48 Tenn. 681 | Tenn. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 15th of May, 1860, Reuben Parrott, executed a deed of gift of a tract of land in the county of Claiborne, to his two sons, Ledford and Latney Parrott. This deed was placed in the hands of Henry Beach, who wrote it for the parties. This bill was filed in Chancery at Tazewell, on the 4th of December, 1865, to have said conveyance set aside- and annulled, and the alleged fraudulent registration thereof, declared void, and
It is charged, that the complainant sent for his .near neighbor, the defendant, Henry Beach, to write his will; that Beach having undertaken the task of writing the old man’s will, and having already begun to write the same, advised the complainant that it would be better to convey the lands he intended to give the defendants, Ledford and Latney, by deed. To this the complainant assented, with the understanding, between him and his sons, that, in consideration of the deed, they were to execute and deliver to him a bond, to provide for him and their mother., a home, and an ample support during the remainder of their lives. That the parties agreed that the defendant, Beach, should retain the deed until the bond* was executed; and the delivery of said deed to Beach, Avas as an escrow, without any intention of its surrender to defendants, Ledford and Latney, until they had complied with the conditions upon which it was executed. That, although the deed recites a pecuniary consideration, yet no money was paid, demanded, or contracted to be paid for the land, but that the sole consideration therefor, was the maintenance of the complainant and his wife, during their’ lives, by his said sons, to be secured by the execution of said bond. That
There are other allegations in the bill, of the acts of said Beach and said Ledford, tending to show a combination between them to wrong the complainant; but the case made out in the bill is sufficiently indicated in the foregoing abstract of its charges. The bill prays for an injunction, forbidding the sale, renting or occupation by the said Beach and Ledford, of said land; that the deed be declared null and void, and the registration thereof of no effect; that the deed be delivered up .to be canceled, and for general relief. The defendants are called upon to answer; but the oaths of defendants, Ledford and Beach, are expressly waived. The defendant, Latney, does not answer; but the cause proceeds against him under an order pro confesso. ' The defendants, Ledford Parrott and Henry Beach, file a joint answer, which is sworn to. They deny the fraudulent combination, or the intent of fraudulently combining to wrong the complainant or to deprive him of his land. They insist that the deed was absolute and unconditional; that the agreement to execute the bond was a collateral undertaking; that the deed was delivered to said Beach by his two co-defendants, Ledford and Lat-ney, and not by the complainant. They admit the registration of said deed, and are silent as to the manner thereof; that when the will was in course of preparation, nothing was said as to the support and maintenance of the old people; but when the complainant changed his mind and determined to convey by deed, he at once demanded that the defendants, Ledford and
The decree of the Chancellor was in favor of the complainant. He declared the instrument in question to have been deposited as an escrow; that the registration thereof was fraudulent, void, and of no effect; that the instrument was a nullity; and that the title of the complainant was unaffected by the proceeding. He decreed that the defendants deliver up the' deed to be cancelled, and that defendants, Ledford and Beach, pay all the
We have given to the facts disclosed in this case the most careful consideration. We have endeavored to accord to the conduct of defendants, Beach and Ledford Parrott, the. most charitable construction, and to reconcile it with that integrity of purpose which they claim for themselves in their answer. The result is, that, in every respect, our convictions coincide with those of the Chancellor. It is difficult to imagine a case where a fraudulent purpose^ always conceived in cunning and difficult of proof, has been more successfully demonstrated by a well linked chain of circumstances, than in this case.
We are not fully advised of the complainant’s mental condition at the time of the execution of the deed. The defendants sought to prove that he was of sound mind, but the evidence is evasive and unsatisfactory. One or two of the witnesses, when interrogated as to the state of complainant’s mind at the time, answered that he was “as sound as common;” another, “cannot say that he was sane or insane.” We are informed in the bill, that he is an old and infirm man; and we are left to infer from the proof, that the complainant, naturally credulous and confiding, was rendered none the less an easy victim of imposture by that imbecility of mind which keeps even pace with gathering years. The Court of Chancery, while it guards with jealousy .the rights of all, recognizes .decrepit old age, no less than helpless orphanage, as its peculiar ward. 1 Swan, 474; 5 Sneed, 282; 1 Story Eq. Jur., 237.
But the case is rested, in the bill, not upon any
In the cancellation, rescission or reformation of deeds, or other instruments, for fraud, accident, mistake, or other valid cause, its jurisdiction, founded upon the administration of what is called a “protective or preventive justice,” is unembarrassed, and its remedies complete.
Was the deed handed by the parties to Henry Beach, on the 15th of May, 1860, intended as an absolute deed, to be delivered when called for, to the grantees, or was it deposited with him as an escrow to be delivered as a deed only on the performance of certain conditions? An escrow is concisely defined as a conditional delivery of a deed to a stranger, and not to the grantee himself, until certain conditions shall be performed, and then it is to be delivered to the grantee. Until the condition be performed and the deed delivered over, the estate does not pass, but remains in the grantor. 2 Johns. R.., 248.
The first question by which we are confronted in this case, is, why it is -that for five years or more from the date of the execution of the deed to the time of the filing of the bill, this instrument should have remained
The remark of Beach to the witness, Bowman, is not very clearly defined, but taken in connection with Led-ford’s admission of a sale, and the price, it can mean nothing else than a proposition to take fifty dollars for his bargain. We have it shown, in spite of the denial in the answer and the statements of one or more witnesses, who have evidently forgotten the details of the transaction, that the defendant, Beach, in some unguarded moment, admitted to one of the Bowman’s that he held the deed for the complainant and his two sons, and he also said that he knew how the deed could be taken out of his possession, but he would not tell it. In connection with Beach’s subsequent purchase of Ledford’s
But, if any clearer demonstration of the character of these transactions be necessary, it may be found in the utter silence of the answer as to some of the more serious charges- of a fraudulent complicity, as alleged in the bill; in the fact of the close alliance of the defendants, Beach and Ledford, in regard to the matter from' the beginning to the end; in the fact that they secretly caused the registration of the deed; in the fact that when' the deed was demanded of Beach, his co-defendant, Ledford, forbade its surrender, and he obeyed him; in their negotiations for the sale and purchase of Led-ford’s interest in the land; and in the fact that their solemn asseverations in the answer, that the deed was
We have in this case, an exhibition of filial irreverence and ingratitude, which could ' scarcely hope to escape the severe reprobation of a Court of Chancery. There are certain principles pertaining to the relation of parent and child, that lie at the foundation of social order and domestic happiness, which a court of equity can not disregard in adjusting a litigation between them. “The duties of children to their parents,” says Sir William Blackstone, “arise from a principle of natural justice and retribution; for to those who gave us existence we naturally owe subjection and obedience during our minority, and honor and reverence ever after. They who protected the weakness of our infancy are entitled to our protection in the infirmity of their age; they who, by sustenance and education, have enabled their offspring to prosper, ought, in return, to be supported by that offspring, in case they need assistance. And upon this principle proceed all the duties of children to their parents, which are enjoined by positive laws.” 1 Black. Com., 374.
The decree of the Chancellor in this case, might very well have reposed upon the badges of fraud and the reprehensible conduct of the defendants, already indicated in this opinion. But another remains to be disclosed.
It is proven that the defendant, Ledford Parrott, actually caused the arrest of his father and mother, and
We find no error in the action of the Chancellor, and affirm his decree.