Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1924

Awe v. Domer

Awe v. Domer
Wisconsin Supreme Court · Decided March 11, 1924 · Crownhart
183 Wis. 268; 197 N.W. 718; 1924 Wisc. LEXIS 149

Awe v. Domer

Opinion of the Court

Crownhart, J.

This action was based on fraud of the appellant in securing title to 120 acres of land, whereas the respondent claims he should have had title to only eighty acres of land and the respondent should have had title to forty acres. The facts as found by the court, and which are fully supported by the evidence, are substantially as follows: On the 1st day of September, 1917, one Max Loeb was the owner of the south half of the southeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 30, township 28 north, of range 1 west, Clark county, Wisconsin. On that day Loeb entered into a contract in writing with one Albert Hotler, who agreed to purchase the land for $5,000 — $200 cash, $600 on or before January 1, 1918, and $4,200 on or before five years after date, interest on payments at six per. cent., payable annually. Hotler paid the $200 cash and the $600 due January 1st. In 1919 Hot-ler assigned his land contract to the respondent, Herman Awe. Shortly after 'Awe had secured this assignment, the • appellant, Domer, having knowledge of the fact, negotiated with Awe to secure his interest in the south half of the southeast quarter, with the result that Awe, Domer, and an agent of Loeb met in Medford, where it was mutually agreed between them that Awe, in consideration of his payment to Hotler and obligations assumed to 'the extent of $800, should have a deed to the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter, and that Domer, in consideration of the payments to. be made to Loeb and the mortgage on the premises of $2,000, which had been assumed by Hotler, should have the title to the eighty acres aforesaid.

The contract from Loeb to Hotler and the assignment from Hotler to Awe were not recorded. After the agreement between Domer, Awe, and the agent of Loeb, Loeb sent a deed in blank to the Colby State Bank of the 120 acres. Azue left his contract with Loeb’s agent to be surrendered to Loeb upon delivery of the deeds to Awe and Domer. Domer went to the bank, examined abstracts of the property, and found that the. contract between Hotler *270and Loeb and the assignment from Hotler to Awe had not been recorded. Pie thereupon requested that his name be filled in as the vendee in the deed, which was done, and he took title to the 120 acres. Before this was done, Andrews, the cashier of the bank, acting as the agent of Loeb, told Domer that Awe had been to the bank and advised Andrews that he had the contract between Loeb and Hotler assigned to him, and that in his agreement with Domer, Domer was to have eighty acres, and he, Awe, was to have forty acres. Domer testified that he was surprised to find the 120 acres in the deed, but nevertheless, with intent to defraud the respondent Awe, he took title to the whole 120 acres and thereafter refused to convey the forty acres to AzSe. Domer went into possession of the whole 120 acres and took valuable timber from the forty acres, to which Awe was entitled.

The mortgage on the place was in process of foreclosure at the time the judgment in this case was entered in the circuit court.

It is plain from the evidence in this action that Domer secured a conveyance to him of the 120 acres' for the purpose of defrauding Awe out of forty acres, to which Awe was entitled under his contract with Domer; in fact it may be said that Dorher confesses to his fraud. Domer testified: ■

“I borrowed the money at the Colby State Bank and paid up Loeb & Hammel the balance that was due. The first time I went up to see Mr. Andrews [cashier of the bank] there was no abstract there. I didn’t pay up that day or get a deed. I came up about ten days afterwards and there was an abstract. The abstract didn’t show the contract. When the abstract was there Mr. Andrews told me Mr. Awe had been in the Colby Bank and told him he was to get title to that forty, and if I took title to all of it I might have trouble about'it. It was my intention until the deed was given to me that Awe should have the forty. At the time when I got the deed for the whole 120 acres it was still my intention and purpose to give him the forty acres. But when I finally got the deed to the 120 acres of land, the eighty which belonged *271to me and the forty to Awe, I thought I would keep the 120 acres because Hotler’s contract was not on record. I was surprised that they should deed it all to me. I did not know that the whole 120 acres was to be deeded tó me, I did not expect it all; they must have looked to me for the whole of it. I do not know and. cannot think of any reason why it' was all deeded to me. I paid $4,800 for the eighty and paid nothing for the forty. Awe was to get the forty next to me. I cut the timber off that land since this lawsuit was started two years ago.”

So it appears without substantial dispute that this appeal is without merit on the facts. The only question that is worthy of consideration here is whether or not the contract between Awe and Domer was void under the statutes of the state. A bare statement of the facts is sufficient to show that the respondent’s claim is not barred by either sec. 2302, Stats., reading as follows: .

"No estate or interest in'lands, other than leases for a term not exceeding one year, nor any trust or power over or concerning lands of in any manner relating thereto shall be created, granted, assigned, surrendered or declared unless by act or operation of law or by deed or conveyance in writing, subscribed by the party creating, granting, assigning, surrendering or declaring the same or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized by writing,”—

or by sec. 2077, which is as follows:

“When a grant for a valuable consideration shall be made to one person and the consideration' therefor shall be paid by another, no use or trust shall result in favor of .the pern-son by whom such payment is made; but the title shall vest in the person named as the alienee in such conveyance, subject only to the provisions of the next section.”

Sec. 2077 is followed by sec. 2079, to wit:

“Sec. 2077 shall not extend to cases where the alienee named in the conveyance shall have taken the same as an absolute conveyance in his own name, without the knowledge or consent of the person paying the consideration, or when such alienee, in violation of some trust, shall have purchased *272the lands so conveyed with moneys belonging to another person.”

The agreement between Awe and Domer did not contemplate that Awe was to convey the land to Domer, or that Domer was to secure title to the land and convey forty acres to Awe. It was simply to the effect that, under Awe’s assignment of the Hotler contract, Awe was to procure from Loeb a deed of the forty and Domer was to receive from Loeb a deed of the eighty, but Domer, in fraud of Awe, secured the deed from Loeb to the whole 120 acres. It thereby appears that a trust resulted in law, whereby Domer held the bare legal title to the forty acres in trust for. Awe, and the trial court correctly adjudged that he should make conveyance of the forty acres to Awe and save Awe harmless on account of the mortgage existing against the premises. The judgment should be affirmed.

By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.