76 Wis. 567 | Wis. | 1890
The facts of this case are substantially as follows: William II. Dudley died on the 2d day of July, 1879, seized of lots 7 and 8, and the east twenty-five feet of lots 6 and 9, in block 7, in the city of Madison. On lot 8 and the east twenty-live feet of lot 9 there was a dwelling-house, where he lived and died. He left also a personal estate which, after the payment of all debts and expenses, amounted to the sum of over $26,000, one half of which was assigned to the defendant as his widow, and the other half to his son, Charles L. Dudley, on the 12th day of February, 1880, the whole of which remained, however, in the hands of said Charles as administrator, and only a small portion of the defendant’s share has ever been paid to her, but was retained by him until his death. All of the above real estate was also assigned to said Charles, subject to his mother’s homestead right and right of dower. The homestead embraced the whole of lot 8 and the east 25 feet of lot 9. Lot 7 and the east 25 feet of lot 6 was vacant property, and was worth the sum of $1,300, and the homestead property was worth $7,000, at the time of William H. Dudley’s death.
In May, 1879, the said Charles L. Dudley and the plaintiff entered into an agreement of marriage to be consummated thereafter upon request, and this agreement was known to both the father and mother of Charles; and in the summer of 1880 the day of the marriage was fixed to take place on
On the 27th day of September, 1880, the said Charles gave to the defendant, his mother, a quitclaim deed of said real property for the nominal consideration of one dollar, and caused the same to be recorded on the same day. At that time the said Charles owed the defendant a large amount of money, which he had appropriated to his own use, of the moneys of said estate,' — ■ at least the sum of $5,000; and it has never yet been paid. Charles L. Dudley, for some time before executing said quitclaim deed, took counsel of several 'of his friends, among whom were two former clerks and partners of his father, a neighboring lady, an old friend of the family, and Mr. Siebecker, an attorney at law, and now the judge of this circuit, and who had been his legal partner in this city,— all persons of the very highest respectability and integrity, — as to what he ought to do about couveying'to his mother the fee or vested remainder in the homestead property, and the title of the vacant lots. After having stated to them the circumstances, and the fact that his father had intended to leave said property to his mother, but was unable todo so in his last sickness, to which time he had deferred it, and that his mother would need it, and that if he conveyed it to her it would come back to him again in time, and that he felt it his duty to his mother to so convey it, they advised him that he ought to do so. The said Charles at the time had control of all the moneys of the estate, and was supposed to be worth much more in pecuniary means than the value of said real property; and he told his friends that he would not need it and his mother would, and that he thought it but justice and right to his mother to deed the property to her.
The plaintiff, as the widow and sole heir at law of the said Charles L. Dudley, who died on the 2d day of Novem
It will be observed that the gravamen of the complaint is the actual fraud of the defendant in inducing and persuading the said Charles to make the conveyance. There is no charge of intended secrecy on the part of the said
The circuit court, besides other facts, found that the defendant persuaded and induced the said Charles to make the deed, and that the deed was fraudulent as to the plaintiff. We are unable to assent to either of these findings. The facts above stated are sustained by a clear preponderance of the testimony. We do not think the evidence shows that the defendant persuaded or induced the said Charles to make the deed. Those are strong terms, even when unaccompanied by the qualifying word fraudulently. Mrs. Dudley, the defendant, may have assented to the making of the deed, or she may have expressed the wish to have it done; and that is scarcely proved. The evidence shows most clearly that Charles L. Dudle3q in making that deed to his mother, acted from his own sense of right and duty. The testimony of Judge Siebecker, Mrs. Burgess, and Messrs. Baker and Zehnter, shows this beyond a doubt. He had been reckless, and used a large portion of her money in his hands as administrator’, and he was indebted
