Welsh v. Cooley

Decision Date01 November 1890
Citation44 Minn. 446,46 N.W. 908
PartiesWELSH v COOLEY, (TWO CASES.)
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

(Syllabus by the Court.)

1. A stipulation defining the issues to be tried, construed.

2. Bausman v. Kelley, 38 Minn. 197,36 N. W. Rep. 333, to the effect that a foreclosure of a mortgage by advertisement, in the name of the mortgagee, he being then dead, is void, followed.

3. Facts held insufficient to estop the mortgagor, in such a case, from asserting his title.

Appeal from district court, Hennepin county; HOOKER, Judge.

E. E. Cooley, for appellant.

J. R. Corrigan, (D. A. Secombe, of counsel,) for respondent.

GILFILLAN, C. J.

In these cases, depending on the same issues and consolidated for trial and judgment in the court below, we do not think that the record presents the principal question argued here, to-wit, was a breach of the covenant of seisin shown? For the stipulation entered into for the purpose of the trial agreeing that the cases shall be tried on “the whole issues as to title, and that the judgment may include the recovery of the consideration paid by the plaintiff and the cancelation of the note and mortgage, or otherwise, as the title may appear,” seems to have been intended to narrow the issues down to that of title, and to make the right of judgment depend on the finding on that issue, without regard to the question of the technical breach of covenant alleged.

The issue of title is free from doubt. Within the decision in Bausman v. Kelley, 38 Minn. 197,36 N. W. Rep. 333, the attempted foreclosure of the mortgage, through which defendant claimed the title she assumed to convey to plaintiff, was void, the person in whose name it was made being dead. The title, therefore, remained in the mortgagor, and defendant passed none by her deed to plaintiff.

There is nothing in the facts found to work an estoppel against that owner asserting his legal title. To work an estoppel, he must have known the facts, or been guilty of negligence in not knowing them, and the persons in whose behalf the doctrine is invoked must have relied on and acted on the faith of what he said or did or omitted. These elements of an estoppel are not found. The rule upon which Bausman v. Kelley was decided was not that of estoppel, but the equitable doctrine of laches under which equitable relief will be denied one who has been guilty of unreasonable and prejudicial delay in seeking it, and he will be left to his legal remedy. There is nothing in the case...

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