Finnegan v. Brown
Finnegan v. Brown
Opinion of the Court
This action was brought against several defendants- to determine adverse claims to a quarter section of land in Redwood county. It was alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff was both the owner in fee and in possession. The answer of the only defendant who appeared —A. A. Brown — was (i) a general denial; (2) ownership in fee, as an affirmative defense; and (3) ownership, as a counterclaim. It was also alleged that Brown was and had been for many years in the actual possession of the premises. The court below, trying the case without a jury, made its findings of fact, wherein it found that the plaintiff was the owner in fee and in possession of the west eighty acres, and that whatever right or title'he had to the east eighty acres was acquired by him after the commencement of this action. It found all other allegations of the pleadings false and untrue. Its conclusions of law were that the defendants had no right, title, or estate in or to the west eighty acres, and that plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession thereof, and as to the east eighty acres that the action be dismissed. The appeal is from the judgment entered on these conclusions.
In behalf of the defendant there was then introduced in evidence a certified copy of the record of a power of attorney, executed by Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson, purporting to authorize one S. D. Peterson to sell, assign, and transfer this east eighty acres, describing it according to government survey,
“Which came into our possession by reason of an additional homestead entry granted by act of congress of June 8, 1872, as amended by act of March 3, 1873, °f the congress of the United States, granting additional homesteads to soldiers and sailors.”
. This power of attorney is set out in full in the record, is dated March 18, 1875, and was recorded on May 28 following. Defendant next offered in evidence the record of a warranty deed from Jacobson and his wife, by their attorney in fact, S. D. Peterson, conveying the eighty acres described in the power to Canute A. Brown, of date May 6, 1875, and recorded in the office of the proper register of deeds June 2 of the same year. This was objected to upon the ground that no power or authority had been shown in S. D. Peterson to execute any deed as an attorney in fact for the grantors, John and Caroline Jacobson. It seems that upon the final disposition of the case the court below sustained this objection. Following this, defendant Brown offered and there were received in evidence mesne conveyances through which he claimed and which apparently conveyed to him title to the eighty acres in question.
We now come to a consideration of the west eighty. The technical objection above referred to is not made as to it, for the exhibits are set forth in full. Nor do we find it necessary to determine the question of pleading raised upon the argument, but later we shall have occasion to refer to the pleadings. It appears that the plaintiff intro
“Homestead Cert. No. 2,618. Patent.
“Application 8,264. The United States of America.
“To All Whom These Presents Shall Come, Greeting:
“Whereas, there has been deposited in the General Land Office of the United States a certificate of the Register of the Land Office at New Ulm, Minnesota, whereby it appears that pursuant to the act of congress approved the 20th of May, 1862, to secure homesteads to actual settlers on the public domain and the acts supplemental thereto, tjie claim of Peter Moe has been established and duly consummated in conformity to law for the west half,” etc.,
And conveying title thereto to Moe March 20, 1878. This patent was duly recorded in Redwood county April 24, 1878.
We have italicized a few words in the above excerpt from the patent for the purpose of easy reference, and call particular attention to. the same. The plaintiff also introduced in evidence a quitclaim deed of this tract of land, in which Moe and his wife were named as grantors, and himself as grantee, bearing date November 12, 1895, but not recorded until November 26, 1898, some three years after its execution, and, as we understand it, several months after the commencement of this action. It was through this patent and the quitclaim deed that plaintiff asserted title.
Defendant Brown then introduced in evidence a power of attorney whereby and wherein Moe and his wife made and appointed S. D. Peterson
“Their true and lawful attorney for them and in their name, place and stead do hereby authorize the said S. D. Peterson to take possession of and sell, assign and transfer any and all lands that may come into his possession by reason of an additional homestead entry granted by act of June 8, 1872, as amended by act of March 3rd, 1873, of the congress of the United States granting unto said attorney full power to perform everything whatsoever required and necessary to be done as they might or could do if personally present without revocation.”
“As an additional homestead entry under and by virtue of an act of congress approved June 8, 1872, as said act was amended by an act approved March 3rd, 1873, being an act giving additional homestead to honorably discharged soldiers and sailor's of the late Rebellion.”
He also introduced in evidence mesne conveyances through which Canute A. Brown’s title was conveyed to him.
It will be noticed that in the patent it was stated that the claim of Moe to the eighty acres had been established and duly consummated in conformity with the act of May, 1862, to secure homesteads to actual settlers on the public domain, and the “acts supplemental thereto.” One of the acts supplemental to the original homestead act of May, 1862, was that of June 8, 1872, and another was the amendment of March 3, 1873, both known as “Additional Soldier’s Homestead Acts.” The first of these was entitled an act “to enable honorably discharged soldiers and sailors, their widows, and orphan children, to acquire homesteads on the public lands of the United States,” while the other was entitled an act “to amend an act relating to soldiers’ and sailors’ homesteads.” The statute under which Mr. Moe, as a discharged soldier or sailor, could acquire an additional homestead, was that last referred to — the law of March 3, 1873 — and it was this additional homestead, and no other, that Mr. Peterson was authorized to sell, assign, and transfer. Reference was expressly made to all acts supplemental to the original homestead act in the patent of the United States, and this reference included the amendment of 1873. The patent, which is the highest and best evidence of title to the land therein described, was sufficient to establish the claim, there being no dispute over the fact that the eighty acres in question was entered as an additional homestead, and under the acts referred to in the power of attorney,
Counsel for the plaintiff make the point that the authority contained in the power was to sell, assign, and transfer lands which might come into his possession, etc. Evidently this word “his” was used with reference to Mr. Moe. The intent is obvious, and the power granted was to convey the land which should come into the possession of Moe, not that which,might be possessed by the attorney in fact, Peterson. Holding, as we do, that the legal title was in defendant Brown long before the quitclaim deed upon which plaintiff relies was executed and delivered, we have no occasion to go into the contention of defendants' counsel that plaintiff was not a bona fide purchaser of this land, and that in obtaining the deed from Moe and his wife he was guilty of fraud and deceit. We will say, however, that the testimony was abundant to warrant a finding that Finnegan was not a purchaser in good faith, for two reasons: (1) Fie was sufficiently informed by Moe at and prior to the time he secured the deed that the eighty acres had previously been conveyed by Peterson, as the attorney in fact of himself and his wife, to a third person; that Moe had no claim to it; that it was not his to convey; and (2) at the time of the execution of this deed Mr. Hibbison was in actual possession of the whole one hundred and sixty acres under a contract for the purchase thereof entered into in 1892 between himself and defendant Brown. This possession was ample notice to Finnegan of the rights of the parties to the contract, and, with such notice, he could not be an innocent purchaser.
The judgment must be reversed, but the present findings will not sup
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.