Windom v. Brown

67 N.W. 1028, 65 Minn. 394, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 7, 1896
DocketNos. 9962-(193)
StatusPublished

This text of 67 N.W. 1028 (Windom v. Brown) 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
Windom v. Brown, 67 N.W. 1028, 65 Minn. 394, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 288 (Mich. 1896).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment of the district court of Hennepin county, entered in an action commenced, by one of the plaintiffs as widow and the surviving children of William Windom, deceased, to quiet title to the N. W. 4 of section 3, in. township 118, range 22, in Hennepin county, Minnesota. The action inform is one to determine adverse claims. Almon C. Brown and wife-were made principal defendants, and the other defendants, of whom there are a large number, are either judgment creditors of Brown, or persons who were supposed to hold liens upon the property in question,, or on such interest as Brown had therein, by virtue of mortgages thereon executed by Brown and his wife. The only defendants who answered in the case were S. E. Neiler, to whom a mortgage was given by Brown upon his interest in the land for the benefit of the Union. National Bank, of which Neiler was president, and Otto E. Naegele, who was a judgment creditor of Brown, claiming a lien upon Brown’s undivided interest in the land.

During the pendency of the action, Lewis C. Spooner intervened' therein, and claimed to be the equitable owner of an undivided one-sixth interest in the land; that, before the death of Windom, he made-a contract with Almon C. Brown, but in fact with the firm of Spooner & Brown, composed of Lewis C. Spooner, Almon C. Brown, and one Rhone, which contract provided that whereas certain claims had been' made against said lands by other parties on account of certain tax titles, if said Brown should, in behalf of Windom, institute and prosecute such litigation as might be necessary to remove from said lands, the cloud of said tax titles, he (Brown) should have a conveyance of are undivided one-third interest in and to said lands; and that said con- ' tract, although in the name of Brown, was, in fact, understood by all parties, including Windom, to have been made with the firm of Spooner & Brown.

The trial court found as facts that a contract in writing did exist between Windom and Spooner & Brown, in the name of Brown, as set forth in the intervenor’s complaint in the action; that Spooner &r Brown had in all respects completely performed all the terms of said contract in and so far as they were concerned; that they had become fully entitled to a conveyance of an undivided one-third interest in the land; that such interest had in fact been divided between the members of the firm of Spooner & Brown, and should be divided between [396]*396them so that Spooner and Brown should each have an undivided one-sixth interest therein; and the court ordered that judgment should be entered accordingly in their favor. But, by the same order, the court •directed that judgment be entered establishing the interest and right •of the Union National Bank, and of Otto E. Naegele, and made these ■claims liens upon the undivided one-sixth interest of Brown, but ordering and establishing the judgment held by Naegele as a paramount .and superior lien on Brown’s interest;' the judgment having been entered and docketed prior to the accruing of any other liens. After the entry of the judgment according to the order of the trial court, the plaintiffs took this appeal.

We do not deem it necessary to enter into an analytical discussion ■ <of the evidence upon which' the trial court based its finding of facts as to existence of the contract between Windom and Brown. That there was a contract, either oral or in writing, seems beyond any reasonable controversy; and that it was fully performed on the part of Brown or Brown & Spooner, by their successful litigation in favor of Windom, is quite conclusive; and nowhere does it appear that Win■dom ever actually paid for these legal services performed in his behalf. This fact gives force to the contention of the defendants that the payment for such services was to be made by Windom’s conveying to Brown, or the firm of Brown & Spooner, an undivided one-third interest in the land described in the complaint. That such contract was in writing, as found by the trial court as a fact, seems to be supported by ample evidence, and we decline to disturb such finding. The only legal questions which we need discuss arose at the trial as to the sufficiency of the preliminary proof offered to show the loss of the written contract, and the admission of secondary evidence as to the ■contents of the contract.

The original written contract between Brown and Windom could not be found and produced as evidence on the trial. It appears that this contract was made in the latter part of the year 1885, or early part of the year 1886, and the business to which it related was successfully completed by Brown & Spooner before August 1,1888. Win■dom died about February 1, 1891, and neither the contract nor a copy thereof could be found among his papers. Brown & Spooner were practicing attorneys, with their office located in Minneapolis; but Brown left there about November 1, 1889, and, during the succeeding [397]*397few years, resided at several other different places. He appears to have been a man of a roving disposition, either insolvent or indifferent as to the payment of his debts, and careless in keeping his papers. Soon after leaving Minneapolis, many of his books and papers were shipped to him at Washington, D. 0., where Mrs. Brown, wife of Almon C. Brown, testified that she saw this contract in question in his possession, in 1890, and there heard him read it. Brown’s papers not shipped to him at Washington were turned over to Mr. Cahaley, of Minneapolis. Mrs. Brown also testifies that she saw the contract afterwards, in the hands of Edward A. Sumner, at his residence in New York City, who had it among other papers which he had taken from the hotel at Waterbury, Connecticut, where Brown had left his grip as security for his board bill, as Mr. Sumner had paid the bill, and taken the papers, and held them also for money loaned Brown. Sumner was a practicing lawyer in New York City, and formerly knew Brown in Minneapolis, and befriended Mrs. Brown while she had a sick child and was without funds. He testifies that, to the best of his recollection, he never had the contract in his possession, and he could not tell where it was, and that Mrs. Brown took from the papers in the grip such ones as she wished. Mrs. Brown was unable to find the contract or tell where it was, Cahaley, with whom part of Brown’s papers were left, testified that he had made diligent search for the contract among his papers, and those left with him by Brown, and could not find it. About February 9, 1893, Brown left the city of New York, and went to the city of Duluth, in this state, from which place he wrote his wife, stating that he was going out from under the jurisdiction of the old flag, and very likely would never return again, since which time she has not heard from him, and his whereabouts are unknown to her or parties connected with this action.

It seems to us that the defendants used all diligence and reasonable exertions tp find this contract. The law does not require impossibilities. íhe parties in whose possession it was last seen could not find it. For its loss the defendants were in no way accountable. Brown himself was undoubtedly beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and his whereabouts entirely unknown "to the defendants or to any one else, so far as appears by the evidence. There was no suspicion that it had been purposely destroyed, and its nonproduction was accounted for by reason of the defendants’ inability to find it. The [398]*398.■■search, for it seems to have been made in good faith, and to the extent which the nature of the case admitted.

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Bluebook (online)
67 N.W. 1028, 65 Minn. 394, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windom-v-brown-minn-1896.