The result of the judgments of this court on! the two former appeals is that if the place where the stake stood which is referred to in Goodsell’s deed to the grantors of the defendants as at the northwest corner of Eowell’s lot can be established, that must control in fixing the line between the lots of the respective parties. But if the place where the stake stood cannot be identified, the plat must control. The last trial of the case appears to have been conducted upon a correct understanding of the former judgments, and the struggle on behalf of defendants was to show that the stake referred to in such deed was located at or very near the west end of the fence mentioned in the same deed as “Eowell’s fence.” Succeeding in that, the defendants would have been entitled to judgment. Failing to identify *252the exact place where the stake stood, the plat must control, and the proof is very strong that in such case the plaintiff is entitled to judgment. The defendants’ testimony tends to prove the location of that stake. It was so adjudged on the second appeal on substantially the same testimony, and the point is res adgudieaia in the case, as long as the testimony remains unchanged. As to the proof required to establish .the location of such stake, the circuit judge instructed the jury as follows: “ If you should find from the evidence and all of it, including the parol testimony that has been given by parties who claim to know something about the stake, that there was, at the time the survey and said plat were made, a stake placed by the claimants of the lots now owned by the plaintiff and defendants to fix the northwest corner of the lot now owned by the plaintiff and the southwest corner of the lot now owned by the defendants, or even stuck by the defendants or their grantors to fix the southwest corner of their lot, before claim was made to the Eowell lot, that would be an artificial monument fixing these corners, to which distances marked on the plat on the west line of said quarter-section must yield, and even though one of the said owners may get more land and the other less than is designated on said plat. . . . The plat in evidence is controlling unless you find there was a stake placed there, under the circumstances which I have stated, for the purpose of fixing the corner of the two lots of the plaintiff and the defendants ; if so, that must control.”
It is entirely immaterial who set the stake which the defendants claimed, and the testimony tended to prove, was the one referred to in Goodsell’s deed to the defendants’ grantors. The question is, Was that the stake mentioned in the deed? not, Who set it?' Yet the instruction made it necessary for the jury to find that the stake was set by the grantors of the parties, or at least by the defendants or their grantors, before they could find that it was a controlling *253monument in fixing the boundary between the respective lots of the parties. The testimony as to who set the stake in' question is quite vague and unsatisfactory, and that portion of it which may tend to show that it was placed there by any of the persons specified in the instruction seems to be entirely hearsay. The jury may have found that the stake which formerly stood at or near the west end of the fence was the stake specified in the deed of Goodsell as standing at the northwest corner of Nowell’s lot, but may have failed to find that it was placed there by any of the persons specified in the instruction. In such case the defendants were clearly entitled to a verdict. Yet under the instruction it became the duty of the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, if they were satisfied (as they doubtless were) that the plat gave him the land which he claimed. The instruction is, therefore, erroneous in that particular. The error may have been, probably was, inadvertent, and had the attention of the learned judge been called to it before the jury retired, as was required by the former practice, doubtless he would have corrected it. Whether such conception would or would not have resulted in a different verdict, is not for us to say. It might have so resulted, and that fact demonstrates the materiality of the error.
Another question, which was raised in the argument of this appeal for the first time (so far as we know) in the progress of the cause, requires notice. Goodsell testified that he first deeded what is known as the Nowell lot to Nowell, who subsequently returned it to the witness, and thereupon (presumably at the request of Nowell) he destroyed that deed, and conveyed the same lot to one Barnard. The latter after-wards conveyed the lot to the plaintiff. On this testimony it is now claimed that the legal title to the lot is still in Nowell, and hence that the plaintiff, whatever his equities may be therein, cannot maintain ejectment for it. It is undoubtedly the law that the voluntary cancellation or destruc*254tion of a deed of conveyance of land, by the consent and agreement of the parties thereto, does not operate to revest the legal title in the grantor. Such title will still remain in the grantee. Parker v. Kane, 4 Wis., 1; Wilke v. Wilke, 28 Wis., 296; Hilmert v. Christian, 29 Wis., 104. See, also, Price v. Osborn, 34 Wis., 34, and Bogie v. Bogie, 35 Wis., 659. This rule of law, however, does not necessarily defeat this action. The plaintiff read in evidence a deed of the lot executed by Goodsell (who, it is admitted, is the common source of title) to Barnard, and a conveyance thereof in fee by Barnard to the plaintiff. These proved prima facie that the legal title to the lot is in the plaintiff. The burden was thus cast upon the defendants to disprove his title. It is said in the brief of counsel for plaintiff, and not denied, that both of these deeds were duly recorded. It appears inferentially from Goodsell’s testimony that the deed to Rowell was not recorded. It will be assumed for the purposes of this discussion that the former deeds were, and the latter deed was not, of record.
The onus of breaking down the plaintiff’s legal title, thus jorima fade established, being with the defendants, they did not go far enough to accomplish that purpose. Under the registry laws, if the plaintiff took his conveyance from Barnard, paying a valuable consideration therefor, and without notice that the unrecorded deed to Rowell ever existed, the legal title is in the plaintiff. Under such circumstances the Rowell deed is void as against the plaintiff. R. S., 641, sec. 2241. Hence, in addition to proving the execution of the Rowell deed, the defendant was required to prove either that the plaintiff did not pay a valuable consideration for the lot, or, if he did, that he took his deed with notice of the Rowell deed. In a case (if such a case can arise) where it is necessary for the plaintiff, in the first instance, to show that the deed under which he claims is paramount to a prior unrecorded deed, in order to make good his *255title to land, probably the burden would be upon him to show the facts which render the prior deed void as against him. But here we have no such case. Probably, also, in a contest between two grantees of the same grantor (the last deed being of record and the first unrecorded), the onus would be upon the junior grantee to show that he purchased in good faith and for a valuable consideration. But in a contest like this, between the junior grantee and one who does not claim under the first grantee, and where the junior grantee can make a prima facie title without recourse to the first deed, we think, as already stated, that the onus is upon him who seeks to destroy such title.
These observations are made on the hypothesis that there is proper evidence in the case to show the existence of the deed to Rowell. But such is not the fact. Regularly, after proving the destruction of the instrument, its contents should be proved by the best evidence attainable. Here we have proof that Goodsell made a deed of the lot to Rowell. Instead of giving the contents of the instrument, the witness merely states his conclusion of law that it was a deed, and says nothing of the manner of its execution. This is clearly insufficient. ¥e regret that this protracted litigation cannot be terminated now and here. But no alternative is left us. The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
By the Court.— It is so ordered.