261 Mo. 202 | Mo. | 1914
This is a'controversy over seventy-two acres of land. The petition is in three counts. The first count alleges that Mary J. Fenton on October 31, 1901, conveyed to the defendant George W. Fenton,
The second count is for partition of the same land and seeks to' charge the defendants Charles F. and George "W. Fenton with advancements equal to their share of the land in controversy.
The third count is for the purpose of quieting the title against the heirs and legal representatives of a former owner of the land. These defendants made default and judgment went against them.
At the date of the deeds the grantor, Mary F. Fen-ton, was an aged widow, with two sons, the defendants George "W. and Charles F. (Fred) Fenton. These four plaintiffs are the children of her deceased son, Philip C. Fenton. She was living in the house on the tract in controversy. That tract was to some extent less valuable than each of the other two tracts men tinned. She went before Mr. Smith, as her lawyer,
“I recall the circumstance of mother turning over to me a deed to the seventy-two acres in question; I think this was in 1902 and was at her home. I was at her house on a visit. She asked me to come and go in the bedroom with her. I went in there and she gave me these three papers. She says, ‘You have a safe at the store, haven’t you?’ I says,‘Yes, ma’am.’ She says, ‘You put them in your safe and keep them until I tell you what to do with them; keep them there for same keeping,’ she says. I done exactly what mother told me to do — put them in my safe in my store, and they were never touched from the time she gave them to me until the time she called for them, which was something like, a year after, that. I asked her what the papers were when she gave them to me and she says, ‘You can read them as you go home and see.’ She afterwards called for these deeds at my house. I took them out of the safe and handed them together to her just as she gave them to me to keep for safe keeping. She handed me my deed back and says, ‘Fred, here is your deed; you can do as you please, with it,’ and she told me to tell George to do as he pleased with his, that he could have his, and she gave back to me George’s deed. She did not give back to me the deed to the land in controversy, but took it with her. I have never.had possession of that deed from that day until this, and, furthermore, since the time of the conversation she made to me at the time she asked for the deeds back, she says, ‘This deed I am ¡going to change’ — that was the deed for the seventy-two acres. She said, ‘If you will be the administrator for these heirs I can fix it up some way at their death it will go back to the Fenton estate; I will do that; but otherwise they cannot have it.’ I said ‘Do just
George W. Fenton testified as to the deed to plaintiffs, as follows:
“I went with my mother to Adrian at the time she signed and acknowledged the deed to the plaintiffs before A. J. Smith. She afterward told me she had given this deed to Fred to keep for her until she called for it. I do not know the exact date when it was returned to her, but I guess from what she told me it was something like a year and a half later. I afterwards saw this deed among some of her other papers in the drawer of her dresser in her house. It remained there in the house five or six years. She and I cleaned out the dresser drawer, as the mice had eaten up part of the papers there, and I, by her instruction, put it in a trunk that she bought from Pete Alexander. This deed remained there in the trunk during her life and until after her death. I never had the custody or possession of that deed. During her lifetime my mother, on different occasions, remarked that she thought the children didn’t treat her right; that they ' didn’t care nothing for her, only for what she had, and they wasn’t going' to get it.”
The deed to Fred was recorded February 3, 1903, and the one to George on February 7, 1903.
At the time of the execution of these deeds and for three or four years afterward, James C. Fenton and his wife lived in the same house with the grantor. He was her step-son, and the half-brother of her children. Mrs. James 0. Fenton testified that the grantor told her that she had given all the deeds to Fred to be recorded, but that he only had his own recorded, and that she didn’t know it until George came; that
“Emily Fenton, Phil’s widow, came to the house quite frequently, and so did the other brother, George, and it seems that ma had turned the deeds over to Fred ‘ to have them all recorded, that was the impression I got from their talk, and from the way the thing was done; Fred had his recorded and return the other two. After George discovered that his deed had not been recorded he came to see about it, and she went to Fred and got the deeds back and turned them over to George and George had his recorded and didn’t have the third one recorded. So Emily then came to inquire in the interest of her children, came to grandma, and ma talked to my wife and me frequently about it, and to me especially. . . . Emily would come right down after ma once or twice a month, possibly, and she would say, ‘I am feeling had and Emma disturbs and worries me about that old paper, and I wish she didn’t talk to me about it. I have fixed it to suit myself, and I am going to have those children, Phil’s children, safe.’ She says, ‘I know Phil’s children haven’t their share and there won’t be any trouble about it, and I assured Emma of that.’ She refused to turn the deed over to Emma; I supposed she had it. She said, ‘I will have it attended to; I will turn it over to you.’ The deed was evidently in the house. George was there most of the time himself. I heard these conversations with Emma after George’s and Fred’s deeds had been recorded, and she assured her every way she could that she would have it done right and that she wasn’t going to turn it over to her now. She said, ‘I haven’t got any too much confidence in the Powells. She is a young widow and might marry again and those
The deed to plaintiffs, after the grantor’s death, was found in her trunk at her home. ' She left a will executed December 10, 1910', in which she gave the plaintiffs a dollar each, and gave all the residue of her personal property to the two sons. The will made no mention of real estate.
The grantor delivered all the deeds to Fred. He testified that they were to be kept by him for her. He stands alone in that statement. The facts show the contrary; James C. Fenton and .his wife, inmates of the mother’s home, testified that she stated that the deeds were delivered to Fred for record. Fred did put his on record. Such fact was published in the papers. As a result George went to see his mother about it and his deed was sent to record. Later on the mother of the plaintiffs became importunate about the deed to them. The grantor had talks with Fred in which the subject was discussed .as. to changing the deed so that at the death of the plaintiffs the land would go back to the Fenton estate. We need not conclude that Fred was responsible for a change in, the •mind of the grantor, if there was a change. It is sufficient to say that a great preponderance of the evidence shows that the grantor delivered all these deeds to Fred to be by him placed on record. As late as 1910', she made her will which shows that she was unconscious of having any real estate to dispose of. Even if she did undergo a change of mind after delivering the deeds to Fred for record, and did get possession of the deed and refuse to deliver it to the mother of plaintiffs or to put it on record, that fact does, not
In Crowder v. Searcy, 103 Mo. l. c. 118, it was held that the law presumes much more in the case of voluntary settlement, especially when made to infants, than it does in ordinary cases of bargain and sale. In that case the grantor signed and acknowledged a deed to his grandchildren and handed it to a third party to be recorded and gave him the money for that purpose. The court said: “When he did this, we hold that the first deed was fully delivered and the title passed to the defendants, even though there was a misdescription. A court of equity would have corrected the description. Equity regards that as done which ought to be done.”
The fact that the grantor gave the third party the money to record the deed does not make any difference. When Mrs. Fenton handed the deeds to Fred to be recorded, if she did not furnish him with the money to pay for recording them, his acceptance of the duty was equivalent to an undertaking to have them recorded.
In Standiford v. Standiford, 97 Mo. l. c. 239, it was held that each ease must stand on its own peculiar facts, the court saying: “It is sufficient, if, after the grantor has signed, sealed' and acknowledged the deed, he makes some disposition of it from which it clearly appears that he intended that the instrument should take effect as a conveyance and pass the title.”
This being a case' of family settlement, and the grantees being minors at ° the time, their acceptance of the deed will be presumed.
In our opinion the judgment and decree entered on the first count disposes of the controversy in the second count, and the judgment is in all particulars affirmed.