1. What expectations did the plaintiff have of estate in this property that were cut off or defeated by this deed ? The defendant held her dower intei’est in the property, and a life-estate by homestead in the south half or improved portion of it. She was seized of that life-estate, and therefore Charles Dudley did not die seized of it, and the plaintiff could have no dower in it. We shall see hereafter that the only expectation she could have was of dower. For this object alone could the deed be declared fraudulent and void, under any circumstances. Charles Dudley had the same right to convey the fee before as after the marriage. It must be the expectation of present possession and enjoyment that is defeated. Her dower in the homestead was not defeated by the deed, for she could have none in it. The defendant had dower in the unimproved portion of the property. That would leave to the plaintiff only one third dower interest in two thirds of that. ■ The whole value of that portion of the lots was $1,300. That is a very small interest at most, hardly sufficient as the basis of expectation. The homestead descended to the defendant as a freehold estate for life, and on the death of William Dudley she became seized of it in fact and in law. Sec. 2271, R. S.; 4 Kent’s Comm. *26; 1 Washb. Real Prop. 87, 88, and note 5; Id. 346-350; Holbrook v. Wightman, 31 Minn. 168. This homestead estate of the defendant excludes the possibility of the plaintiff’s dower in those lots. Sec. 2159, R. S. It is an estate in possession and actual occupancy in one alone for life, inconsistent with dower in another person. Browning v. Harris, 99 Ill. 456; Hafer v. Hafer, 33 Kan. 449; and other cases in appellant’s brief. When the deed was made, she could have had no expectation of the enjoyment of the remainder vested in her husband, because that would depend upon too many contingencies. Her husband could
The leading case in this country on this question is that of Chandler v. Hollingsworth, 3 Del. Ch. 99. In that case the chancellor says that such a conveyance will be set aside when it is a fraud on some legal right existing at the time. “Its validity cannot be held in suspense, to be determined by future contingencies. This would subject titles to distressing uncertainty.” “He [the husband] could after marriage have effectually disposed of his whole personal estate, and of the inheritance of his real estate, by just such a deed.” The chancellor shows conclusively, both on principle and by authority, that the deed in such a case can be set aside only as to the intended wife’s right of dower. There is a note appended to this case, of approvals of many legal publications and text-book authors, and the decision has never been disapproved. 3 Washb. Real Prop. 359; 2 Bish. Mar. Worn. § 353; Youngs v. Carter, 10 Hun, 194. Nothing, therefore, can be recovered in such a case except the plaintiff’s right of dower, and no relief except to set aside the deed only to save that right. The deed is not wholly void. It is void only in respect to the plaintiff’s right of dower. Chandler v. Hollingsworth, 3 Del. Ch. 99, and other cases c'ted in appellant’s brief. Nearly all the cases cited by the
2. The only remaining question of law is whether the mere non-eommunieation of the fact of the making of the deed establishes the transaction as a legal fraud which cannot be questioned or repelled under any circumstances. It must be admitted that there is a class of cases which hold that nothing can be shown against it except notice or information given to the intended wife, and that non-communication is conclusive evidence of fraud. But all such cases must be understood to have been decided upon their own facts, where there was nothing to repel the presumption of fraud. But in most if not all the recent cases, and in some not so recent, it is held that concealment or the non-existence of communication to the intended wife or husband is not always a constructive fraud, but that it will depend upon the circumstances of each case, as in England v. Downs, 2 Beav. 522. There is a very full discussion of this question, also, in Chandler v. Hollingsworth, 3 Del. Ch. 99. In St. George v. Wake, 1 Mylne & K. 610, it is held that “the court will take into consideration the meritorious object of such conveyance, and the situation of the intended husband in point of pecuniary means.” Lord BRougham examines the cases very fully and holds that the principle depended very much on the dieta of courts, but that “the cases would even seem to authorize us in taking all the cir
It would be useless to incumber this opinion with more cases. Many others can be found in appellant’s brief. In one of the above cases the placing the deed on record at the time was held to rebut the secrecy of the transaction. The reasonable doctrine seems now to be well established that the deed is not necessarily fraudulent if not disclosed to the intended wife, but that the facts and circumstances may be
By the Gourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with direction to dismiss the complaint on the merits.