that he bought the land in good faith, and without any knowledge of the conveyance to Lyon. But we think the facts hereinafter stated, which are undisputed, show conclusively that plaintiff is mistaken upon both of these points.

James L. Sanborn testifies that in the spring of 1882 he had a conversation with the plaintiff about the Lyon timber on section 15, and at that time Oliver claimed to have a tax title, and said nothing about having a deed. In that conversation Oliver asked him from whose lands they were getting this timber off, and he told him from the Lyon lands, and had been bought for L. B. Sanborn & Sons; that these lands were known as the “Lyon landsthat in another conversation with Oliver, which occurred later, Oliver stated that he did not believe that Lyon had ever bought the land ; that he had never recorded the deed ; this was some time during the fore part of the summer of 1882 that Oliver told him there was no record of any title to these lands; that Lyon lives at Detroit, and paid taxes while he was lumbering there.

This testimony of James L. Sanborn is not disputed by plaintiff when afterwards recalled to testify, although he does deny a similar statement testified to by William IT. Sanborn.

If this were all the testimony bearing upon the question of notice of facts sufficient to put the plaintiff upon inquiry, the plaintiff having denied all notice previous to his purchase, we think the case could not properly have been taken from the jury; but it is not all the testimony bearing upon the fact of notice. The plaintiff’s own testimony is as follows, in answer to questions put to him by his attorney :

Q. Now, state exactly what notice you ever had of any deed or conveyance from Mr. Johnston to Mr. Lyon previous to the time of purchasing these lands and paying for them.
[353]*353A. I had nothing,- only just a rumor.
Q. What was the rumor?
A. The conversation with James L. Sanborn was that he had cut some timber on these lands, and I told him I had purchased the lands.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Auditor General
50 N.W.2d 721 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1952)
Smelsey v. Guarantee Finance Corp.
17 N.W.2d 863 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1945)
Andreae v. Wolgin
241 N.W. 876 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1932)
McParland v. Peters
128 N.W. 523 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1910)
Potter v. Martin
81 N.W. 424 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1899)
E. B. Millar & Co. v. Olney
37 N.W. 558 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.W. 527, 60 Mich. 346, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-sanborn-mich-1886.