82 N.C. 33 | N.C. | 1880
The facts appear in the opinion. Verdict for plaintiffs, judgment, appeal by defendants.
Cited and commented on James v. James,
Messrs. Guthrie Carr, for defendants:
Whether a gift is an advancement or not, depends upon the intention of the parent at the very time the gift is made. Osgood v. Breed's Heirs,
1. Is the plaintiff, Irvin, a tenant in common with the others, his sisters, in the said descended lands?
2. Did Robert Melvin, their father, in his life time, settle upon or advance to said Irvin the real estate described in the answer?
3. Has the said Irvin waived or abandoned all claim to share with the other heirs in the descended lands aforesaid?
Upon the trial the defendants introduced a deed from the intestate to said Irvin, reciting a consideration of four hundred dollars paid by the latter and conveying the tract of land set out in the answer, and to show this to be a gift and an advancement, proved by a witness, Howard Smith, that he was consulted by said Irvin previous to the making the conveyance as to the effects of a deed in form, a gift, or a *36 bargain and sale, and advised said Irvin that land conveyed by bargain and sale would not have to be accounted for, while as a gift it would; and suggested to him that money should pass between them as the consideration, or a note given for the amount, and either could be afterwards returned to him.
The defendants offered to prove declarations of the intestate, subsequent to the execution of the deed and while his son was in possession, as to the consideration of it, and this evidence on objection was ruled out.
It was proved that at a division among the three sisters the said Irvin was present, made no objection, and said he should claim no part of the land. Similar and repeated declarations of said Irvin, to the same import, were proved by different witnesses for the defendant.
The plaintiffs offered testimony tending to prove the payment of a full consideration for the land, and a witness present at the delivery of the deed saw a note therefor passed from the son to the father.
Upon this showing His Honor intimated an opinion that the defendants' evidence tended to prove that if no consideration of value passed between the parties it was in consequence of an arrangement between them by which the transaction was to be treated, as in form it was, a bargain and sale and not a gift; and in such event the land would not have to be accounted for.
The defendants' counsel then insisted that, in that aspect of the case, the surrendered note would be an advancement in personalty. To this suggestion His Honor replied that if the return of his note to the son was part of the arrangement by which the land was to be given, so that in form the deed would upon its face purport to be for a valuable consideration, while in truth it was a gift, the return of the note to the maker, in pursuance of the common understanding, would not be in law an advancement. The jury under *37 these instructions found the issues for the plaintiffs. The several exceptions presented on the record will in their order be considered and disposed of:
1. The defendants except to the rejection of the declarations of the intestate as to the consideration of the deed, made after its execution. The reasons assigned for the exclusion by the court are two-fold: first, because they are offered" as a narrative of a past fact," and are hearsay merely; secondly, they do not proceed from a person in possession, and are not therefore connected with a possession to qualify or explain it. The ruling of the court is correct, and there is no ground upon which the evidence could be admitted. The incompetency of a party who has conveyed property and delivered the possession to impeach his own deed or to impair its force and efficiency by his own subsequent words or acts, is a rule of evidence too well established to need argument or authority in its support. When they accompany a retained possession, they are admitted only as explanatory of the act of possession or in disparagement of the defendant's title and not to prove the existence of an antecedent occurrence, as is pointed out in the opinion in Roberts v. Roberts, ante 29.
2. The defendants object to the instruction given to the jury, upon the supposed findings of fact by them, as to the operation of the deed as a gift and an advancement. We see no error in this statement of the law. While a gift in form raises the presumption of an intent that the donee of any considerable portion of the parent's estate shall account therefor in a settlement with the heirs and distributees after his death, while a bargain and sale does not, it is clear that if at the time of the conveyance by either mode the parent did not intend it should operate as an advancement, and this intent appears in the instrument by which the transfer is effected, or from the facts of the transaction, or is shown by other proof, the property so conveyed is not an *38 advancement, nor its value to be accounted for afterwards. The intention of the donor controls and gives character to his donation, and it is his indisputable right in his life time as well as at his death, to dispose of his estate among his children and to bestow it in unequal proportions among them or to exclude them altogether, if he shall so elect.
In James v. James,
3. The counsel further insisted, and presses the argument before us, that the transaction is in form and effect a sale, and that the surrender of the note is an advancement of its value as personalty, and relies uponBridgers v. Hutchings, 11 Ired., 68, and Hanner v. Winburn, 7 Ired., Eq., 142. The principle decided in those cases does not apply to the facts of this, nor to the ruling of the court thereon. The instruction is in effect this: If the original understanding of the parties contemplated the giving and subsequent surrender of the note as the consummation of the matter and as a means of freeing the donee from liability to account for the land, it would not be an advancement of the value of the note. We fully concur in the correctness of this ruling and the ground on which it is placed. But a sufficient answer to the objection is that the defendants allege an advancement in land and no other, and the issue is confined to that inquiry alone. No amendment was asked to present the question of an advancement of personal estate, nor issue to correspond with it, and hence the matter was wholly outside the controversy. Furthermore, the condition of the intestate's personal estate is not ascertained, and it is only when the gift to a child exceeds his share in that fund that the excess is transferred and its value charged in the division of the real estate among the heirs. Bat. Rev., ch. 36, rule 2.
4. The defendants urge also that the conduct and repeated disclaimers of the plaintiff, Irvin Melvin, are an estoppel, and forbid his assertion to any right or interest in the inheritance. This evidence was received and may have been admissible as bearing upon the question of the donor's intent and the character impressed upon his conveyance. It certainly was incompetent to create an estoppel and transfer an estate in the land. There is no element of an estoppel in the facts testified to as defined by READE, J., in Holmes v. Crowell,
Mere words, however often uttered, do not convey an interest in land or extinguish a legal right thereto, unless when another, acting upon the representations, has been induced to part with something of value, or assumed obligations, and it would be a fraud upon him to allow the party afterwards to assert a claim or title to his injury. Such is not the present case.
No error. Affirmed.