Rogan v. Walker

1 Wis. 527
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 1 Wis. 527 (Rogan v. Walker) 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
Rogan v. Walker, 1 Wis. 527 (Wis. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court,

Smith, J.

[The Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Crawford having been concerned in some way as counsel, in some former stage of litigation upon the subject matter of the suit, a stipulation was entered into between the counsel for the respective parties, to have the case heard before Mr. Justice Smith, and hy him decided, which was accordingly done.]

[553]*553I stall first examine this case, in tlie light of the written contracts between the parties, and of the matters established by the bill and answer., without reference tó the proof taken ; and first:

What are the rights of the parties, derived from the bond of Roganto Walter, and Walker’s deed to Rogan ?

It is contended on the part of the complainant, that the deed, on its face, is in its legal effect, a mortgage, and under it the complainant has a right to redeem. But if not, the parol proof submitted by him, shows the original transaction to have been a loan of money, and that the deed and bond were executed in the manner and form they were, to secure the payment of the sum loaned, and interest.

On the contrary, it is insisted by the defendant, Walker, by his counsel, that the deed is not by its terms, its legal effect, or in consequence of any of the facts or circumstances recited therein, in law a mortgage ; that it does not show on its face to have been executed, with the bond recited, to secure the payment of a loan of money and interest, but that it is a deed with a condition precedent; that by its effect no estate passed until the performance of the condition in full; that this condition must be punctually and literally performed by the grantee before any estate could, by its terms, vest; and that parol proof is inadmissible to prove any'facts or circumstances which would vary the terms of legal effect or control the operation of the deed.

That this deed is a strictly technical mortgage, I apprehend no one will contend. It wants many of the essential elements of a mortgage. Who is the mortgager ? Not Rogan, for he makes no deed, passing an estate to Walker. Not Walker, for he is placed by [554]*554the bill in the character of mortgagee, and it is against him as a mortgagee, 'wrongfully denying the equitable rights of the mortgagor to redeem, that the bill addresses itself to the consideration of the court. Nor does it present itself like those cases in. which the owner of an estate, to secure a loan of money, makes to the loanor an absolute conveyance of his estate, to secure the payment of the loan ; for by the terms of the deed and bond recited, no estate is shown to have passed from Hogan to Walker. Walker is not strictly a mortgagee, for no estate lias passed to him from Kogan. Kogan is not a mortgagor, for he has parted with no estate upon condition, which he has evidenced by deed.

It is not, however, indispensable to apply an approved technical term to an instrument or transaction, in order to perceive and administer the equities which, it may disclose. Nor should it be demanded, that all the various transactions and forms of agreement, to which modern improvement and advanced civilization and progress have given rise, should be reduced within the scope of nomenclature, adopted in the early stages of legal science. Nor is it wonderful that in the pursuit of substance, names have been left in the rear. It is sufficient that the established principles of equitable jurisprudence are found competent to the substantial and equal administration of justice. According to such principles, we shall preceed to examine the deed in question, and to give to it its proper construction and legal effect.

“ An estate upon conditionH' says Black-stone, 2 Com. 153 ; “is one whose existence depends upon the happening of some uncertain event, whereby the estate [555]*555may "be either originally created or enlarged, or finally defeated

Again, page 154 : “An estate on condition expressed in the grant itself, is where an estate is granted, either in fee simple or otherwise, with an express qualification annexed, whereby the estate granted shall either commence, be enlarged, or be defeated, npon performance or breach of such qualification or condition. These conditions are there!ore either precedent or subsequent. Precedent, are such as must happen or be performed before the estate can vest or be enlarged ; subsequent are such, by the failure or non-performance of which an estate already vested may be defeated. Thus, if an estate for life be limited to A. upon his marriage with B., the marriage is a precedent condition, and until that happens, no estate is vested in A. Or, if a man grant to his lessee for years, that upon the payment of a hundred marks within the term he shall have the fee, this also is a condition precedent, and the fee simple passeth not till the hundred marks be paid. But, if a man grant an estate in fee simple, reserving to himself and his heirs a certain rent; and that if such rent be not paid at the times limited, it shall be lawful for him and his heirs to re-enter and avoid the estate ; in this case, the grantee and his heirs have an estate upon condition subsequent, which is defeasible if the condition be not strictly performed.”

Kent, in his Commentaries, vol. 4, page 125, says : “ These conditions are also either precedent or subsequent, and, as there are no technical words to distinguish them, it follows, that whether they be the one or the other, is matter of construction, and depends upon the intention of the party creating the estate. [556]*556A precedent condition is one which, must take place "before the estate can vest, or he enlarged; as, if a lease he made to B. for a year, to commence from the first day of May thereafter, upon condition that B. paid a certain sum of money within the time ; br, if an estate for life he limited to A. upon his marriage with B.: here, the payment of the money in the one case, and the marriage in the other, are precedent conditions, and until the condition he performed, the estate cannot he claimed or vest. Precedent conditions must he literally performed ; and even a court of chancery will never vest an estate, when, hy reason of a condition precedent, it will not vest in law.”

Again, page 125, the same author says: “Subsequent conditions are those which operate upon estates already vested, and render them liable to he defeated. Of this kind are most of the estates upon condition in law, and which are liable to he defeated on breach of the condition,'or on failure of payment of the rent, or performance of other services annexed to the estate. So long as these estates upon subsequent condition continue unbroken, they remain in the same situation as if no qualification had been annexed.” See also Wood's Inst. 142.

“ Conditions in deed may he subdivided into conditions precedent, which must he performed before the estate can take effect, and conditions subsequent to the estate, or to he executed after it.” Wood's Iust. 235.

“ Conditions precedent are such as must he punctually performed before the estate can vest; hut on a condition , subsequent, the estate is immediately executed ; yet the continuance of such estate dependeth on the breach or performance of the condition.” 1 Bacon's Abr. 640.

[557]*557With these lights before us, we are prepared to enter upon the examination of the deed of Walter to x James Rogan.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Wis. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogan-v-walker-wis-1853.