Miles v. Robertson

258 Mo. 717 | Mo. | 1914

BROWN, C. —

This action was begun in the circuit court for Phelps county July 2, 1910, to secure the determination by the court of the interests of the respective parties in about 170 acres of land in that county. There was also a separate count for partition of the same land. The plaintiffs are Lulu E. Miles and Ida M. Collins, who state that they are the owners of an undivided 140-840 of the land; and the defendants are Martha E. Robertson, alleged to be the owner of an undivided 649-840; John Hale 20-840; Maude Roster of 10-840; and Walter Beeler, Grace Beeler and Homer Beeler of 7-840 each.

The respective titles of the parties are stated as follows:

“That on the 15th day of January, A. D. 1909, Albert C. Robertson departed this life intestate at Phelps county, Missouri, seized and possessed of the *721fee simple title to the above-described real property; that the said Albert C. Robertson left surviving Mm no widow or children, and no father or mother, but leaving as his sole and only heirs, Ms sister, the defendant, Martha E. Robertson; Ms sister, Margaret Love, and Ms sister, Mary Blain; and the plaintiffs, Lulu L. Miles, formerly Robertson, and Ida M. Collins, formerly Robertson, only eMldren and heirs of W. E. Robertson, a brother of Albert C. Robertson; and W. R. Hale, John Hale, A. B. Hale, Samuel Hale, Caroline Hale, who intermarried with one Parry, eMldren of Sarah Hale; and Walter Yowell, Otto Roster and Maude Roster, grandeMldren of Sarah Hale, composing the sole and only heirs at law of Sarah Hale, sister of the deceased Albert C. Robertson; and B. F. Wood, PI. W. Wood and Dora Wood, eMldren of Lucinda Wood; and Ubert Beeler, Walter Beeler, Emma Beeler, Grace Beeler, and Homer Beeler, grandeMldren of Lucinda Wood, deceased, a sister of the said Albert C. Robertson, deceased, composing the sole and only heirs of the said. Lucinda Wood.
“That the following named heirs of the said Albert C. Robertson have conveyed their interest in the above real estate to Martha E. Robertson, to-wit: Margaret Love, Mary A. Blain, W. R. Hale, A. B. Hale, Samuel Hale, Caroline Hale, B. F. Wood, H. W. Wood, Dora, Wood, Walter E. Yowell, Otto Roster, Ubert Beeler, Elma Beeler and Crawford Beeler, whereby said defendant, Martha E. Robertson, has acquired the-undivided 649-840 interest in said land.” •

The petition further states that the defendant Martha E. Robertson is in possession claiming the-entire title. The three Beelers, defendants, were-minors and non-residents of the State. They answered, through their guardians ad litem, disclaiming knowledge or information of the facts. Martha E. Robertson demed the allegations of the petition and set up that *722■she was the owner of the entire title. The other two-defendants did not answer, nor have they appealed.

The plaintiffs replied to the answer of Martha E. Robertson that she claimed absolute ownership under a “purported” deed from A. C. Robertson which was without consideration and had never been delivered.

On the trial Martha E. Robertson admitted that she claimed title to the land as grantee of A. C. Robertson who died January 15, 1909. The deed was introduced in evidence. It was dated June 17, 1899. It conveyed the land in question, with the usual covenants of an indefeasible title in fee and against incumbrances and was witnessed by W. E. Yowell, the same mentioned in the petition as an heir of A. C. Robertson, and by one S. M. Lorts. It was acknowledged before Robert C. Carpenter, notary public for Phelps county, and recorded January 23, 1909.

The real and only question is upon the delivery of the deed. The evidence, about which there was no dispute, was to the effect that Mr. Robertson was a bachelor who at the time of the execution of the deed was old and feeble and described himself as not having long to live. Miss Robertson was a spinster well advanced in years, although not as old as her brother, and had always lived with and kept house for him, except during fourteen years when she was at work in Montana for monthly wages. Upon her return she again went to live with and keep house for her brother, investing about $1500 which she had acquired, in the improvements on this farm, which was their home. On the morning of the day the deed was made he told her that he would go into St. James and fix the deed for her. When he came back, which was before noon, he came through the house 'and presented her the deed saying, “Here is your deed.” He further said, “take it and lay it away and let it lay there until the change comes, and if I have to go first you will have something to secure you a home, and if you die first I will *723make you secure. The land then still remains in me.” He said, “I am old and am liable to go first, but the deed is yours.” In answer to a question by plaintiff’s counsel Miss Robertson said that she took his intention to be that if she died first he would still have the land. He told her to put the deed in her trunk. She put it in the till and he never saw where it was put. She saw it three or four times afterward. She said that he said to her that the deed would hold until after he was gone, and then have it recorded, which she did.

After the making of this deed he sold the land and personal property on it to a Swiss who lived in St. Louis named Meinschmidt, for $3500, conveying it himself, and taking a deed of trust for three thousand dollars of the consideration in his own name. Meinschmidt did not pay for it and Robertson took it back, and he and Miss Robertson both “came back home.” They were gone a year. Mr. Robertson always had the land assessed in his name but Miss Robertson paid a good part of the taxes. Mr. Robertson always managed it. When he sold to Meinschmidt he was to pay her out of the proceeds, the money she had expended on the farm, and used there after coming home from Montana.

