Bland v. Talley

50 Ark. 71 | Ark. | 1887

Smith, J.

The object of the bill was to establish a resulting trust in land. It alleged that the.plaiptiff, John L. Talley, and his. two brothers, William H...and Frank, both :sinee deceased, had, in the year 1872, purchased a tract of two hundred acres of land for $1,200, the same to be held in common and in equal shares; that as the plaintiff and Frank were minors, it was on that account agreed that the purchase ¡should be made in the name of William H.; that the.pur•chase was entirely upon a credit and the land was to be paid for entirely out of the crops produced by their joint labor; that the brothers took possession of and farmed the land together under this agreement, until the death of Frank, which occurred in February, 1875; that about this date a payment of $500 was made on the land out of the proceeds of crops raised by the joint labor of all three; that after tbe death of' Frank, the residue of purchase money was in like manner paid from crops produced by the two surviving brothers and1 the title deeds were made to William EL, who frequently-promised to convey to the plaintiff his share, bui. died without having done so.

The answer specifically denied all the material averments of the bill. It denied that the purchase of the land was for the joint account of the brothers, and asserted that it was-•made by William H. with his own money and for his individual benefit.

The circuit court appointed a receiver, upon the coming-in of the answer, to take charge of the place and collect the rents and profits. And at the hearing it established the alleged trust, and decreed that the plaintiff was the equitable-owner of one third of the land,and the heirs at law of Frank were entitled to another third upon the payment of one-third of such part of the purchase money as was paid after his-death.

The pi’oofs showed the following state of facts: At the-date of the purchase in 1872, William EL Talley had charge of John L. and Frank, lads aged respectively fourteen and sixteen years, and also of a sister. The family was poor.. William EL had no cash capital, but was an enterprising farmer and owned four horses and mules, a wagon and the-ordinary farm tools-and implements. His brothers and sister had no property of any description, but for their support and education were dependent upon him and their own labor.. He seems to have bought the land for the purpose of providing a home for himself and them and with a view to keep-the family together. His ability to pay for it depended on the result of his farming operations; and the factors which contributed to his success were his own energy and skill in farming, the labor of his brothers and sister, his team and the credit he enjoyed as a managing farmer. The bond for-title and the deed of conveyance, when, five or six years, later, the payment was finally completed, were in the name of William H. In fact the vendors had never heard of his brothers. So we may be sure the land was not sold on the credit of their labor. The family settled upon the land about January, 1873; the sister doing, the household work and the brothers laboring in the field. Frank died about two years afterwards. William H. married in 1876. The sister married in the following year and withdrew to her husband’s house. John L. remained, going to school a part of the time and working on the farm the rest of the time. His board, clothes and washing were furnished by his brother, who also paid his me ’ical and school bills. When he grew to man’s estate, he was furnished with as much land as he could use, free of rent,.and with a horse to work it; and he made crops to himself and appropriated the proceeds of them to his own use, living all the time in the house and at the expense of his brother. The land was. not paid out solely by the labor of the brothers. After the first year, tenants were procured, to whom William H. furnished team and supplies. And these tenants, whose contracts and business relations were with William H. alone, must have raised the principal part of the crops.

William H. died in 1882, leaving a widow and infant child. After his death John L. rented land from his widow. But after the widow remarried, he refused to pay rents and set up a claim of title.

The evidence of a recognition by William H. of his brothers’ interest in his purchase goes only to this extent: that he stated to several persons on different occasions, about the time of the purchase and subsequently, that he bought for them as well as himself and that, if they would stay with .him and help him pay out the land, they should have an interest in it. What that interest was to be was not mentioned in any of these conversations. The title to real estate ought not to be affected by such loose declarations and equivocal expressions, where the speaker may have meaut one thing and the witness may have understood another.

The plaintiff swore that the three brothers agreed to buy the place and pay for it out of their joint labor on the farm, and when paid for, to own it share and share alike; that the business was to be transacted in the name of William H., he being the only one of the three who was of age, and that their shares were to be couveyed to the younger brothers when they reached their majority. It is not alleged nor shown that Frank and John L. paid any definite aliquot part of the purchase money, but only that the proceeds of their labor contributed to its payment.

1. Trusts: Statute of frauds: Parol agreement for interest in land. Passing over the inherent improbability that a mature man of sound judgment, engaging in an arduous undertaking, should have associated with himself upon equal terms two boys, who could not be of any possible assistance beyond the manual labor they might perform, the story, if true, amounts only to this: that the three agreed to purchase and one furnished all the money and took the title to himself. Now a parol agreement that another shall be interested in the purchase of lands, or a parol declaration by a purchaser that he ■buys for another, without au advance of money-by that other, falls within the statute of frauds and cannot give birth to a resulting trust.

If the creation of the trust is not manifested by any writing and no fraud has been practiced in obtaining the title, the trust must arise from the payment of the purchase money and not from any agreement of the parties. Mansf. Dig, secs. 3282-3; 1 Lead. Cases in Equity, 4th Am. Ed., 322, 336, notes to Dyer v. Dyer; Bispham's Principles of Equity, sec. 80; Perry on Trusts, sec. 133; Bartlett v. Pickersgill, 1 Eden, 515; Irwin v. Ives, 7 Ind., 308; Barnet v. Dougherty, 8 Casey, 371; Bickel's Appeal, 86 Pa. St., 204; Cook v. Bronaugh, 13 Ark., 183; Hackney v. Butts, 41 Id., 393; Robinson v. Robinson, 45 Id., 481.

2. Same: Same. In Neal v. Neal, 69 Ind., 419, the complaint alleged that certain land had been purchased by the plaintiff's father, under an agreement with plaintiff, that if the plaintiff would stay with his father and work for him for three years, the plaintiff being then twenty..one years old, the labor performed by the plaintiff should entitle him to one-half of the land; that the plaintiff had performed the labor for the stipulated period ; and that the defendant, with the means acquired by their joint labor, had bought the land, taking title to the who]e in himself. It was held, on demurrer, that the contract was presumably by parol, no writing being alleged and that, if so, it wac void by the statute of frauds. It was also held that there was no trust.

Equity will not decree William H, Talley a trustee, because he used the proceeds of his brothers' labor, with their consent, in paying for the land, under a promise to give them an interest in the land. This would not put them on any higher vantage ground than if' they had lent the money to make the payment under a like promise.

The decree is reversed and cause remanded with directions to recfuire the receiver immediately to surrender the lands to~ the widow and heirs of William H. Talley, to pass his accounts and pay over to them all moneys in his hands; then to discharge the receiver and enter a decree, dismissing the plaintiff's bill.