Fortney v. Tope

Decision Date04 April 1933
Docket NumberNo. 62.,62.
Citation247 N.W. 751,262 Mich. 593
PartiesFORTNEY et al. v. TOPE et al.
CourtMichigan Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Circuit Court, Midland County, in Chancery; Ray Hart, Judge.

Suit by Delbert Fortney and others against Robert L. Tope and others, in which defendants filed a cross-bill, and Eunice E. Robinson and others were made parties plaintiff. From the decree entered, defendants appeal.

Affirmed in part, and reversed and rendered in part.

Argued before the Full Bench.

POTTER, J., dissenting.Charles H. Goggin, of Alma, and James E. Ryan, of Mt. Pleasant, for appellants.

A. W. Penny, of Muskegon, for appellees.

SHARPE, Justice.

The bill of complaint in this case was filed to secure the partition of 40 acres of land in the county of Midland under section 14995 et seq., Comp. Laws 1929. Plaintiffs claim that they together own an undivided one-third interest therein, and that the defendants own the other two-thirds. The defendants deny that plaintiffs have any interest therein, and by cross-bill seek to have the conveyances under which plaintiffs claim declared void and removed as a cloud upon their title.

The records in the office of the register of deeds disclose that the title rested in Samuel I. Harrison on March 27, 1902.

Plaintiffs' Record Title.

Deed, Samuel I. Harrison and wife to David E. Harrison, undivided one-half interest, dated March 27, 1902, recorded February 12, 1903.

Assignment of residue of David E. Harrison estate to Regina K. Harrison, his widow, and children, Don E. and Hazel O., recorded November 24, 1928.

Don E. Harrison to E. E. Robinson, quitclaim, dated August 22, 1931, recorded August 25, 1931.

E. E. Robinson to G. M. Porter, quitclaim, dated September 17, 1931, recorded September 26, 1931.

Hazel O. Strong, née Harrison, to G. M. Porter, quitclaim, dated August 22, 1931, recorded September 3, 1931.

G. M. Porter and wife to Delbert Fortney, warranty deed of undivided one-third interest, dated September 17, 1931, recorded September 26, 1931.

Defendants' Record Title.

Samuel I. Harrison and wife to Regina K. Harrison, the wife of his brother David, quitclaim of entire 40, dated July 31, 1905, recorded October 12, 1905.

Regina K. Harrison to P. J. Gruber, warranty deed, dated October 19, 1911, recorded March 18, 1912.

P. J. Gruber and wife to William H. Yats and Millie Yats, his wife, warranty deed, dated January 12, 1915, recorded January 13, 1915.

William H. and Millie Yats to Joseph Grover, warranty deed, dated October 29, 1915, recorded November 11, 1915.

Myra and Marion Grover, as sole heirs at law of Joseph Grover, to Robert L. Tope, defendant, quitclaim, dated August 17, 1931, recorded August 19, 1931.

After submission of the proofs, the trial court found that plaintiffs collectively were the owners of a one-third interest in said land, and that the defendants were the owners of the remaining two-thirds. He further found that partition between the plaintiffs and defendants should be had ‘by metes and bounds'; the plaintiffs' one-third to be set apart ‘in square form.’ The decree entered pursuant to such finding provided: ‘That partition of said premises shall be made in kind by commissioners hereafter appointed by this court pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, said commissioners allotting to said plaintiffs, quality and quantity relatively considered, one-third of said land, said commissioners designating the parcel so allotted to said plaintiffs by permanent monuments pursuant to the statute, and if found equitable and practical, such commissioners shall parcel out such parcel passing to said plaintiffs in square form and make report to this court of their findings and doings in the premises pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided.’

The defendants by cross-bill prayed that Eunice E. Robinson, G. M. Porter, and H. J. Mulder be made parties plaintiff, and that they and the plaintiffs be decreed to be liable to the defendants for their ‘unlawful and fraudulent acts' in hindering and delaying the defendants in the development of their property. An order was entered making these parties plaintiffs, and an answer to the cross-bill was filed by them and the other plaintiffs. In its decree the court dismissed the cross-bill. The defendants have appealed.

By deed from Samuel I. Harrison, his brother David acquired a one-half interest in this land in 1902, and his wife, Regina K., by deed acquired the other one-half interest in 1905, and they were the owners thereof as tenants in common until 1911, when Regina by warranty deed conveyed the entire interest therein to Gruber, although she then owned but a one-half interest.

Defendants' counsel seem to concede that under the record of conveyances the plaintiffs are the owners of an undivided one-third interest in this land. They state the question involved in this respect to be: Were the plaintiffs, ‘or any of them, bona fide purchasers and legal owners of a one-third interest, as tenants in common, in the forty acres in question?’

They rely on the rule of law as stated in 39 Cyc. p. 1687: ‘The essential elements of a ‘bona fide purchase’ of land are: (1) The payment of a valuable consideration; (2) good faith and absence of purpose to take an unfair advantage of third persons; and (3) absence of notice, actual or constructive, of outstanding rights of others.'