About three days after Mr. Robertson’s death Mr. Yowell, the nephew, came out to see her and she gave him the deed to have it recorded as her brother had told her. Mr. Yowell then saw Mr. Jones, alawyer, who told him that the deed was not a proper deed, and the quicker she could get around and get quitclaim deeds the better. Her nephew looked after this, and most of the deeds were offered without any consideration. „She asked Mrs. Dora Wood, Mrs. Love and Mrs. Blain what consideration they wanted, and they said nothing; but she gave them $25 each.

Mr. R. C. Carpenter, before whom the deed was executed and who took the acknowledgment, testified that Robertson gave him as a reason for making it that his sister had let him have some money and other *724valuable things and he wanted to secure her or reimburse her for the outlay.

The court found for the defendants and dismissed the petition.

of6 DeeT The only question suggested by the record .relates to the delivery of the deed around which this contest is waged. If it was delivered to the grantee there can be no doubt the judgment of the trial court is right, and should be affirmed; otherwise, it must be reversed. The consideration of the question seems remarkably free from a difficulty which frequently characterizes such inquiries, for we have carefully examined the testimony without gathering from it any impression that the parties, irrespective of their personal interests, have not attempted to fully and fairly place before us the true facts. Neither can it be denied that the disposition made by the judgment of the trial court was the one intended by both the grantor and the grantee. Nor will the natural justice and propriety be questioned, of an arrangement by which the home acquired by the joint labor of this brother and sister, and in which they had laid the hearthstone around which the sentiment. of their lives had been warmed into memories of each other, should remain to the one who would be left alone. The question is whether these parties have disregarded rules of conduct which the law has established to guard against the defeat of justice, and thereby caused the miscarriage of their own laudable purpose.

The question of the delivery of a deed is often a difficult one. It has been said that it may be shown by acts without words, or words without acts, or by both combined; and it may take place and the deed still remain in the possession of the grantor. [Bunnell v. Bunnell, 111 Ky. 566, and cases there cited; Burke v. Adams, 80 Mo. 504.] The underlying principle in all these cases is the expression of the intention of the parties that words or acts, or words and acts that fall *725•short of the actual transfer of the physical custody of and dominion over, the instrument, from the grantor to the grantee, beyond the power of the former to recall it, shall be considered equivalent to ' such transfer. When the actual tradition takes place, the delivery by the grantor into the hands of the grantee to serve the purpose for which it is made, there is no further use for fiction or construction. The instrument by that final act of its execution becomes “ipso facto the present deed •of the party, which could not be if the deed were not in itself perfect and complete as an instrument according to the intention of the parties as gathered from the instrument itself.” [Hicks v. Goode, 12 Leigh, 479.] As was said by this court through Judge Lamm, in Chambers v. Chambers, 227 Mo. 262, “delivery is the life of a deed.” It is consummated when the grantor, to give it some effect, transfers his possession and dominion over it to the grantee, who receives and accepts it. Thenceforth the instrument speaks for itself, free from any conditions or limitations not written in or upon it. Its effect depends upon the law, with reference to which it is presumed to have been made and which the parties are presumed to have known. Its delivery, like its signing, has reference to and is coextensive with the instrument itself. It would be as reasonable to say that a promissory note had not taken effect by delivery because there was, as there frequently is in such' cases, a contemporaneous understanding that payment was not to be exacted at maturity, but that it was to be renewed from time to time to suit the convenience of the maker. Such understandings are usually scrupulously kept, as was the understanding in this case; but in the meantime the instrument itself goes forth bearing the evidence of its own validity, as well as the rule of its own construction. The remarks of the New York Court of Appeals on this subject in Worrall v. Munn, 5 N. Y. (1 Selden) 229, 238, are instructive and interesting. It said: “The agree*726ment was in a perfect condition. It was signed and sealed by Prall.. It was delivered on condition' that it be subsequently approved by Prall. This was a delivery as an escrow: such a delivery can only be made to a stranger. It cannot be made to the party. If made to the party, no matter what may be the form of the words, the delivery is absolute, and the deed takes effect presently as the deed of the grantor, discharged of the conditions upon which the delivery was made; and where such a delivery is made, parol evidence of the conditions, being contrary to the terms of the deed, is inadmissible. Here the intent of Warner was to deliver the agreement to the appellant as an escrow. It was not handed to Henry Worrall as an unexecuted and imperfect paper. There was no direction to him to retain it and not to deliver it to the appellant until it was ratified by Prall. It was not left in his hands for a temporary purpose, and to be returned in case Prall did not assent to it, but it was delivered to Henry Worrall, as the agent of the appellant, as an executed and perfect instrument, on condition that Prall subsequently assented to it. Such a delivery was in law an absolute delivery. [Ward v. Lewis, 4 Pick. 520; Fairbanks v. Metcalf, 8 Mass. 238; Gilbert v. Ins. Co., 23 Wend. 45; Clark v. Gifford, 10 Wend. 313.]”

This grantor made, signed and acknowledged a general warranty deed, conveying the land in question to Miss Robertson. He gaVe it to her with the statement that it was hers; and said it would make her secure. That he intended that it would have some effect — accomplish some purpose — is too evident to afford a subject of intelligent discussion. That is enough; and, as we have already said, the law directs us to the deed for further information on that question. Whatever of restrictive understanding there was between them has been faithfully kept, and the law inter*727poses no obstacle to the accomplishment of the desire of both the living and the dead.

The judgment of the Phelps Circuit Court is affirmed.

Blair, C., concurs.. PEE CURIAM. —

The foregoing opinion of Brown, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.

All concur, Bond, J., in the result.
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