85 Me. 143 | Me. | 1892
Writ of entry to recover land from the possession of defendant, a widow, whose husband once owned the same and mortgaged it. These mortgages were foreclosed and assigned to Samuel Donnell, the plaintiffs’ ancestor. The defendant contends that they were paid and redeemed by him for her and not purchased on his own account; that he gave them to her, and that plaintiffs are estopped by his acts from disputing the fact.
Exceptions are taken to rulings at the trial, in substance, that Donnell purchased the mortgages for himself, and has been guilty of no fraudulent acts that estop the plaintiffs from asserting title under them ; that a promise by Donnell to give the mortgages to the defendant (he being under no legal obligation to do so) ■ would be but- an executory gift, a mere intention to give without doing it; not an executed gift that might vest the equitable title in defendant; that "saying that he had paid them or taken them up, or that he had made a gift of them” to her, "even if he supposed the assignments would have the effect of payment instead of purchase ” " would not alter the case that so long as the transaction remained executory and he retained the title and the muniments of it himself, no gift became, executed and no equity passed to the defendant; but that if there was a contract between Donnell and the defendant, made in consideration of money that he owed her or was to owe her, that he would pay the mortgages for her, then, upon his doing so, the equitable title passed to her, although he took the assignment of them in his own name, and the plaintiffs cannot recover. The other exceptions are not pressed, and are of too vague a character to require consideration here.
The evidence discloses that the defendant, a widow, threatened with trouble from outstanding mortgages upon her homestead and perhaps with ejectment from her home, requested Samuel Donnell, her friend, to take them up. He did so, and during ten years, the remainder of his life, allowed the defendant to continue to occupy the property and deal with it as if it were her own; he, meantime, holding the legal title and the muniments of it, and, being a sea-faring man, staying periodically at her house, when ashore at Boothbay, as convenience might require him to do. The testimony of several witnesses indicates that he, at various times, expressed the intention of giving her the property. Some of them say that he had said that the property was hors ; but he never did give it to her, and died without executing any such purpose. The mortgages and assignments of them at his death were found in his safe among his other valuable papers at Bath, where his home was, and the title descended to the plaintiffs, his legal heirs.
The defendant neither furnished funds nor securities, nor any valuable consideration, to procure a redemption of the mortgages, nor does the evidence show any contract between Donnell and the defendant, whereby he engaged to assume the mortgages in her behalf. His conduct was purely voluntary; no doubt incited by a desire to make her comfortable in the continued enjoyment of her home. She has neither a valid claim at law nor in equity to be the real owner of the property. For ten years she has had the use and income of it, but she has never acquired any title to it. The verdict is fully sustained by the evidence and the motion must be overruled.
Complaint is made that equitable defenses were shut out from the consideration of the jury. On this score, the defendant has no cause for complaint. Defendant’s equity can only arise, in this case on three grounds. First: that, by contract, Donnell engaged to redeem the mortgages for the defendant. That question was submitted to the jury and settled in the
Both equitable and legal rights arise from a consideration, or from conditions that are equivalent to it, never from mere voluntary unexecuted promises that have not induced action or change of condition, so as to work a consideration for them. Northrop v. Hale, 73 Maine, 63; Parish v. Stone, 14 Pick. 197; Wilson v. Clements, 3 Mass. 1; Fowler v. Shearer, 7 Mass. 14; Gould v. Belcher, 119 Mass. 257; Bank v. Copeland, 77 Maine, 263 ; Basket v. Hassell, 107 U. S. 602.
Delivery is essential to a valid gift inter vivos. Wing v. Merchant, 57 Maine, 383 ; Dunbar v. Dunbar, 80 Maine, 152; Augusta Savings Bank v. Fogg, 82 Maine, 538 ; Drew v. Hagerty, 81 Maine, 231; Sessions v. Mosely, 4 Cush. 87;
Certainly the instructions excepted to were as favorable to the defendant as she would be entitled to have, in any form of' action.
Motion and exceptions overruled.