Batchelder v. Blake

70 Vt. 197 | Vt. | 1897

Tyler, J.

It appears that H. N. Wright and his wife, Orpha Wright, being well advanced in years and desiring to divide their property between their two children, Mary A. Blake and Catherine Batchelder, on October 8, 1879, executed and delivered to their daughter Catherine a mortgage of their farm in Barton, conditioned for the payment of two promissory notes of that date, of $500 each, signed by H. N. Wright and payable to the said Catherine at the decease of the maker and his wife, with interest after the maker’s decease, and on the same day they gave a deed of the same farm, with the live stock and farming tools thereon, to their daughter Mary A., conditioned that she should pay the mortgage to her sister Catherine. At the same time Mrs. Blake made a written contract with her father and mother, by which, in consideration of the conveyance to her, she undertook to settle all his outstanding debts and support her father and mother upon the farm during their lives, and at their decease pay Mrs. Batchelder $1,000. After the execution of these papers Mrs. Blake took possession of the real and personal estate conveyed to her which was of the value in all of about $3,000, and held it as her own and supported her father and mother upon the farm until her father died, Aug. 15, 1887, and continued to *199support her mother until Mrs. Blake herself died, Dec. 5, 1888, after which Mrs. Wright continued to live on the farm with.her grandson Burton Blake — who held it under his mother’s will — until June, 1892, when Mrs. Batchelder and her husband, without Burton’s consent, removed her from his house. In July, 1882, Mrs. Blake mortgaged the farm to H. N. and Orpha Wright to secure to them the performance of her contract. Her husband died in Sept. 1884, and defendant Dwinell was in May, 1894, appointed administrator of bis estate. Mrs. Batcbelder’s husband died after Feb. 13, 1894. Mrs. Blake made ber will in Aug. 1888, and ber sister’s busband, W. C. Batchelder, was the executor. She then owned two western mortgages amounting to $1,200, which the master finds she bequeathed in the following paragraph in her will:

“I give to my beloved mother, Orpha Wright, the interest on twelve hundred dollars during the time of her natural life, and at her decease, I give to my beloved sister, Catherine H. Batchelder, one thousand dollars of said twelve hundred dollars, and the balance of said twelve hundred dollars which shall be left after paying said one thousand dollars to my said sister, Catherine H. Batchelder, and after paying the funeral expenses of my mother, the said Orpha Wright, which said funeral expenses, it is my will shall be paid out of said twelve hundred dollars, I give to my beloved sons, Charles H. Blake and Burton Blake, to be divided equally between them.”

She gave the remainder of her estate to her two sons, including in Burton’s share the farm in question.

The master finds that the bequest of $1,000 to the oratrix was intended by the testatrix, “when paid to the oratrix,” to be in payment and discharge of the mortgage of Oct. 8, 1879; that the oratrix so understood it and made no objection to it, and while her husband held the western notes and mortgage as executor of her sister’s will, manifested a willingness to accept payment of her mortgage *200by funds derived from the western securities when collected. But the oratrix did not accept the securities in payment of her mortgage, nor did she ever have the custody or control of them, nor did she enter into any agreement to rely upon them in payment of her debt. The oratrix and the defendant, Burton Blake, for a time assumed that these securities were good and would be paid, that her debt would thereby be paid and that Burton would have the farm clear of all incumbrances. The securities were never collected and proved to be of no value. The defendant Burton recognized the mortgage of the oratrix as an incumbrance upon his farm, and in the years 1893 and 1894 claimed and had an offset to his personal property in his tax inventories.

From the facts reported the master was fully justified in finding that the oratrix’s mortgage notes were due and unpaid, and that nothing in her conduct concerning them constituted an equitable estoppel. The report does not show that defendant Blake did or omitted any act in respect to his farm in consequence of the oratrix’s expressed reliance upon receiving payment of her mortgage by means of these securities.

It was competent for the oratrix to prove by the scrivener that the erasures and alterations in the mortgage were made before its execution.

Exhibit No. 4 was offered in evidence by the oratrix merely as a declaration by Mrs. Blake that at the time the deed and mortgage were executed by her father and mother, she made a written agreement with them to support them upon the home farm while they lived and pay her father’s debts. The contract itself was not in issue and on trial. The oratrix only testified that she had made search for it among her mother’s papers and had not been able to find it. For this purpose she was a competent witness. The making of the agreement was shown by other evidence.

Decree affirmed and cause remanded.