Schmidt v. Deegan

34 N.W. 83, 69 Wis. 300, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 171
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 N.W. 83 (Schmidt v. Deegan) 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
Schmidt v. Deegan, 34 N.W. 83, 69 Wis. 300, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 171 (Wis. 1887).

Opinion

Cole, C. J.

We fail to see any force in the objection that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue, but that this action should have been brought by the personal representative of the deceased. The plaintiff is a feme sole, has the [303]*303right to sue in her own name where her interest is involved; besides, this is not an action to recover damages for the wrongful killing of her husband. Of course, such an action, under the statute, would have to be brought in the name of the personal representative of the deceased. But this action is to recover the note and mortgage which the defendant executed in settlement of the damages for wrongfully killing plaintiff’s husband. It seems to us there can be no doubt but the plaintiff had authority to settle with the defendant for these damages. She was the beneficiary under the statute, and would be entitled to any damages which the personal representative might have recovered in an action brought for her benefit. We can therefore see no possible objection to sustaining a settlement made by her, and giving her the full fruits of it. If the allegations of the complaint show that the note and mortgage belong to her, why may she not bring a suit to secure possession of them ? It is well settled that a court of equity will direct the delivery of title deeds and other instruments to the party entitled to them. ' 2 Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 703-705, and 906. If the facts stated show that the note and mortgage are improperly withheld from the plaintiff, and that she has an equitable and legal right to them, she should haye a judgment for the specific delivery of them.

Now recurring to the complaint, we find it alleged that the defendant, Deegan, willfully killed the plaintiff’s husband; that a suit was about to be instituted against him to recover damages for causing such death; that Deegan heard of this premeditated suit, and made overtures of settlement with the plaintiff; that thereupon it was agreed by and between Deegan and the authorized agent of the plaintiff that Deegan should make, execute, and deliver, to one Schwin, in trust for the plaintiff, a promissory note in the sum of $1,550, due one year from date, and a mortgage to secure the payment of the same, which the plaintiff agreed to ac[304]*304cept in full satisfaction and settlement of the claim against Deegan for killing her husband. Nothing is alleged tending to discredit the bona fieles and fairness of this settlement; and if the plaintiff had the right to make it,— as we think she had,— there is no reason why it should not be enforced. We have already said that the plaintiff was the real party in interest in the cause of action for the unlawful killing of 'her husband, and that any recovery of damages by the personal representative would have been for her exclusive benefit. She therefore had the right to settle the claim for her injury or pecuniary loss, and it seems needless to observe that, prima facie, the settlement was founded upon an adequate legal consideration. And this brings us to the real difficult question in the case, namely, whether the note and mortgage were delivered so as to give effect to them in law, and vest the plaintiff with the right to their possession.

It is in effect alleged that on the 9th of September, 1886, in Ozaukee county, Deegan made and executed a note and mortgage according to agreement, and at the time and place delivered these securities to his co-defendant, Ages, to deliver the same to the plaintiff, when the plaintiff should execute and deliver to the depositary a good and sufficient release and satisfaction for her claim for damages against Deegan; that the plaintiff was not personally present at the time of the execution of the note and mortgage, and Deegan desired to have the release signed by the plaintiff in person. That thereafter, on the 13th of September, 1886, the plaintiff did make and execute to Deegan a full and complete release and satisfaction, in writing, of her claim against him, and offered the same to Ages, and demanded of him the delivery of the note and mortgage, which Ages refused to deliver, for the reason that he had been instructed by Dee-gan not to deliver them. It is further alleged that the trustee afterwards assigned to the plaintiff all his right and title to the note and mortgage, and that both the trustee [305]*305and plaintiff, jointly and severally, demanded of Agez that he deliver them up, offering at the same time to him the release, but Agez refused to acoept the release, or deliver the note and mortgage, hut retained possession of them.

The question now is: Do these allegations show that the note and mortgage were delivered to Agez as an escrow, he to keep them until the plaintiff should execute and tender to him her release for damages, and then deliver them to her. ¥e think they do. There was a conditional delivery of the securities to Agez>,to be kept by him until the plaintiff executed and tendered her release for damages, when they were to be delivered to her. This is the natural and obvious meaning of the facts stated. The condition having been performed, the plaintiff is entitled to the possession of the note and mortgage. Says Dixon, C. J., in Prutsman v. Baker, 30 Wis. 641: “A conditional delivery is and can only be made by placing the deed in the hands of a third person, to be kept by him until the performance of some-condition or conditions by the grantee, or some one else, or until the happening of some event, when, upon the performance or happening of which, the deed is to be delivered over by the depositary to the grantee.” Again: “ It follows, in case of conditional delivery, or where the instrument has been deposited as the writing or escrow of the grantor, that it does not become the grantor’s deed, and that no estate passes until the event has happened upon which it is to be delivered to the grantee, or until the second delivery or redelivery, as it is sometimes called, by the depositary to the grantee. Whether in such case actual delivery to the grantee is necessary in order to give effect to the instrument as the deed of the grantor, seems not to be very well settled, but the inference would appear to be that it is not. The indication from the authorities quite clearly is that it becomes the grantor’s deed the moment the condition has been performed or the event has happened, upon which the [306]*306grantee is entitled to the possession of it, and that thenceforth the depositary or holder is regarded as the mere agent or trustee for the grantee.”

These remarks of the chief justice are quite applicable to the facts stated in the complaint, and clearly show that the note and mortgage were delivered to Agez as an escrow, he to hold them until the plaintiff had executed her release and tendered it to him, which it appears she has done. She is therefore entitled to the possession of the securities.

. The learned counsel for the defendants insists that the complaint shows that there was no delivery of the note and mortgage by Deegan, because, he says, the latter retained control of them and had the right to recall them while in the hands of Agez, who was simply his agent. We do not think this is a fair construction of the averments of the complaint. Not a fact is stated which justifies the assumption that Agez was the mere agent of Deegan alone, so that the latter had the right to recall the note and mortgage while in his hands.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.W. 83, 69 Wis. 300, 1887 Wisc. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-deegan-wis-1887.