88 W. Va. 135 | W. Va. | 1921
The bill is to enforce specific performance of an alleged verbal gift by W. M. Moss to his son James M. Moss in June, 1903, of a tract containing about 85 acres of land in Calhoun County. The decree complained of by defendants W. M. Moss and his wife Mary S., plaintiff’s stepmother, did not grant the prayer of the bill, but treated the father as holding the title to the land in trust for himself and his son in the proportions of 530/1658 and 1128/1658, respectively, and provided that if the son should, within thirty days from its date, pay the father $530, he and his wife should within ten days thereafter convey the title to the son by an apt and proper deed; and that if the son should, within the time limit so fixed, fail to pay the $530, the father should have the option, within the next ensuing thirty-day period, to pay the son $1,128, whereupon the latter should convey all his right, title and interest in the land to the father; and in the event that neither father nor son should desire to purchase the interest of the other, the land was to be sold and the proceeds divided between the parties in the proportions named above.
The bill and no other pleading prayed for the relief granted, and no evidence introduced by either party warranted it in that form. In other words, if plaintiff was entitled to the land, the court by its decree should have vindicated that right, and if not so entitled, should have dismissed the bill. The cause presents but one of the two alternatives and no other. There is, therefore, but one question to be decided, that is, whether plaintiff by his evidence has made a case warranting the relief he seeks.
Apparently the court had serious doubt whether the evidence was sufficient to support a decree for specific performance, conceding the bill to be unobjectionable on any ground of proper challenge and that equity has jurisdiction to enforce a parol gift of land; on neither of which propositions is there any room for doubt where the intended beneficiary has entered into possession by virtue of the preconceived gratuity, made substantial improvements, and complied with
Plaintiff did enter upon the land in June, 1903, soon after his marriage, or, to be more exact, continued to reside thereon with his father as he had been doing since the latter acquired the property in 1901, and has thenceforward, he says, retained exclusive possession without let or hindrance from any source, and now retains it as against his father subject to the requirement for a deed of grant therefor, the right to which now depends upon the just determination of this cause. That he has continued to reside thereon during the period stated, excepting about nine months, when for prudential reasons, as he attempts to explain, he resided elsewhere, but in the meantime tilled and used it, seems to be conceded, with this reservation, that the father relies upon the nine months’ absence as a virtual abandonment of the premises. Whether the latter can or cannot derive any substantial advantage from the temporary absence from the land for residential purposes, or predicate thereon right to withhold a deed of grant on that account, it is not necessary to say: (1) Because the son reestablished his residence on the land at the end of the nine months’ period with the knowledge of the father and without objection by him;, and (2) it is not denied that the son retained at least a qualified or constructive control during the interim. ,
It is the character of plaintiff’s possession and not the fact of possession about which there is such a wide and apparently irreconcilable disagreement, and on the determination of which depends the proper adjudication of the respective rights of the parties. In other words, there is no question as to plaintiff’s right to occupy the land during the life of his father and stepmother, but this right of occupancy, the father contends, is subject to his right to control and exercise such dominion over the land as he may de'sire or deem necessary for the use of himself and wife while living, and upon the death of both to become and remain the property of the son.
As already noted, both families continued to reside on the 85 acres until defendants moved to the 31-acre parcel where their residence now is, and since their departure plaintiff has occupied the home thus left vacant. But the father continued to exercise dominion and control over the larger tract. He leased it for oil and gas purposes, granted a pipe line right of way through it, and to his own use appropriated the rentals for the lease and consideration for the right of way, and paid the taxes assessed against the land. That he paid the taxes the son admits, but accompanies the admission with the explanation that, as the father collected the rentals and compensation for the lease and right of way, he should in return therefor protect the land from the consequences of the delinquency that must have ensued upon their nonpayment, especially since he held the legal title to the 85-ae:fe tract and was chargeable and charged therewith on the landbooks of the county. The testimony as to the facts is grossly conflicting, except that relating to the lease and pipe line easement and the assessment and payment of taxes, as to which there is no dispute.
Judged by the testimony, though in some respects inconsistent, the work and labor performed by the father and son combined did not substantially enhance the value of the land. Some witnesses even express the opinion that it was less valuable after than it was before the labor was performed and money expended upon it. Others also attribute to the son the casual remark that he did not intend to do anything more by way of improving the land than was necessary to support himself and family, because of the uncertainty of his father’s intention to vest the title in him.
