Dragoo v. Dragoo

50 Mich. 573 | Mich. | 1883

Cooley, J.

The purpose of this suit is to enforce an alleged oral agreement for the partition and conveyance of lands.

The parties to the agreement were John F. Dragoo and Peter Dragoo his brother, sons of Jacob Dragoo, who died intestate in Berrien county in the year 1838, leaving seven children and one grandchild. He left a very small property, and John F. Dragoo was appointed administrator. The estate was settled without complaint, though there seems to be some dispute respecting the method of settlement; the complainant alleging that John F. and Peter purchased the interest of the others and took the property. In the year 1839, three parcels of land, aggregating about one hundred and forty acres, were purchased and conveyed to John. The theory of the bill is, that the purchase was made by John and Peter jointly, and that in or about the year 1847 an agreement was made between the brothers that the land should be divided between them by a certain line represented in part by an existing fence, and that John, who held the title for both, should convey the north half to Peter. This is denied by the defendants. It seems highly probable, however, that there had been an understanding between these brothers which contemplated their occupying, improving and owning the land jointly, and bearing jointly the expense of caring for and supporting the other children, who were nearly all minors; but what the conditions of *575this understanding were, is not very clear. John at the time of the supposed understanding was a man of family, and lived upon the land. Peter was a bachelor, but in the year 1848, he was married to a woman who had a farm a few miles from the land in controversy, and went to live upon it. He died within a year thereafter, and John and the widow were appointed administrators and settled the estate by regular proceedings.

When Peter went to live upon his wife’s farm the two brothers divided between them the personal property, and defendants claim that whatever understanding had previously existed for a joint ownership or for a partition of the land was then abandoned. This is denied by complainant, and upon this claim and denial all the controversy turns. It is certain that with the exception of a parcel in respect to which no question now arises, John always treated the land as his own, selling off some parcels of it, and cultivating the remainder in his own interest, and that what remained unsold at his death has since been claimed, and occupied and used by his heirs. John.died in the year 1861, and in the year 1871 complainant, who was a posthumous child and is sole heir-at-law of Peter, filed this bill against the heirs of John to compel specific performance of the alleged agreement.

The circumstance that first attracts attention is, that the bill is filed to set up and enforce a parol agreement for the conveyance of lands nearly a quarter of a century after it is said to have been made. In most cases this would be a conclusive objection to the relief prayed. But the delay is excused in this case by the fact that complainant only reached her majority the year before the bill was filed, and may never have become fully aware of her rights before that time. Laches is not to be imputed to a minor or other person incompetent to act on his own behalf. Smell v. Dee 2 Salk. 415; Mills v. Dennis 3 Johns. Ch. 367; Dow v. Jewell 21 N. H. 470 ; Chandler v. McKinney 6 Mich. 217. Still, great delay is always an important fact in these cases ; for time obscures and destroys evidence even when it does *576not absolutely take away rights of action ; and a parol contract is never to be enforced unless it is satisfactorily proved. And the older the supposed facts are, when they are to be made out on the recollection of witnesses, the more are they open to doubt and suspicion; so that if the delay is sufficiently excused the evidence that is to establish the case requires to be examined with unusual care and circumspection.

But in this case if the facts are as complainant says, it is remarkable that no one made claim on her behalf during the period of her legal minority. When her father died her mother survived, and there is every reason to suppose that, whatever the facts were, she was cognizant of them. Tet she took no steps to assert any claim on behalf of complainant ; and the relatives of complainant on her mother’s side, several of whom lived near them, were equally neglectful of her interests. There is no pretence of collusion by them with the surviving brother to deprive the orphan of any property belonging to her, or of any disposition to refuse assistance in the enforcement of her rights ; and the neglect to show some interest in her behalf during the long period of her minority, if they believed she was unjustly-excluded from her inheritance, is, to say the leastj an unusual circumstance and noticeable as such.

But if the evidence concerned recent transactions, instead of dealings which took place thirty years before the proofs in the case were taken, we should be compelled to say that it was too vague, uncertain, ambiguous and unsatisfactory to justify the overturning of titles in reliance upon it.

It the first place the alleged contract must be made out, if at all, on the admissions of John F. Dragoo, made for the most part in casual conversations with his neighbors. No one pretends to have been present when any bargain between the brother’s was made, no one claims to have heard the terms and conditions of any understanding deliberately talked over between them. If the supposed contract was ever made, witnesses were never called to it, and knowledge of its existence only came to others casually and as it were *577by accident. But this supposed contract related to nearly all these parties had ; it concerned the estate they were cultivating and improving for their home. ~We can understand how Peter under the circumstances alleged might have left the title to his share in the hands of his older brother, but that he should have failed to provide himself with any evir dence of his rights which would be available in the event that death or other casualty interfered with their plans, is remarkable. It is not claimed that there was intentional secrecy, or reason for any; so that we are to suppose the brothers took no pains whatever to provide for the ordinary contingencies of life, so far as their arrangement might be affected by them. And in his last days it does not appear that Peter took any steps to secure to his wife and his expected child any interest in the land which he had left in John’s possession.

But again: the evidence adduced on the part of complainant is as consistent with a temporary arrangement which was abandoned when Peter went to live on his wife’s farm, as with one which was permanent and contemplated a final division notwithstanding their separation. In other words, it is as consistent with the theory of the defendant as with that of complainant. This is as much as to say that the case of complainant is not made out.

But the difficulties with the case do not end here. No court can grant specific relief on the basis of a parol contract unless there have been important acts of part performance which raise in favor of complainant a strong- equity. No such acts are shown in this case. There was joint occupancy and improvement for a short time, but the joint-expenditure of either labor or money was small, and there is little if any reason to suppose that Peter Dragoo made any change in his business affairs or abstained from making any because of the supposed contract. And the joint occupation and improvement, which, if anything, must be considered acts of part performance, were discontinued as soon as Peter married.

The supposed contract was also vague in respect to the *578line of partition, and it would be difficult to satisfy ourselves, if we were guided exclusively by complainant’s evh dence, where the line should be made out. But it is unnecessary to point out other difficulties in the case. It is enough to say that we do not find in it those circumstances which justify setting aside the titles to land and compelling their conveyance in supposed conformity to parol agreements.

The decree appealed from should be set aside and decree entered for defendants with costs of both courts.

Graves, O. J. and Campbell, J. concurred.