Stevens v. Hatch

6 Minn. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 Minn. 64 (Stevens v. Hatch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Hatch, 6 Minn. 64 (Mich. 1861).

Opinion

By the Cov/rt

Atwater, J.

— This was an action brought by the Appellant, Stevens, to foreclose a mortgage made and executed by Newton, one of the Defendants, May 9th, 1857. Judgment was taken by default, against all the Defendants except Hatch and wife, who answered, alleging that C. C. B. Hatch was seized in fee simple, and in possession of twenty acres of the premises mortgaged, and that she acquired title thereto through a deed of conveyance' made by Defendant Newton to said C. C.-B. Hatch, made and delivered March 1, 1858, recorded May 10, 1858, in Ramsey County, and that at the time of the execution of the mortgage set forth in the complaint, the said Newton had not any title to the premises claimed by Defendants, and that the title of Newton was acquired subsequent to the execution of the mortgage to the Plaintiff.

These allegations were denied by the reply.

A jury trial was waived and the cause was tried by the Court. The whole evidence submitted in connection with the pleadings, was the deposition of Geo. L. Becker, Esq., on the part of the Defendants, which was read without objection and by consent. The facts may be stated as briefly as in any other manner, by quoting the material parts of this deposition, which are as follows :

On the 23d of July, 1856, Newton wrote to me that a deed I had made to him the October previous, contained an erroneous description of the land intended to be conveyed. I had sold him a strip of land 160 rods by 20 rods, off the north side of the north half of the southeast quarter of Section 10, T. 28, R. 23. In the deed, which was dated Octoher 28, 1855,1-had described the land as a part of the [72]*72S. W. quarter of said section 10, and on July 23, 1856, be wrote to me calling my attention to the description, and asking me to correct it. I replied to him under date of July 31, 1856, by stating that I had made out a deed for a strip of land from north side of north half of southeast quarter, &c., a copy of which letter is hereto annexed as Exhibit A, and received as original. Under date of August 29, 1856, Mr. Newton replied, that it was all right as I wished to do; The reply is Exhibit B, received by consent as the original. The deed lay in the safe of Hollinshead & Becker until I saw Mr. Newton in the spring following. He informed me then that he had made a loan on the property to Mr. John Gr. Stevens, and desired me to make to Mr. Stevens a statement of the condition of the property, which I did, under date of May 12, 1857, hereto annexed, marked as Exhibit C. I do not know whether I delivered the deed to Newton for record, or recorded it myself. I think the letter to Stevens was written the 12th, as dated, and retained until after the mortgage was recorded.”

The material portions of Exhibits A and B above referred to are as follows, the first being the letter of Mr. Becker to Mr. Newton of July 31, 1856 :

«* * * j have made out a deed to you rectifying the mistake in my former one, for land on the reserve, as I before wrote you. I need no deed from you. This deed from myself and wife to you, is in our safe to guard against accidents to me, but I would rather not record it until I see you again in St. Paul, and we can both see for ourselves that all is right. However I will do as you desire in the matter.”

The next is the letter of Mr. Newton in reply to the foregoing, dated Superior, August 29, 1856, as follows:

“Tours of July 31st received, in relation to your deed to myself of Reserve lands. It is all right as you wish to do.” (The balance of the letter relating to other matters.)

Then follows a letter from Mr. Becker to the Plaintiff, giving a statement of the title to the mortgaged premises, (including the tract in dispute,) which the writer concludes is satisfactory. This letter is dated May 12, 1857, but retained, as Mr. Becker states in his testimony, until the mortgage was [73]*73recorded. Then follows the deed from Becker aud wife to Newton, dated October 23, 1855, filed for record November 25,1355. Also the deed of Becker and wife dated May 10, 1856, to .Newton, recorded May 13, 1857, at 8 o’clock a. m., and which states that the same was given to correct an error in the deed of October 23d, 1855. The mortgage from Newton to Stevens was recorded May 13th, 1857, at eleven o’clock A. M.

As conclusions of fact, the Court found, “that at the time of the execution and delivery of the said mortgage as aforesaid, the said last named deed from the said Becker and wife to the said Newton, had not been delivered to the said Newton, but had remained, and was in the safe aforesaid, and in the custody and control of the said Becker, that'said deed was first delivered on the 13th day of May,' 1857, when the same was filed for record as aforesaid,,” And as conclusions of law, inter alia, the Court held “that said Newton had no title to the said twenty acres at the time of the execution and delivery of the said mortgage to the Plaintiff ; that the acquisition of the title to said twenty ac’"os after the said mortgage was executed by virtue of the said second deed from the said Becker and wife to said Newton, did not enure to the benefit of the said Plaintiff as against the Defendants Hatch and wife, and that the said mortgage is not a valid and subsisting lien upon the said twenty acres,” &c. And the said twenty acres were adjudged to be the property of Charlotte C. B. Hatch. Erom which judgment the Plaintiff appeals to this Court.

Before passing to an examination of the main question presented by the facts above disclosed, it may ho proper to remark, that the [Respondents have no equities as innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration as against the Appellant. Their deed from Newton was made and delivered March 1, 1858. An examination of the records would, have disclosed the fact, that Newton acquired this property May 10, 1856, as in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, that is presumptively the time of the delivery of the deed. And the same deed disclosed the fact, that he was in equity the owner of the premises, from October 23,1855. The deed [74]*74from Becker to Newton was in fact recorded, before the mortgage from Newton to Stevens. Here were circumstances amply sufficient to put Respondents on inquiry, and if they purchased with full knowledge of all the facts disclosed upon the trial, their claim must be regarded as solely of a legal nature, unsupported by equities.

The important question presented by the case is, whether there was a delivery of the deed from Becker to Newton, of May 10, 1856, before the execution and delivery of the mortgage from Newton to the Plaintiff. Erom a careful ex-ination of the facts proved, and the authorities applicable, I think there was a good delivery of this deed, previous to the execution and delivery of the mortgage. It will be observed that this was not an original sale of the premises, but a com rection of a previous deed. Newton was already the equitable owner of the premises, and the sole object of the deed was to correct an error, and vest the legal title in Newton, to which he was rightfully entitled. This fact is not wholly unimportant, in the circumstances, in determining the intent of the parties as to the disposition of the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Minn. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-hatch-minn-1861.