108 Ind. 382 | Ind. | 1886
In July, 1871, Joshua Lyles and his wife;
Isaac Lyles was the son of the grantors, and Anna was Isaac’s wife. After the execution of the deed, the grantor himself caused it to be recorded, by delivering it to the recorder, on the day of its execution, for record. Both Isaac and Anna Lyles were living on the land at the time the deed was executed, and had three children then living. No consideration was paid to the grantors for the conveyance, but possession was hold by the grantees. Isaac Lyles died in 1876, and after his death his widow, Anna Lyles, conveyed the real estate to John J. Lescher, who devised it to his wife, Eliza J. Lescher, and died in March, 1878. Eliza J. Lescher continued in possession of the land after the death of her husband until October, 1882, when she conveyed the land to William Lescher and put him in possession, and he has since remained in possession, in conjunction with Jesse Lescher, to whom he conveyed an interest in the land.
The facts, which we have given in an abridged form, are stated in a special finding, and upon them this conclusion of law was stated by the court: “ The plaintiff has no title to the land.”
One of the controlling questions in the ease is as to the effect of the deed of July 1st, 1871, upon the appellant’s claim to the land, for, if it divested him of all title, it is not material to inquire what is the character of the estate vested in his grantees. If the appellant has no title his action to recover the land was justly defeated.
The contention of appellant’s counsel is, that as no grantee
Our own court has, upon the concession of counsel, assumed this to be the rule, although,, as it is evident, without very-careful examination, for the case of Morris v. Stephens, 46 Pa. St. 200, relied on, has been overthrown, and the case of Hunter v. Watson, 12 Cal. 363, cited by Washburn, is not in point, because, when the deed in that case was made, the grantee named was dead, and it was held that a deed to a dead man was a nullity. Winslow v. Winsloio, 52 Ind. 8.
In speaking of the case of Morris v. Stephens, supra, in a subsequent case, the court said: “ The reliance of the court below and of this court on the former occasion, was upon the case of Hall v. Leonard, 1 Pick. 27, a case which in its turn was rested upon what is laid down in Perkins, section 52, that a grant to the heirs of a person in being is void, as there are no persons in esse who can take under that description. If the learned judge of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts had noticed that this rule from Perkins was predicated of incorporeal interests, which only lie in grant and are not susceptible of livery, he would not have misled us into applying it to a conveyance of land here in Pennsylvania, where registry stands instead of livery.” Huss v. Stephens, 51 Pa. St. 282.
The case from which we have quoted was expressly and very emphatically approved in Stephens v. Huss, 54 Pa. St. 20.
It was held in Hogan v. Page, 2 Wall. 605, that an'instrument of conveyance, called a confirmation, which granted land to the “ representatives of Auguste Conde,” was valid.
It, therefore, seems doubtful whether the law is as the appellant assumes it to be and as it is conceded to be by the ap
Appellees’ counsel, assuming that if the deed is to the heirs •of Anna and Isaac Lyles jointly, it is void, contend that this is not a just construction, but that the proper construction is that it is a grant to Anna Lyles, and to the heirs of Isaac Lyles. This contention can not prevail. The deed on its face purports to be, and is, prima facie, a grant to the heirs of Anna Lyles and Isaac Lyles jointly. No other construction can be placed upon it, looking alone to the words employed, without directly violating the plain and well known rules of grammar. To make the deed properly and fully express what the appellees claim, would require us to supply a punctuation mark and an additional word. This we can not do, on the basis furnished by the language of the deed alone.
The remaining inquiry is, whether the acts of the parties gave such a construction to the deed as should protect the title in the hands of bona fide purchasers; It appears that possession was held by Anna and Isaac Lyles during the life of the latter; that after his death it was held by Anna, and thenceforth by her immediate and remote grantees. It appears, also, that the grantor himself caused the deed to be placed on' record. These acts, in our judgment, gave a construction to the deed which makes it effectual as a convoyunce. As we have said, a change in the punctuation, by ■adding a single mark, and one word would make the deed mean exactly what the acts of the parties have construed it to mean, that is, that if divested the appellant of title, and we think their construction, as evidenced by their conduct, should prevail, at least as against intervening third parties.
It is said to be “ a rule in reading and construing deeds, that no regard is had to punctuation, since no estate ought to depend upon the insertion or omission of a comma or semicolon.” -3 Washb. Real Prop., p. 628. It is also a familiar doctrine,
In holding that the acts of the parties performed under a-written contract are admissible for the purpose of ascertaining the construction placed upon it, there is no encroachment upon the rule that contemporaneous parol evidence is not admissible to vary a written instrument, for acts done in execution of the contract are subsequent in time to the execution of the instrument, and different from mere verbal statements. In this instance, the acts of the appellant in causing the deed to be placed of record, in suffering possession to be maintained under the deed, and in permitting the land to- be sold by the grantee as an owner, are utterly incompatible with the claim now asserted, and are invincibly hostile to the theory now advocated. After all these acts, and after the lapse of so many years, he can not, in justice, be permitted to affirm that the deed did not mean what his acts have so unequivocally asserted that it did mean.
Mr. Broom, translating a fundamental maxim, says : “A liberal construction should be put upon written instruments,., so as to uphold them, if possible, and carry into effect the intention of the parties.” Broom Max., star p. 540. Another author says : “ The law, fortunately, is far from being strict in requiring any great accuracy or precision in respect to what is written, so far as the rules of grammar or orthography are concerned.” 3 Washb. Real Prop. 554. By another writer it is said : “ Where a deed can not operate in the way intended by the parties, it will be construed so as to operate in some.
Here, a little, insignificant change, nothing more, perhaps, than the rejection of the sign of the possessive case, would make this deed operate as the grantor, by his acts, certainly declared it should operate, and we ought not to sacrifice the substantial rights of purchasers to so small a matter. If we should do so, we would make the deed inoperative, defeat the rights of intervening purchasers, and disregard the acts of the grantor; but, in upholding the deed, we do him no injustice, for it is evident that he meant to divest himself of title, and we do no more than carry that intention, so plainly manifested by his acts, into effect, and give protection to rights acquired on the faith of his deed and his acts.
Judgment affirmed. '