16 App. D.C. 161 | D.C. Cir. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The bill in this case was filed by the appellant, Johanna O’Connell, against the appellees, John W. Koob, John A. Schaeffer and William R. McOloskey, the two latter as trustees, for the purpose of having a certain deed made to John W. Koob reformed, and a trust in respect thereof declared, and for an account, etc. The court below, upon the pleadings and proof, dismissed the bill; and the complainant has appealed.
It is alleged in the bill that the complainant is a widow; that her husband, Jeremiah O’Connell, died in March, 1878, intestate, leaving her with two children, namely, Jeremiah A. O’Connell _ and Maggie C. O’Connell, and that the last named child, Maggie, married and became the wife of John W. Koob. That the husband of the complainant, at the time of his death, was seized of the north one-half of lot 29, in square 624, in the city of Washington, D. C., which was subject to a deed of trust, in which she had joined, and thereby conveyed her contingent right of dower. That on or about April 15, 1896, the two’ children, being desirous that complainant should not be deprived of all interest in the property, agreed to convey to her an undivided one-third interest therein, and, in pursuance of such agreement, by deed dated April 17, 1896, conveyed such undivided one-third interest to complainant; that, by deed of the same date, for and in consideration of $600, Jeremiah A. O’Connell, the son, conveyed all his undivided one-third share or interest in the property to his sister, Maggie C. Koob.
It is further alleged that, on or about the date of the above mentioned conveyances, the defendant, John W. Koob, in whose house and with whose. family the complainant resided and had her home, represented to her that in order to pay to the son, Jeremiah A. O’Connell, the $600 for his interest in the property, it would be necessary for
The relief prayed is that the defendant Koob be decreed to hold an undivided one-third interest in said property in trust for the complainant, her heirs and assigns; that he be required to pay off and discharge the last mentioned mortgage or deed of trust, and in default of such payment and in the event of a sale under said deed of trust, that the interest of said Koob in the property be first applied to the payment of said indebtedness, and that he be required to account for one-third of the rents collected since April 17> 1896; and for general relief.
The complainant did not call for answers from the defendants under oath, but in express terms waived the oath. The defendant Koob filed a separate answer, and the other two defendants filed a joint answer.
The defendant Koob, by his answer, admits the relationship of the parties as stated in the bill; the dying seized of the property by the husband of the complainant as charged; and the making of the several conveyances as set forth in the bill; that the complainant occupied the property for
The other defendants say that they are without knowledge of any of the matters and things charged in the bill, except the fact of the release of the deed of trust for $650, made by the defendant Koob, and the making of the deed of trust of the 13th of August, 1897, to them as trustees, to secure a loan of $1,700 made by the National Permanent
Replications were entered to the answers, and proof was taken on behalf of both sides. And the principal, indeed the only real question in the case on the pleadings, is, whether the deed executed by the complainant, jointly with her daughter, to Howard C. Wall is such as it was intended and supposed to be by the complainant at the time of making the same, or whether the deed is-different in its nature and character from that intended and supposed to have been executed.
The claim set up by the defendant Koob is, that the conveyance by the mother in law and his wife to Wall is, and was intended to be, an absolute donation and transfer to him, the defendant, of the property embraced in the deed? and that there was no question of trust suggested or intimated. Of course, it is not alleged or contended that the deed to Wall, so far' as it operated upon and was intended to convey the undivided two-thirds of the property, then vested in Maggie 0. Koob, the wife, was intended to have the form of a deed of trust instead of an absolute deed. Wall was only an intermediary, and his deed to Koob only carried the title that he derived from the complainant and her daughter, to be at once conveyed to Koob, the husband. The complainant was examined as a witness on her own behalf, and she swears positively that her intention and purpose was to execute a deed of trust only, and not an absolute deed to Koob — that the object of the trust was to enable Koob to raise the purchase money, amounting to $600, to pay Jeremiah A. O’Connell for his interest in the property conveyed to his sister. But the inquiry is suggested, in respect to such a trust, why should the complainant have joined her daughter in the deed to enable the husband to raise the purchase money to be paid 'to Jeremiah, when the daughter owned two-thirds of the property ? The $600 could have been raised on the daughter’s interest, without pledging the one-third interest that had been then
There are, however, several circumstances in this case which are’ not disputed, and which are much relied on by the counsel for the complainant, and which are of a nature to require the relative situation of the parties to be considered, especially in regard to the burden of proof to show bona fides in the transaction. Prominent among these is the fact that the complainant is, and was at the time of making the deed, a woman of advanced years in life, and was very illiterate — so much so that she can neither read nor write; and being in that condition of comparative disqualification for business, she was more or less dependent upon those in whom she confided for proper advice and guidance in her business affairs. Then, she lived with the defendant and his wife, as a member of his family, and their relations were of a friendly nature. It is admitted that she confided in the defendant, and that the small business that she had was attended to by him; and that, in regard to the particular transaction in question, she had no independent counsel or adviser upon whom to rely. In addition to this, it is admitted that the attorney who was the draftsman of the deed executed by the complainant, was the
