The plaintiff, a contractor and builder, made extensive improvements upon the buildings on the Brown farm, of the value and agreed price of $3,736.75, under a contract with Mrs. Parrott, made by her husband representing her, and this action is brought to impress an equitable lien upon the farm therefor.
John H. Kingsbury was the sole survivor of the firm of Kingsbury Brothers, composed of himself and three brothers, who had always lived upon a farm formerly belonging to their father and which they inherited from him. The three brothers had died intestate, unmarried and without issue; the surviving brother was unmarried and without children. The defendant Mrs. Carter was a sister and the defendants Butterfield, Met-calf and Mrs. Burns, since deceased, were the children of a deceased sister. In 1907 Mrs. Carter brought an action to partition the home farm, and John H. Kingsbury was very
Shortly after the purchase of the Brown farm Parrott and his wife made a contract with plaintiff for extensive improvements upon the farm buildings, which were in bad state of repair, and the repairs were reasonable and necessary. It is clear that when the plaintiff began to repair the buildings Kingsbury knew that the farm was purchased with his money, that the title was in the nameof Mrs. Parrott and that the Parrotts were holding the farm for him. He says Parrott
The plaintiff has increased the value of the Brown form by
The Parrotts are insolvent and the plaintiff can recover nothing unless he can follow the farm. It is inequitable that the grantees of Kingsbury should receive the farm as a. gift and the plaintiff receive no compensation for the improvements. If .no conveyance had been made by Kingsbury the property would have gone at his death to the parties who became his grantees, subject to his just debts. The only effect of the conveyance, therefore, is to deprive the plaintiff of his pay. That was evidently the intention of Kingsbury. It is a reasonable conclusion that the grantees had knowledge of the facts and were aiding him in carrying out his purpose, and believed that by taking the conveyance they were getting the farm free from the debt which Kingsbury rightfully owed for its improvement. The Parrotts had no means of buying the Brown farm, or improving it, except from the moneys received from Kingsbury. From all the facts and from the apparent relations between Kingsbury and the Parrotts, it is immaterial when the plaintiff acquired knowledge of the Butterfield action. If the property was actually given to Parrott, as plaintiff believed, he could hold one-half of the property transferred in spite of the relatives. He knew that Kingsbury knew of the purchase of the farm and the improvements, and was justified in believing that it was done with his knowledge a.nrl consent. The finding, therefore, that the plaintiff did not act in good faith and had knowledge of the action does not prevent his recovery and is not justified by the evidence. He is not seeking to hold the interest which the other defendants had in the property of the Kingsbury Brothers, but is only seeking to hold the property which all concede was the property
The court found that in March, 1907, Kingsbury was seventy-eight years of age, or thereabouts, and was physically and mentally enfeebled and unfit for the proper transaction of business. If this means that he was mentally unable to employ the Parrotts to transact his business for him, to purchase the farm for him and improve it, it must also mean that he had not the capacity to deed the farm to the defendants in this action, and upon that theory he died intestate. The plaintiff was present when the transfer to Parrott was made, at which time Kings-bury had the assistance of counsel. He had the right to believe that the conveyance was valid and for a proper purpose and by a competent grantor. The Butterfield action, when known to the plaintiff, could have indicated to him only that one-half of the property transferred to Parrott might be taken from him. The settlement of that action shows clearly that Kings-bury was entitled to half of the property and the other next of kin of the deceased brothers to the other half. It is not
If we conclude that Kingsbury was incapable of transacting business, and disregard the deed to the defendants, then they received the property not by deed but as his heirs, and under section 101 of the Decedent Estate Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 13; Laws of 1909, chap. 18), which was formerly section 1843 of the Code of Civil Procedure, an action could be brought at the proper time to charge the heirs of the debtor to the extent of the value of the property inherited. Therefore, we may assume that Kingsbury was liable for the plaintiff’s claim, and that he having died leaving no property but the Brown farm, that farpa will eventually be liable for the plaintiff’s claim. But the action was brought in his lifetime to enforce an equitable lien upon the property, and in order to avoid a multiplicity of suits the court having jurisdiction of the matter may now administer justice. If the plaintiff was not proceeding in good faith perhaps he should recover only the amount which his improvements have actually enhanced the value of
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed upon the law and the facts and judgment entered declaring the amount due the plaintiff a lien upon the Brown farm as against the defendants last named and superior to any interest they have therein, together with the costs in the trial court and in this court.
All concurred, except Smith, P. J., not voting.
Judgment reversed on law and facts and judgment directed declaring the amount due the plaintiff a lien upon the Brown farm as against the defendants Carter, Butterfield and Met-calf, and superior to any interest they have therein, together with the costs of the trial court and in this court. The court disapproves of the finding of fact that John H. Kingsbury had no knowledge of the purchase of the Brown farm by the Parrotts, or either of them; also of the 8th, 10th and 11th findings of fact; also of the finding that the said Kingsbury at the time of the transfer to the Parrotts was too physically and mentally enfeebled for the transaction of business, and the court finds that at the time of the settlement between the Parrotts, Kingsbury and the defendants Carter, Bums, Butterfield and Metcalf they all had knowledge of the