140 S.E. 689 | W. Va. | 1927
This is a suit to cancel two certain deeds as clouds upon plaintiff's title. From a decree granting the relief prayed for, the defendants appeal.
Plaintiff is the widow of J. W. Duncan, deceased, who died on or about the 30th day of May, 1925, at an advanced age and after a lingering illness. She was seventy-seven years of age at the time of her husband's death. The defendants are the children of the deceased by a former wife. After the marriage of plaintiff and J. W. Duncan, in 1902, the two purchased two or three tracts of land in Putnam county, the titles to which were taken in the name of plaintiff. J. W. Duncan had been in failing health for several years prior to his death and was waited upon and nursed by plaintiff. Ten days prior to J. W. Duncan's death, the defendants called the plaintiff from the bedside of her husband, and had her to sign, in their presence, two writings purporting to be deeds to them for the two pieces of property then held in her own name. J. M. Duncan, having theretofore represented himself to plaintiff as the lawfully appointed Committee for his father, signed the latter's name by himself as such Committee. The notary who drafted the purported deeds, according to his testimony, inserted a clause in each writing reserving the property therein to the parties of the first part during their life-time. On the day of the funeral the several defendants began inquiring about certain papers and notes belonging, as they claimed, to their father, and threatened to have plaintiff and others arrested if she did not reveal their whereabouts. Shortly after, to-wit, on July 24th, the plaintiff had summons issued, and later filed her bill praying that the deeds purporting to convey her property to defendants be cancelled, set aside and held for naught as creating a cloud upon her title to the same. The bill alleges among other things that the plaintiff was sick and greatly enfeebled, both in mind and body, at the time of signing, due to the fact of her husband's serious illness, and by reason thereof, easily susceptible to the influences, arts and persuasions, of others; that J. M. Duncan held himself out as legally appointed Committee for her husband, and that she was told by him immediately prior *602 thereto that she had to execute the deeds, and that she believed it was necessary; that the property was worth $2,500.00, and that she never received any consideration for the same, not even the $1.00 consideration mentioned in each writing.
The defendants answered, denying any coercion on their part, and stating that at the time the deeds were signed plaintiff well understood the legal consequences thereof; that they were to furnish her a reasonable support and maintenance during the remainder of her natural life as a consideration. They close with a prayer that specific performance be required of the plaintiff — that she be required to make them a good and apt deed for the property so attempted to be conveyed by the two several writings.
The appellants evidently rest their case on the authority given a married woman to sell and convey property without her husband joining in the deed under chapter 73, section 6, Code, where she is living separate and apart from her husband, or her husband be non compos mentis. They admit that the acknowledgment of the wife to the deed did not state the fact to be that she was living separate and apart from her said husband, or that he was non compos mentis. In order to giveprima facie validity to a deed these facts must be stated as having been shown to the satisfaction of the officer taking the acknowledgment. The appellants rely upon the proof in this case as establishing the fact that the husband was non compos mentis
at the time the writings in question were made. They assert that a deed void for want of formality may nevertheless be good as a contract and pass the equitable title. The case of Shumate
v. Shumate,
In order to have specific performance of the contract, the burden rests upon the defendants not only to prove the contract, but that the same is fair, just and equitable.Crotty v. Effler,
The circuit court has found that the defendants have not shown themselves entitled to affirmative relief, and have cancelled the deeds as clouds on plaintiff's title. We must affirm *605
that decree. Wegmann v. Clark,
Affirmed.