Swartz v. Ballou

47 Iowa 188
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 20, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 47 Iowa 188 (Swartz v. Ballou) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swartz v. Ballou, 47 Iowa 188 (iowa 1877).

Opinion

Servers, J.

Previous to June 22, 1865, the plaintiff was the owner of the premises in controversy. On that day he made and executed a conveyance of said premises, containing the usual covenants, which was properly acknowledged and perfected in every respect, except that no grantee was named therein. This instrument, on or about its date, was sent by plaintiff to one J. B. Louther. Both the plaintiff and Louther resided in Pennsylvania, and the premises in controversy are situate in Madison county, in this State. The exact date does not appear, but previous to December 12, 1865, the name of E. ~W. Davis was inserted in said conveyance as grantee, and the same on said day was duly recorded in said Madison county. On November 21, 1867, Davis, for a valuable consideration, sold and conveyed to one Hutchins, who, on December 1-, 1867, for a like consideration, sold and conveyed the same to the defendant. Both of these conveyances were warranty deeds in the usual form and were filed for record in Madison county on the 4th day of December, 1867. The defendant went into possession of said premises soon after his purchase, and during the year 1868 and since 1869 has made ..valuable improvements thereon. He had “'no notice whatever of the plaintiff’s claim of ownership to the premises in question until about the time of the commencement of this action,” which was in May, 1875. Hutchins, at the time he purchased of Davis in 1867, had “no notice of plaintiff’s claim of title or ownership before purchasing the premises.” For several years preceding 1865 the plaintiff paid the taxes, but did not do so for that or any subsequent year. Nor is it shown that Louther paid any of said taxes.

The foregoing are the undisputed facts, and plaintiff testified: “ Wm. Louther, father of J. E. Louther, came to Altoona and wanted the land, and offered me all kinds of oil stock for the land, or had at the time different kinds of stock, for which he was asking different prices; I refused to sell the land or take [190]*190any of his stock at any price ;T was in Newport some time after this; saw W. Louther; also met J. R. Louther at his own house in Newport; he spoke to me about this land, and expressed a wish to have the land; I told him all I wanted was the money, and asked him $3,000 for 400 acres in Iowa; he said he had no money now, but would give me oil stock, and give me my choice; I declined taking any stock, that it was all alike, none of it having any value; he then said I should send him the deeds in blank and try and sell some stock for him, which he thought would be valuable in time; I orally said I would send him the deeds in blank, but declined taking any stock; no exchange made, but Louther said if the stock would be of no value I should not lose anything; that he would make it good; if at any time the stock would be saleable I would send for it; never got the stock, never sold any, and never was saleable. This, Louther, as well as myself, knows very well. I either wrote or told him, can’t say which, that stock was not saleable; he never sent me the stock; the fact is, he was not to send any unless I had an opportunity of making sale, and I made the deed as described, in blank, so as to protect myself, and never did, or intended, making or conveying to him, or any one else, unless I was paid; never gave him any instructions after sending the deeds; never gave J. R. Louther any directions or instructions in relation to the land; I did sign a deed or deeds, as before stated, in blank, no grantee or purchaser named in the deed, and sent the same as stated to J. R. Louther, Newport, at his own request, and in accordance with an oral understanding with said J. R. Louther; he owning a large quantity of western land at the time and wanted this land of mine, agreeing to give me my choice of oil stock, which he said would sell of be valuable; I refused to take any of the stock or to sell the land; he then proposed that I should send him deeds in blank, and try and sell some of his stock, as he had no money now, but if I failed in selling stock I could not lose anything; he would give me 1,500 shares State Capital oil stock, which would make at par $3,000, and if I could not make the money ($3,000) ho would make it good; he was worth then $60,000, and most of it in real estate; I refused to [191]*191take any stock, but agreed to send him the deed or deeds in blank, and that if the stock would ever be worth anything I would try and sell it, or sufficient to pay me the $3,000. The stock never was worth anything, never sold it, never realized anything, and never conveyed or authorized the sale of any land; signed a deed as stated; sent same to J. R. Louther, Newport; deed was not complete, no grantee named; don’t remember if dated or not; no stamp attached; the land was not conveyed to any one.

u Ini. 19. State how long it was from the time you parted with possession of said deeds until you- requested its return to you.

