Opinion by
Plaintiff filed a bill in equity, February 10,1916, praying cancellation of a deed, dated November 27, 1880, conveying certain property to defendant, an injunction against alienation or encumbrances, an accounting of income, and general relief. After hearing on bill and
For purposes of the present review, the essential averments of the bill may be stated as follows: Plaintiff and defendant were married November 27, 1880, and lived together as man and wife continuously to the time of trial, having had two children born to them; on the day of the marriage, and just prior to that event, defendant told plaintiff “he had a paper for her to sign,” and thereupon took her to the office of a justice of the peace, where she executed and acknowledged the document here in controversy; “according to representations then made by said defendant,” plaintiff was told “the only effect of [her] signature......on said paper would be to give defendant permission to transact business in her name,” and “by reason of the confidence [plaintiff] had in said defendant, because of... .„. .their approaching marriage, she was induced to sign the said paper, believing...... it simply gave said defendant power to transact whatever business was demanded in connection with her estate” ; in “the year 1910” plaintiff “learned for the first time that the paper signed by her was not as represented ......, but was a deed conveying all her estate, real and personal, to said defendant” (a copy of this instrument, naming $5,000 as the moving consideration, being attached to the bill); thereupon plaintiff “made demand on defendant to convey the said estate, together with the accrued income thereof, back to her......, but said defendant refused and still refuses so to do”; finally, “said deed was obtained......by false and fraudulent misrepresentations made by defendant, and was without consideration.”
The answer admits execution of the deed just prior to the marriage, and the “trust and confidence” then existing between plaintiff and defendant as man and woman about to marry, but denies that the latter misrepresented the character and effect of the document, or that he at any time represented it as “anything other than it
In all material particulars, the findings of the court below accord with the allegations of the bill.
The decree appealed from orders defendant to reconvey to his wife, “free of all encumbrances, in fee simple, all of the land and property described in said deed, subject, however, to such conveyances as......[had been] made to third persons,” and, reciting that defendant “has by an accounting......been found to have in his hands $32,275.89......, property of plaintiff, which he, the defendant, holds for her as trustee ex maleficio,” directs him “to pay over the said amount to her,” judgment for the sum named being thereby ordered against defendant; this is accompanied by an injunction, to insure a proper reconveyance.
We shall discuss and determine the several questions presented according to the order in which they are stated in defendant’s paper book.
It is contended that plaintiff is incompetent as a witness in her own behalf, because the deed in controversy was executed prior to her marriage, and, therefore, at
Appellant further contends that, since this was a proceeding in equity to set aside a conveyance, absolute in form, it could be done only by the testimony of two witnesses, or one with corroborating circumstances; and that this rule had not been met in the present instance. The learned court below found the testimony of the wife had been sufficiently corroborated by certain of her own witnesses to meet the requirements of the rule in question ; but, under the circumstances of this case, it is not necessary to go into a discussion of the merits of that conclusion, for, notwithstanding defendant’s claim that the deed under attack conveyed to him an absolute title, and was intended so to do, when Mr. Monish appeared as a witness in his own behalf, he admitted not only that no consideration had passed from him, but that the deed, although absolute in form, was made upon the understanding that he was to take over and handle the property thereby conveyed in order to protect his wife’s interests and facilitate a settlement of the estate of her father, from whom the property had been inherited, and to invest the coal royalties and other income therefrom — such “property to be kept for our children, if we had any in the future, and that the coal royalty I should invest where it wouldn’t be squandered or spent.” He further testified the understanding between him and plaintiff, at the execution of the deed, was that the property, and
The averments of both bill and answer are somewhat loos'ely drawn, and must be judged accordingly; but it is plain the material allegations of the former are (1), that the paper under attack was never intended to take effect as a deed absolute, and (2) that defendant purposely deceived plaintiff as to the form and character of this document, when he induced her to sign it. The answer denies both allegations; but, as just shown, defendant, at trial, practically admitted the first and most material of them, although not the second. Under these circumstances, it requires no citation of authority to show that defendant cannot in good faith assert against his wife that the property in controversy now belongs to him; nor can his counsel successfully argue that plaintiff’s case must fall because she was the sole witness on her side who gave direct testimony as to what occurred at the time the deed was made.
The two-witness rule does not require that every detail of one witness’s testimony must be verified by the direct evidence of another, but only that a litigant’s material, or controlling, allegations must be sustained by either one other witness or equivalent corroborating circumstances (Miller v. Pearce, 6 W. & S. 97, 99, 100; Lingenfelter v. Ritchey,
In addition to urging that the two-witness rule has been complied with, plaintiff (citing Kline v. Kline,
The best considered decisions upon the subject in hand, even since the Married Woman’s Property Acts, are to the effect that, owing to the social importance of maintaining the family relation, in suits between a wife and her husband for the protection of the former’s property, statutes of limitation, as also presumptions or estoppels by lapse of time do not ordinarily affect the rights of the wife, since she cannot be expected to treat her husband as a stranger; as certain courts have well said, any other policy would be apt to beget disagreements and contentions in the family fatal to domestic peace: Bowie v. Stonestreet,
In addition to authorities already cited, as to the effect of the husband’s acknowledgment of his wife’s equitable title upon the former’s claim that the latter’s suit was barred, see Miller v. Baker,
Both sides are dissatisfied with the surcharges of income against defendant; on the accounting, he was held liable for, and surcharged with, coal royalties received by him from plaintiff’s lands. The court below has found, on sufficient evidence, that, under the trust here involved, these royalties were to be collected and put at interest by defendant for the benefit of his wife and children, and, as a matter of fact, they were accumulated and invested by him; therefore it becomes unimportant whether or not the property from which the royalties arose was an open mine at the time of the deed to Mr. Morrish — in other words, whether the money thus derived represents principal or income. The remaining points argued by defendant are without merit, and require no special notice.
All assignments of erfor are overruled, the decree is affirmed, and both appeals are dismissed at the cost of the respective appellants.
