88 P. 738 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Two principal questions are involved herein: (1) Was the instrument which was executed and acknowledged by Mrs. Smith in the form of a deed to Pearly from her, and which was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county wherein the land was situated, really a deed which conveyed a present interest in the land, or was it a will, designed- only to convey the land to Pearly after the death of her mother? The instrument was not drawn- in the form of, nor witnessed, as, a will, but in the form of a deed, although it was evidently written by one who had some knowledge of legal forms. It was acknowledged and recorded as a deed, it is to be presumed that the mother caused it to be recorded and paid the fees therefor,. as the child could not be presumed to have done this, and she could not have delivered the deed for record if it had not previously been delivered to her. All these facts, while not conclusive, were entitled to some weight with the court.
The first consideration, however, is the instrument itself. The granting clause is complete, in the usual form -of a conveyance of a present interest in fee simple; the exception is of a lifetime lease on the land. The mother was then in the possession of the land, and continued so thereafter for-about fifteen years and until her death. No third party ever claimed any rights thereto under a lease. This exception, therefore, should be construed as the reservation of a life-estate in the mother. In the same sentence with this reservation, and separated therefrom only by a comma, is this clause: “In three days after the said party of the first part is deceased this deed shall be in full force.” We think this should be construed as an extension of the life-estate, or as defining when the grantee in the
In Powers v. Scharling, 64 Kan. 339, 67 Pac. 821, Mr. Justice Greene, speaking for the court, said:
“In determining whether an instrument be a deed or a will the question is, Did the maker intend to convey any estate or interest whatever to vest before his death and upon the execution of the paper? Or, on the other hand, did he intend that all the interest and estate should take effect only after his death ? If the former, it is a deed; if the latter, a will.” (Page 343.)
In Durand v. Higgins, supra, the grantor took back, in a collateral agreement, the full control of the real estate conveyed by the deed during his lifetime, with the right to sell or convey as if the deed had not been given; also, it was stipulated that the grantees should not convey without his written consent, and should sign all deeds for the property when so requested by him. This court, construing the deed and contract together as one transaction, held that the deed conveyed a present estate, was not testamentary, and could not be revoked at the will of the grantor.' It was also said in that case to be hornbook law that if there be repugnant clauses between the premises and the habendum in a deed of conveyance the former must prevail; that “the habendum may lessen, enlarge, explain, or qualify, but not totally contradict, or be repugnant to, the estate granted in the premises.” (Page 124.) Following this well-recognized principle, we must hold that the deed in question by its terms conveyed an estate in fee
(2) Was the deed ever delivered so as to become effective? It is, of course, the general rule that a deed does not effect the conveyance of the real estate described therein until it is delivered by the grantor to the grantee and is accepted by the latter; though this does not always mean á manual delivery nor an express acceptance. There is no evidence in this case of either such a delivery or such an acceptance, but on the contrary the circumstances seem to negative the idea that either actual delivery or acceptance occurred. Yet we think the presumption of- the delivery arising from the recording of the deed supplies the .place of proof of manual delivery, and the fact that the conveyance was beneficial to a child of such tender years as to be incapable of ail intelligent acceptance or rejection of the deed raises the presumption of acceptance and obviates the necessity of proof thereof. (Tobin v. Bass, 85 Mo. 654, 55 Am. Rep. 392; Stow v. Miller, 16 Iowa, 460; Scrugham v. Wood, 15 Wend. [N. Y.] 545, 30 Am. Dec. 75; Souverbye v. Arden, 1 Johns. Ch. [N. Y.] 240; Tiedeman, Real Prop. § 814; Cecil v. Beaver, 28 Iowa, 241, 245, 4 Am. Rep. 174; Compton v. White, 86 Mich. 33, 48 N. W. 635.) Following this respectable line of authorities, we conclude that the decision of the court, in effect that the deed was delivered and accepted or was valid without actual delivery and acceptance, is right.
A deed was also introduced in evidence from Mrs. Mary A. Smith to her other daughter, Mrs. Pentico, purporting to convey the other forty acres of the eighty-acre tract to Mrs. Pentico. This deed appears to be identical in form and content with the deed to Pearly, except only as to the description of the land conveyed and the. name of the grantee. This deed also appears to have been executed, acknowledged and recorded at the same times respectively as was the deed
The plaintiffs in error, however, complain that the court rejected the evidence offered by them of declarations of the mother, on the day after the recording of the deeds, that they were recorded against her wishes and without her consent. This was not a part of the res gestae nor a declaration against her interest at a time when she held the title to the land. It was clearly hearsay, as was also the offered proof of the statements of the mother, made after Pearly and her husband had deeded the land to Hays, as to her (the mother’s) understanding as to when her deed to Pearly was to take effect.
•The other objections to the exclusion of evidence we have examined, and find no material error therein.
As before said, the presumption is that Mrs. Smith caused Pearly’s deed to be placed of record, in the absence of proof to the contrary. Thereupon the status of the parties to the land became fixed, and nothing Mrs. Smith could say or do thereafter except by a legal proceeding could change that status.' If it was not in fact her intention to convey the land to Pearly, and if the recording of the deed occurred through fraud or mistake, she was not without a remedy. Knowing all the facts, however, including the recording of the deed, she remained silent and apparently acquiescent for about thirteen years, and until after Hays had bought the land from Pearly, and had paid for it, presumably. She then undertook to will the land to Mrs. Pentico. The situation savors strongly of an estoppel, both as to Mrs. Smith and as to her would-be devisee by the will.
The judgment is affirmed.