160 P. 000 | Mont. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
Stripped of legal verbiage, the findings of fact in this case
Upon these facts the court concluded as a matter of law that Alvin R. Lincoln became and is an involuntary trustee of the property conveyed to him by Mary E. Lincoln; that neither Anna D. Lincoln nor George R. Lincoln has any title, claim or interest in the premises; that Leonie Huffine is entitled to a conveyance thereof from Alvin R. Lincoln, free of all claims through or under him, and that a decree should be entered directing such conveyance. This appeal challenges the correctness of the judgment entered in so far as it accords with said findings and conclusions.
The first contention is that the agreement between Mary E. Lincoln aid Alvin R. Lincoln is not enforceable at all because of the subsequent marriage of the latter, and is not enforceable at the instance of the plaintiff because “she is not a third party for whose benefit the contract was made, within the provisions of the statute authorizing an action by a third party to a contract.” If, as the argument and cases cited seem to indicate, it is meant by this to urge that the contract between Alvin R.
The real question at issue- is this: Do the facts found warrant the declaration of a trust of the property in Alvin R. Lincoln for the benefit of Leonie Huffine, and can such trust be now declared and enforced as against Anna D. Lincoln, George R. Lincoln, or the children of the deceased daughter? In moving toward the answer it is to be noted that arguments based upon the statutory restriction of a wife’s power to devise her property to others than her husband (Rev. Codes, see. .3735), are wholly irrelevant. The determination of Mary E. Lincoln was not to devise but to convey, and her right to convey cannot be open to doubt. (Rev. Codes, sec. 3700.) What her reasons were for this determination we may not definitely know, but it is a pure gratuity to assert that such conveyance was intended as a testamentary disposition rather than a conveyance inter vivos for the very best of considerations. Suffice it to know that her settled design was to convey to the daughter, and had it been carried out, title to the property would have vested in the daughter free of-all claims by or under her father, her brother or anyone else.
That design was frustrated, as the court has found, by the influence and inducements of the father to his own advantage and, as it ultimately proved, to his daughter’s disadvantage. These inducements were that if the mother would convey to him instead of to her daughter, he would make a will devising all the mother’s property and all his own real estate to 'the daughter and son in equal shares. He made the will and she the conveyance. It is argued that inasmuch as he made the will, and in
There is just as little doubt of plaintiff’s right to have the
The judgment is assailed as depriving Anna D. -Lincoln of any dower light in the property. If she has such right, the judgment should undoubtedly be modified to recognize it; but this is all that could be required, supposing such right to exist, since it is a mere inchoate interest which may never vest. Gen-
Finally the judgment cannot stand, it is said, because the
The conclusions of law are justified by the findings of fact, and the judgment follows both. It is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.'