Patterson v. DeLong

11 Colo. App. 103
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
DocketNo. 1270
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Colo. App. 103 (Patterson v. DeLong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. DeLong, 11 Colo. App. 103 (Colo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Bissell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Departing somewhat from the usual custom in formulating this opinion, I shall first outline the general features of the controversy, and reserve the statement of many of the material facts to the discussion of the propositions on which our conclusions are based.

The case naturally proceeds along certain lines, and its chronological narration is the simplest plan for its decision. The origin of the title so far as respects these litigants is the first stage in its history. The state owned a large quantity of land in the San Luis Yalley, county of Costilla. Much of the land was in the market and offered for sale by the government. The eleven quarter sections involved formed a part of a very large body of some nearly 6,000 acres which were sold originally to the San Luis Yalley Canal Company. In deraigning the title through, under, and by which the defendants in error, DeLong and Brower, claim, it will be stated substantially as it appears from the complaint, because in these particulars its allegations stand admitted by the securities company’s answer. The San Luis corporation will hereafter be called the canal company, as contradistinguished from its successor in interest. The canal company purchased on the 18th of February, 1884, at which date the state board of land commissioners, having authority and power to sell, contracted [105]*105with it with reference to this large tract of land. The contract not only provided for the sale and transfer of title at a price named, bnt obligated the canal company as a part of the consideration to construct a large canal and some laterals which would supply water to irrigate the quarter sections which were contracted to be sold, and the alternate sections to which the state reserved title. In the following May, the canal company gave a deed of trust on the land in dispute with other to John R. Hanna to secure 150 bonds of $500 each. The deed was recorded, and by its terms provided that in default of payment of the principal or interest on demand of the legal holder, the premises should be sold. In the following October, the company defaulted in payment, and the trustee Hanna sold the lands to one Cyrus Strong, and executed a trustee’s deed for all the property, which was recorded on the 28th of October, 1886, in the proper records of Costilla county. In March, 1888, Strong sold these lands to Hanna and Dunbar, transferring title by warranty deed. Shortly afterwards, and in the same month, Hanna and Dunbar deeded to the San Luis Canal & Improvement Company, which held title until the events which will be subsequently narrated. This deed was recorded on the 27th day of April, 1888, in the proper records of the county. Being thus the owner, the improvement company, on the 22d day of March, executed a trust deed to Samuel N. Wood, as trustee, conveying the lands to secure four promissory notes which had theretofore been given by it to Cyrus Strong, the first three for $10,000 each, and the fourth for $13,000, payable in one, two, three and four years after date, with seven per cent interest. The deed was in the usual form, and authorized the trustee under certain conditions to sell. Wood afterwards resigned, and on the 21st of February, 1893, a default having been made in the payment of the notes and the interest, the premises were sold by the successor in trust designated in the deed, with full observance of the conditions specified in the instrument, and DeLong and Brower became the purchasers of the property for a valuable consideration, to wit: about $27,000. [106]*106Up to this time no reference whatever has been made to the evidence of title from the state held by the colorations or the individuals by whom it had been holden, and through whom it passed. The first written evidence of title exhibited by the record is the certificate of purchase given by the state and bearing date January 16, 1890, which recited the purchase by the San Luis Canal & Improvement Company on the 18th of February, 1884. According to the averments of the bill, the admissions of the answer, and the concessions of counsel, it is very evident that the recital of the purchase on the 18th of February, 1884, by the improvement company is a clerical error, and it should have been recited as purchased on that date by the canal company. This is wholly unimportant because the state manifestly sold to the canal company, it transferred to the trustees, who afterwards sold, and the certificate was issued to evidence the contract entered into between the canal company and the state, of which the improvement company became the subsequent holder by transfers of title which are unquestioned, and which on their face are sufficient to vest in the improvement company whatever rights were acquired under it, and the certificate was properly issued to this corporation. Neither this certificate nor any other was recorded prior to the time that the title of the parties who now claim an interest in the premises was put on record. We regard this as wholly unimportant since the certificate itself was in point of fact issued before third persons acquired any rights or interests whatever in the premises, and prior to the time of the foreclosure of the trust deed which had been executed by the last holders of the equitable title. We should have had considerable difficulty to resolve the questions presented by this and the subsequent occurrences, but for a decision of the supreme court, which, to our mind, has completely determined the matters which would have been otherwise debatable.

Stewart v. McLaughlin, 11 Colo. 458, fully settles the main propositions presented by the facts contained in this record. In the phraseology of that decision the title of the canal [107]*107company was an imperfect or an inchoate title, which could neither become perfect nor complete until the contract of purchase should be- entirely completed, the consideration money paid, and the fee pass out of the state by grant to the grantee named in the contract. Nevertheless, this imperfect or inchoate title was subject to incumbrance and transfer as fully and as freely as an absolute title, and was subject to any limitations which might arise from the dealings of the parties. We then have at the date of the certificate, as well as at the date of the antecedent agreements and transfers, a title in the canal company and its transferees, on which the transfers might be operative, whereby, and through which, unless affected by the subsequent transactions, DeLong and Brower got a good title to the property coupled with the right to complete the purchase on the payment of the unpaid part of the consideration, and thus unite in themselves by means of the grant the inchoate and the perfect title, which would vest in them the fee. This right still exists, and the bill can be maintained on the proofs unless the evidence establishes in Barth or in the securities company an equity superior in right, if not prior in time, to that held by DeLong and Brower. The significance of Barth’s connection with the title, and its relation to that of the securities company, will clearly appear from the subsequent discussion. These two parties are so intimately connected, and the infirmities of the one are so nearly and exactly the infirmities of the other, that the history of both are essential to the deduction and establishment of the character of the claim asserted by the securities company.

First in point of time and importance is Barth’s title. We must ascertain what he got, where he got it, and the conditions under which he toot title, and the notice with which he was charged because of these circumstances and conditions.

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

Related

Stewart v. McLaughlin
11 Colo. 458 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Colo. App. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-delong-coloctapp-1898.