- “ Ans. I do not now remember how long it may have been, but wrote to him several times about deeds but never received any very definite answer. But in a personal interview he stated that he did not remember of making any disposition of deeds, and said that after he failed the whole matter was a kind of a blank, but he did say very positively that he had never sold the land. I did not know what to think, and wrote to Iowa; think this was sometime in 1869 that I first learned that my deeds were recorded in Iowa, and the land sold by E. W. Davis.”

The plaintiff also states that he never sold the land to Louther or authorized him to insert the name of a grantee in the deed. In relation to such authority, Louther testifies: “ Can’t say there was any special authority given me for such purpose; had no general instructions on such matters from plaintiff in' writing or otherwise.”

David Kennedy testifies that he obtained the conveyance made by the plaintiff from Louther, by whom he was authorized to insert the name of a grantee, and that he inserted the name of E. W. Davis as such grantee, to whom he sold the premises. Louther does not contradict this statement. He says, however, that he knew Kennedy from about 1862 to 1865; that he, Louther, did not write the name of E. W. Davis as grantee in said deed, and that he did not deliver such deed to Kemnedy to be delivered to Demis. He also states: “ Don’t know that I ever received any consideration for the real estate. [192]*192No money came'from E. W. Davis or David Kennedy that I know of; don’t know that I ever disposed of the real estate.”

It is not sufficiently shown that Davis had any knowledge that the deed delivered to him by Kennedy was defective in any respect at the time it came into the possession of Kennedy, or at the time it was delivered to him.

The foregoing is a full statement of the material evidence, and therefrom we conclude:

i deed- an-sort líame of" grantee. I. That Louther had at least implied authority to insert the name of a grantee in the conveyance executed by the plffiWiff. • Indeed, it can be well said his authority was exPress case the plaintiff got his pay for the either through the sale of oil stocks or otherwise. The evidence also tends strongly to support a sale to Louther. Unless some one of the foregoing propositions is true, it is difficult to conceive the object and purpose of the parties. The one desired a blank deed sent him, and the other, in accordance with such request, sending a deed full and complete in all its parts, except the name of a grantee.

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

Related

Ball v. Kauffman
83 P.2d 746 (Washington Supreme Court, 1938)
Gilbert v. Plowman
256 N.W. 746 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1934)
Tutt v. Smith
204 N.W. 294 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
Cott v. Jacklin
226 P. 460 (Utah Supreme Court, 1924)
Snyder v. Castle
16 Ohio App. 333 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1922)
Wright v. Heyting
203 P. 935 (Washington Supreme Court, 1922)
Harth v. Pollock
193 P. 202 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1920)
Halliwill v. Weible
64 Colo. 295 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1918)
Richards & Comstock v. Fredrickson
171 Iowa 669 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)
Clemmons v. McGeer
115 P. 1081 (Washington Supreme Court, 1911)
Augustine v. Schmitz
124 N.W. 607 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1910)
Mahoney v. Salsbury
120 N.W. 144 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1909)
Creveling v. Banta
115 N.W. 598 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1908)
Hall v. Kary
110 N.W. 930 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Exchange National Bank v. Fleming
65 P. 213 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1901)
Alexander v. Staley
81 N.W. 803 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1900)
Curtis v. Cutler
76 F. 16 (Eighth Circuit, 1896)
Meservey v. Snell
62 N.W. 767 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1895)
Golden v. Hardesty
61 N.W. 913 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1895)
Cribben v. Deal
27 P. 1046 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1891)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 Iowa 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swartz-v-ballou-iowa-1877.