Young ex rel. Johnson-Bostrom v. Engdahl

119 N.W. 169, 18 N.D. 166, 1908 N.D. LEXIS 113
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 119 N.W. 169 (Young ex rel. Johnson-Bostrom v. Engdahl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young ex rel. Johnson-Bostrom v. Engdahl, 119 N.W. 169, 18 N.D. 166, 1908 N.D. LEXIS 113 (N.D. 1908).

Opinions

Fisk, J.

This is the statutory action to determine adverse claims to real property. Plaintiff had judgment in the court below, and defendant appeals, and asks for a trial de novo of the entire case in this court.

Plaintiff’s alleged title to the real property in controversy is put in issue by the answer, and t'he important question for decision is whether a certain purported quit-claim deed under which plaintiff [167]*167asserts ownership is the genuine deed of one Frank E. Young, who concededly had the fee-simple title thereto. It is, of course, plain that, in order to maintain the action, it is incumbent on plaintiff to prove his title as alleged in the complaint. Conrad v. Adler, 13 N. D. 199, 100 N. W. 722. Has he done so? A proper answer to this question necessitates a consideration of the testimony.. Plaintiff’s sole proof that he acquired the title from Young consists of Exhibit A, which is a certified transcript of the record in Book 48 of Deeds, at page 566, in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh county. Such record discloses a purported quitclaim deed of the land in controversy from one Frank E. Young to plaintiff, dated September 5, 1904, and acknowledged before one Lillian R. Noll, a notary public in and for Cook county, Ill., on September 8, 1904. The consideration recited is $50. The residence of the grantor is not disclosed, nor is his signature attested by any witness. The notary’s certificate of acknowledgment recites that, “Before me personally appeared Frank E. Young, known to me to be the same person described in, and who executed the within instrument, and acknowledged to me that he executed the same;” but by her testimony it clearly appears that she did not personally know such grantor, and had no recollection of having taken such acknowledgment. She testified, however, that it was her custom not to take acknowledgments unless she personally knew the person whose acknowledgment she took, or he was introduced by a person whom she did know. The original deed was not produced, and it is claimed to have been lost. Plaintiff’s title is clearly dependent upon the genuineness of the purported deed as that of the owner, Frank E. Young. The introduction of Exhibit A serves merely to prove a prima facie case in plaintiff’s favor, resting upon the well-recognized presumptions of law that the deed and certificate of acknowledgment are, what they purport to be, genuine and valid, and that there was no fraud or forgery perpetrated in the transaction. We shall assume for the purposes of this case that, in order to overcome these presumptions, defendant’s proof must be of a clear, satisfactory, and convincing character.

Tested by such rule, is the plaintiff’s prima facie case overthrown when the entire evidence is considered in the light of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction as shown by the record ? The uncontradicted evidence is that at and for many years prior to the commencement of the action defendant was, with [168]*168plaintiff’s knowledge, in the exclusive possession of the premises as lessee of the owner, Young, or by virtue of an alleged tax title, cultivating and improving t'he same; that he was personally acquainted with Young, and had carried on a correspondence .by mail with him up to January 23, 1899, at which date he wrote and mailed his last letter to him, receiving no reply thereto; that since said date defendant made many efforts both by letters and by employing the assistance of other persons whom he had reason to suppose might furnish infonnation as to Young’s-whereabouts, but all such efforts were without avail. On the other hand, the undisputed evidence discloses that neither the plaintiff nor any of the persons, Hedrix, Knauss, or Bull, who were instrumental in procuring the purported deed in question, had any personal acquaintance with Young, or had ever known or met him. It is a significant fact that the original deed is claimed to have been lost, and could not be produced for inspection at the trial, as well as certain letters claimed to have been received by Hedrix from-Young; he claiming that such -correspondence had been destroyed. This witness knew that litigation must follow the purchase of this property by plaintiff, and he claims to have had a contract with plaintiff to institute such litigation against the defendant for his services, in which litigation he was to -receive the sum of $-100, yet he was so careless as to permit the original deed to become lost and the letters claimed to have been received from Young relating to the transaction to be destroyed. Hedrix knew, or had reason to suspect, that defendant was in possession of letters and signatures of Young, which is an important fact to weigh in connection with the pretended loss of the original deed as well as the destruction of the correspondence relative thereto. T-he uncontradicted testimony is to the effect that in 1892 Young held the property at $500, and wa-s willing to take $1 per acre rental. In 1890 and in 1895 he wrote defendant, fixing a price at $5 per acre or $600 for the 120 acres. Hedrix testified that Young wrote him from Idaho, offering to give him a deed for $100, but that he was never able to locate him thereafter, but, according to the testimony of the witnesses Bull and Knauss, they obtained the deed, of which Exhibit A is a copy, .at Chicago- for the paltry sum of $25, although the -consideration recited in the deed as before stated was $50. The lowest value placed upon the land in 1904 by- the various witnesses' as to its value is $10- per acre, or $1,200. This is a very material fact tending to show the utter improbability [169]*169that Young parted with his title for the insignificant sum testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses. The very unusual, and to our minds suspicious, circumstances surrounding the alleged execution and delivery of the deed by Young, can be best understood by a brief review of the testimony.

Witness Hedrix testified that, some four or five months before the commencement of the action, he was employed by plaintiff Bostrom to procure title to the land, and he called upon the firm of Bull & Knauss, real estate men in Bismarck, to assist him in getting the title, and they used means to locate Young, and finally succeeded in -locating him at -a place in Idaho. When asked why he did not get the deed then, he replied: “When I wrote for the deed, I wanted to see Mr. Bostrom to see whether he would pay for it.” Witness claims to have received a letter from Young sent from Idaho, but says the letter was destroyed, as he did not deem it of any consequence. He testifies that, after receiving Young’s letter, he made out a deed and forwarded it to him, but the same was returned, and he has never been able to locate Young since. The witness admitted that at the time of the trial he was under sentence to the penitentiary for a crime for which he had been convicted, but the nature of the crime is not disclosed.

Plaintiff Bostrom testified that he was acquainted with the rental value of the land in controversy, and in 1905 such rental value was about $500, and in 1904 about $250, and in the years 1896, 1897, 1898, 1899 and 1900 it was about $100; yet he claims to have purchased the land for the sum of $100. He says he read the deed, but cannot say whether, when he first saw it, the grantee’s name therein was blank or not. ,

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Related

Shockman v. Ruthruff
149 N.W. 680 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1914)
Young ex rel. Johnson-Bostrom v. Engdahl
119 N.W. 169 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.W. 169, 18 N.D. 166, 1908 N.D. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-ex-rel-johnson-bostrom-v-engdahl-nd-1908.