And in 20 R. C. L. p. 346: ‘Whatever fairly puts a person on inquiry is sufficient notice, where the means of knowledge are at hand; and if he omits to inquire, he is then chargeable with all the facts which, by a proper inquiry, he might have ascertained. This, in effect, means that notice of facts which would lead an ordinarily prudent man to make an examination which, if made, would disclose the existence of other facts is sufficient notice of such other facts. A person has no right to shut his eyes or his ears to avoid information, and then say that he had no notice; he does wrong not to heed the ‘signs and signals' seen by him. It will not do to remain wilfully ignorant of a thing readily ascertainable.’

It appears that in the spring of 1931 oil was discovered on property about a mile and a half distant from this 40, and there was much activity in securing titles to, or leases of, nearby lands. The plaintiff Fortney and the defendants Tope and Talbot were interested. Fortney was then acting as superintendent for the Columbia Oil & Gas Company. He testified that on September 12, 1931, he met G. M. Porter in the office of the register of deeds in Midland, and had some talk about the one-third interest Porter claimed to have in this 40 acres; that as a result thereof a written agreement was prepared and executed wherein he agreed to pay Porter $1,500 therefor; that Porter agreed ‘to furnish a merchantable abstract certified to date, including tax statements of said premises'; that he at that time gave Porter his check for $100 and $300 in cash; that Porter furnished him an abstract of title to the 40 acres certified to September 16th; that he took it to Carl Holbrook, an attorney at Clare, and on September 21st received a written opinion from him thereon; and that he later got a warranty deed from Porter and paid him the balance due therefor. There was objection to the written opinion of Mr. Holbrook as to the title, but it was received in evidence. He stated therein that Porter and E. E. Robinson each owned an undivided one-sixth interest in the property, and that Tope apparently owned the balance thereof. The deed from Robinson to Porter had not then been recorded.

Defendants rely on the fact that the deeds recorded as shown by the abstract which purported to convey the entire title for so many years ‘should have attracted the attention and aroused the suspicion’ of the purchasers of this undivided interest. Had not the abstract shown that the grantor Samuel I. Harrison, under whose title all parties claim, himself created a divided interest in the land by his conveyance of an undivided half thereof to his brother on March 27, 1902, and thereafter but quitclaimed his interest therein to his brother's wife on July 31, 1905, a different question would be presented. There are, we think, few persons unfamiliar with abstracts of land who are willing to rely on their own judgment as to the sufficiency of a vendor's title thereto. They very properly submit the abstract to an attorney, and, if prudent, do just as Fortney did, require a written opinion thereon. Mr. Holbrook had practiced law at Clare for ten years, during most of which time he had been prosecuting attorney of the county. His integrity is not questioned. He had the abstract in his hands for several days, and testified that in his judgment the report made to Fortney was justified by the entries thereon.

This 40 acres was wild and uncultivated. There was no one living on it. It apparently had little value until land in the vicinity began producing oil. Taxes for the years 1919 to 1924 had become delinquent, and sale had therefor in 1929. It appears that Mr. Tope had secured a conveyance from the purchaser, paying him $1,250 therefor. No reliance is placed upon the effect of this deed. He also paid the heirs of Joseph Grover $100 for their interests in the property. It also appears that he had secured an abstract of title to the land, but it does not appear that he submitted it to an attorney for an opinion thereon. Had he done so, it seems probable that a doubt would have been expressed as to whether the quitclaim from the Grover heirs conveyed the entire interest in the land, as it assumed to do.

Much parol evidence was submitted, but, so far as it bears upon the issue under consideration, it was so contradictory as to have but little weight. In our opinion, the record sustains the finding of the trial court ‘that the plaintiffs were good faith purchasers in the land in question.’

This suit was brought for partition. Section 14996, Comp. Laws 1929, reads, in part,...

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5 cases
  • In re Temple Marital Trust, Docket No. 273911.
    • United States
    • Court of Appeal of Michigan — District of US
    • February 28, 2008
    ...the land made it impossible to divide it into six equal parcels and the land likely had more value sold as a whole); Fortney v. Tope, 262 Mich. 593, 600, 247 N.W. 751 (1933) (recognizing that a "metes and bounds" partition when land contains oil and gas results in a serious loss to a coowne......
  • Wolfe v. Stanford
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • January 19, 1937
    ...137 N.E. 904, and Henderson v. Chesley (Tex. Civ. App.) 273 S.W. 299 (all cited in Coker v. Vierson, supra). See, also, Fortney et al. v. Tope et al. (Mich.) 247 N.W. 751, and Morley v. Smith et al. (W. Va.) 118 S.E. 135. ¶7 Both law and equity should recognize the necessity of the remedy a......
  • Wolfe v. Stanford
    • United States
    • Oklahoma Supreme Court
    • January 19, 1937
    ... ... 346, 137 N.E ... 904, and Henderson v. Chesley (Tex.Civ.App.) 273 ... S.W. 299 (all cited in Coker v. Vierson, supra). See, also, ... Fortney et al. v. Tope et al., 262 Mich. 593, 247 ... N.W. 751, and Morley v. Smith et al., 93 W.Va. 682, ... 118 S.E. 135 ...          Both ... ...
  • Weeks v. Congregation Shaarey Zedek, 35
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • December 3, 1947
    ...absence of unity of ownership in the respective parcels. The case cited in appellant's brief in support of his contention (Fortney v. Tope, 262 Mich. 593, 247 N.W. 751) pertains to lands wherein oil or gas rights were involved; and unlike the instant case, there was unity of title in the li......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

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