But there are other elements of the case that must be considered in connection with those just mentioned; and those are, that courts of equity, as well as courts of law, act upon the ground that every person who is not, from his peculiar condition or circumstances, under disability, is entitled to dispose of his property in such manner and upon such terms as he chooses; and whether his bargains are wise and discreet, or otherwise, or profitable or unprofitable, are considerations not for courts of justice, but for the party himself to deliberate upon. Eyre v. Potter, 15 How. 42, 59, 60. Hence, it is a well established rule in equity jurisprudence that, in the case of a stranger, or a person that stands in the relation of a stranger, and not in any confidential or fiduciary relation towards the maker of the deed or instrument in question, equity will not set aside a voluntary deed or donation, however improvident it may be, if it be free from the imputation of fraud, surprise,undue influence, and it be spontaneously executed or made by the grantor or donor with full information as to the effect of the instrument brought into question. But, on the other hand, it is equally well settled, that in all cases where it has been proved that a person standing in the relation of a stranger to the donor or grantor, and not in any peculiar or fiduciary relation from which undue influence can be inferred, has either by fraud, surprise, misrepresentation or undue influence, obtained from the party complaining what would
It may, however, be laid down as settled doctrine, that even in the absence of any special relation between the parties, where a person gains a great and manifest advantage over another by a voluntary instrument, the burden of proof is undoubtedly thrown upon the person receiving the benefit, and he is under the necessity of showing that the transaction is fair and honest; for although the court never prevents one person from being the voluntary object of the bounty of another, yet it must be shown that the bounty was purely voluntary, and not produced by any undue influence or misrepresentation, which the court views in all cases with the utmost abhorrence. Billage v. Southee, 9 Hare, 534, 540; Blackie v. Clark, 15 Beav. 595, 600; Cook v. Lamotte, 15 Beav. 234; Allen v. Davis, 4 DeG. & Sm. 133 ; Price v. Price, 1 DeG., Mac. & G. 308; 3 Lead. Cas. Eq. 122.
How, then, does this case stand upon the proof? As we have already stated, the complainant is the only witness in support of her case, and she is positively contradicted in respect to many of the material facts alleged in her bill.
Previous to and at the time of the execution of these deeds, the relations between the complainant and her son, Jeremiah, were unpleasant and unfriendly, and the complainant was living with the defendant and his wife, on very amicable terms, though that relation with the defendant
In the case of Harris v. Tremenheare, 15 Ves. 34, 40, where a person unacquainted with business, an invalid, and incapable of attending to his affairs, granted to an attorney, who was distantly related to him, and was his own steward, as he had been his father’s, several leases for long terms, at nominal rents, it was strongly contended that this attorney and steward ought to prove that- he had explained to the client what he was doing, and to have had a third person interposed; but the court said that there was no authority for holding that he could not take such leases as a pure gift from his employer. “ If,” said Lord Eldon, “ I could find in the answer or evidence the slightest hint that the defendant laid before the testator any account of the value of the premises that was not perfectly accurate, that would induce me to set the leases aside, whatever the parties intended, upon the general ground that the principal never
In the case of Pratt v. Barker, 1 Sim. 1, the court refused to set aside a voluntary deed executed by an old and infirm man in favor of a person who had attended him as a surgeon, and received the dividends of some stock for him; it appearing that the nature and effect of the deed were fully explained to the grantor by his solicitor, before he executed it, and that no undue influence had been exercised over him. This decision was made by Sir John Leach, vice chancellor, and upon appeal to the lord chancellor, the decision was affirmed for the reasons assigned by the vice chancellor. 4 Russ. 507.
These cases, and also many others, were reviewed and approved by Lord Chancellor Brougham, in his elaborate judgment in the case of Hunter v. Atkins, 3 My. & K. 113, 135, which has become a leading authority upon this subject in the English chancery.
The case of Eyre et al. v. Potter et al., 15 How. 42, contains many circumstances closely analogous to those presented by the present case. That was a case where a widow filed a bill in equity, complaining that immediately upon the death of her husband, the son of the husband, together with another person, had imposed upon her by false representations, and induced her to part with all her right in her husband’s estate for an inadequate price; but upon the proof in the case the bill was dismissed.
In that case it was alleged and attempted to be shown that the complainant was an aged and infirm woman, predisposed to nervous affections, and wholly inexperienced in the transaction of business, and that, whilst she was sick and oppressed with affliction and infirmity, the defendant, the son of the deceased husband, professing great sympathy and affection for her, availed himself of her distressed condition, and her ignorance of the value of the estate, with
But, by the answer and the evidence in the case, it was shown that the complainant was a woman of good capacity, and that she well knew the condition of her late husband’s estate, and that she had not been in any manner deceived in regard thereto by the defendants, or either of them; that she fully understood the nature of the transaction between herself and Potter, the defendant, and had expressed herself entirely content therewith. The bill was dismissed by the circuit court, and that decision was affirmed by the Supreme Court.
In the present case, the proof produced on the part of the defendant Koob (unless it be disbelieved and put aside), is simply overwhelming to the effect that, while conceding that the complainant is illiterate and unable to read or write, and that her relations with the defendant Koob were of a confidential nature, yet the deed executed by her was explained to her by both the draftsman and the officer taking her acknowledgement thereto, and that she fully understood the whole transaction. Her own testimony standing alone with its contradictions and apparent inconsistencies, can not, as opposed to the testimony produced by the defendant, afford the foundation for the relief prayed for in the bill.
The decree appealed from must be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Decree affirmed.