The most substantial or at least the most reasonable view of the respective rights of the parties is the agreement predicated upon these facts: Sometime prior to 1900 the father purchased and paid the full consideration for a tract of 51 acres of land in Roane County and caused the deed of grant to be made to 'his wife and two children, plaintiff and his
[However that may be, there is another potent fact to be considered in connection with the conveyance of the 51 acres. There is testimony sufficient to warrant the inference that the promise made by the father on that occasion, and on other occasions when discussing his intention as to the 85-
But defendants contend that even if these facts be not. sufficient to show lack of right to require specific execution, of the contract relied on by plaintiff, the latter afterwards by deed, acting as intermediary between his father and stepmother, vested the fee simple title to the 70% and 85-acre tracts in the latter in 1905, and she later in her husband, W. M. Moss, in February, 1917, through W. M. Price as intermediary, and also that by this act plaintiff recognized the substantial ownership of the 85-acre tract to be in his father. To the participants in this transaction the bill imputes no fraudulent intent, nor. is there proof of an intention to defraud, though plaintiff does show by Price that no consideration was paid or promised to him for the part he took in the latter transaction, and by himself that the purpose of the deed to Mrs. Moss was to protect the property of his father from the probable award against him of a judgment for a fine and costs in the prosecution of an indictment for a felony then pending against him. But even if the bill did seek to impeach these transactions as fraudulent, the allegation to that effect would not avail plaintiff, who, so far as disclosed, voluntarily participated in its consummation. For by the unanimous concurrence of judicial decisions and
There is, it is true, some loose, perhaps exaggerated language attributed to the father by various witnesses, and which by a forced construction, may have led some of them to believe in the existence of an intention and purpose on his part to bestow upon his only son title to the tract now claimed by him. But little of this testimony really warrants even the inference of an intention to part with the title before the death of the father and wife, both of whom now are well advanced in years and no longer able to engage in manual labor as doubtless they once did, for it was in this manner that they were enabled to pay for the land they own. The assistance of the son, then a minor, if any he rendered, was such only as was due from him in discharge of his filial duties.
“To establish an equitable title to land in a child, under a parol gift thereof by the parent, it is necesary to prove, by
From a consideration of all these facts and circumstances, we are of opinion that plaintiff has failed to establish by direct, positive and unambiguous proof that the gift took the form for which he contends. Much testimony supports the
But plaintiff insists that even if he is not entitled at this time, under the evidence, to specific performance of the alleged gift, yet, accepting defendants’ interpretation of the conversation with respect to the 85-acre tract as postponing plaintiff’s right thereto until the death of his father and stepmother, even that right should be protected and safeguarded by a decree requiring them to execute a deed conveying to him the property in question, subject to a life estate reserved for them; this upon the theory that plaintiff’s consent to unite in the deed of 1904, conveying his interest in the Roane County 51 acres, was sufficient consideration to support his father’s oral promise to give him the 85 acres in lieu thereof. But treating this agreement as a contract for the exchange of properties instead of as a parol gift, we are again confronted by the positive inhibition of the statute of frauds, and the same indefiniteness of agreement, want of valuable improvements, and concurrent possession and control with his father, which operated to defeat enforcement of the parol gift, are equally insufficient to justify removal of the statutory bar from the former. Gibson v. Stalnaker, 87 W. Va. 710, 106 S. E. 243, recently decided.
Plaintiff rests his final claim for relief upon the ground that, because of his execution of the deed of 1904 conveying his one-third interest in the Roane County land, previously sold by his father, the consideration from which was in part used by the latter in paying for the 85 acres acquired in 1901, a resulting or constructive trust has arisen in his favor which may be established by parol proof. His eon-
Whatever the date of defendant’s sale of the 51 acres in Roane County, it of course did not affect plaintiff’s title to or interest in it until 1904, when he and his sister executed a deed conveying their right, title and interest to the purchaser. His father already had acquired the legal title to the 85 acres three years prior to the son’s execution of his deed. The fact that the purchaser advanced part or all of the consideration for the 51 acres in reliance upon the father’s assurance that his children would execute a deed on coming of age, and that the father applied part of this money to payment of the purchase price of the 85 acres, cannot aid plaintiff, for he yielded nothing of his interest in the Roane County land till 1904. Even granting that his interest therein was a valuable one, owned by him in his own right, though he paid nothing for it, his father having voluntarily had the deed made to his wife and two1 children jointly while the latter were minors, yet until 1904 he had surrendered no part of it, and before he executed the deed
For these reasons we are of opinion to reverse the decree, dismiss the bill, and award defendants their costs incurred upon this appeal and in the circuit court.
Reversed and bill dismissed.