13 S.W.2d 813 | Ark. | 1929
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
Mrs. Ida Cottrell brought this suit in equity against W. R. Reddin to enforce the specific performance of a parol contract to convey or to devise to her 280 acres of land, and also to construe a will so that said land be declared to be held in trust for her under its terms. The devisees under the will of Mrs. Eliza F. Hall, widow of John B. Hall, who originally owned the land, were subsequently made parties to the suit.
Reddin filed an answer, in which he claimed title to the land by deed from Mrs. Eliza F. Hall, who owned said land as devisee under the will of her husband, John B. Hall.
The facts, so far as are necessary to a determination of the issues raised by the appeal, may be briefly stated as follows: John B. Hall owned a farm of 280 acres of land in Calhoun County, Arkansas, on which he and his wife, Eliza F. Hall, resided. They took the plaintiff when *1179 she was a child four years of age, and reared her as one of the family, until 1903, at which time she married Ira Reddin. During the first year of her married life plaintiff continued to live on the Hall place. Then she moved away, and moved back and forth on the place from time to time. In February, 1914, Ira Reddin and wife moved back on the Hall place and commenced the erection of a tenant house, which was finished after the death of John B. Hall, which occurred on the 21st day of April, 1915. After his death, Ira Reddin and his wife continued to reside on the place with Mrs. Eliza F. Hall. The latter was appointed executrix of the will of her husband, and Ira Reddin and the plaintiff assisted her in the probate of the same. The only part of the will relating to the issues by the appeal is 3, which is as follows:
"I give and bequeath to my executrix, Eliza F. Hall, all my property, situated wherever it may be, either real or personal, after the legacies herein provided have been executed, to have and to hold the same as her own, with right to sell and convey same during her natural life, to make title deed thereto, without restriction or limitation; provided, however, if she dies seized and possessed of any part of my estate that I may own at my death, then that same shall go to and vest in our foster daughter, Mrs. Ira V. Reddin, and to her heirs in their own right, to have and own and control the same."
Ira Reddin died on the 13th day of December, 1916, and his widow continued to live on the place with Mrs. Hall. On the 12th day of May, 1918, the plaintiff married Sanders Cottrell. Mrs. Hall violently opposed the marriage, and Mrs. Cottrell left the home of Mrs. Hall, and went to reside in another house on the Hall place. Mrs. Hall told her that if she married Cottrell she would dispose of the land in question so that the plaintiff would have no interest in it. On the 25th day of June, 1918, Mrs. Eliza F. Hall conveyed the 280 acres of land in question by deed to W. R. Reddin for the consideration of $6,000, as recited in the deed. On the same day the plaintiff executed a quitclaim deed to said land to W. R. Reddin, *1180 who was a brother of her first husband. Both deeds were immediately filed for record. In the fall of 1918 Mrs. Hall told the plaintiff to move away from the place, and demanded rent of her for that year. The plaintiff moved away from the place about the first of November, 1918, and has not since resided on it. She also paid Mrs. Hall rent for the year 1918. After the deed was executed to W. R. Reddin, he moved on the place with Mrs. Hall, and took charge of it. Mrs. Hall lived with him until the 13th day of October, 1924, the date of her death. Mrs. Hall left a will in which W. R. Reddin was made executor. She left an estate of about $1,900, consisting mostly of a bank deposit. The children of the plaintiff were left $125 each, and the balance of her estate was left to her sisters and a brother. The remaining facts will be stated and discussed under appropriate headings in the opinion.
The chancery court found that the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon an oral contract for the purchase of the land made with John B. Hall and Eliza F. Hall, his wife, and that the quitclaim deed executed by the plaintiff to W. R. Reddin should be canceled. It was further decreed that the deed from Mrs. Eliza F. Hall to W. R. Reddin should be canceled, and that the latter was holding the land in trust for Mrs. Ida Cottrell. A decree was entered in accordance with the findings of the chancellor for the plaintiff on all issues joined, and to reverse that decree the defendant, W. R. Reddin, has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.
(after stating the facts). It is first sought to uphold the decree on the ground that the plaintiff was entitled to the 280 acres of land in controversy, or the proceeds thereof, after the death of Mrs. Eliza F. Hall, which occurred in October, 1924. This contention is made under the provisions of 3 of the will of John B. Hall, which is copied in our statement of facts, and need not be repeated here. Reference to that section of his will shows *1181
that he gave Eliza F. Hall all of his property, after the payment of certain legacies, to have and to hold during her natural life, with the right to sell and convey the same without restriction or limitation. The 280 acres of land in question was the property so devised to Mrs. Hall. The section of the will contained a proviso that, if Mrs. Hall died seized and possessed of any part of this property, then it should go to the plaintiff. This court has repeatedly held that, where a testator gives an estate for life only, with power in the life tenant to convey the estate absolutely, the life tenant may defeat the estate of a remainderman by the exercise of such power. Archer v. Palmer,
In the application of the settled rules of construction decided in these cases, Mrs. Hall had the absolute right to convey the property to the defendant, W. R. Reddin, and it was not necessary for him to have procured a quitclaim deed from the plaintiff. W. R. Reddin was a brother of Ira Reddin, the first husband of the plaintiff, and, according to his testimony, he obtained the quitclaim deed merely because he wished to have the sanction of the plaintiff to the trade. He testified that he went on the place and took charge of it, and cared for Mrs. Hall, with the consent and approval of the plaintiff. According to the testimony of the plaintiff, she executed the quitclaim deed because the attorney for the defendant told her that her interest in the property was recognized, and that she would have the same interest in the proceeds derived from the sale of the land as she would have had in the land itself. We need not decide this question of fact, however, for, if Mrs. Hall had the power under the will of her husband to convey the land to the defendant Reddin, it was not necessary to obtain a quitclaim deed from the plaintiff. The title to the land, under the authorities above cited, immediately became vested in the defendant *1182
Reddin after the execution of the deed by Mrs. Hall and his acceptance thereof. It did not make any difference whether she collected any of the purchase price of the land from the defendant Reddin or not. After her death, whatever was due from Reddin became a part of her estate, to be distributed under the terms of her will. Galloway v. Sewell,
If the conveyance by Mrs. Hall to W. R. Reddin had been a simulated conveyance, then the plaintiff would be entitled to the land upon the death of Mrs. Hall. The reason is that, if the transaction was a simulated one, the title would not pass from Mrs. Hall to W. R. Reddin. There is nothing whatever in the record, however, to show that the transaction was a simulated one. The record does show that Mrs. Hall was opposed to the second marriage of the plaintiff, and for that reason conveyed the land to W. R. Reddin. This fact, however, does not make any difference. Under the will of her husband she had the absolute power and right to convey the land, and it did not make any difference what her motive was. All that the court could concern itself with was whether or not the transaction was real or simulated. We are of the opinion that, under the terms of the will, Mrs. Hall had a right to convey the land to W. R. Reddin, and that he acquired the title thereto by the conveyance to him from Mrs. Hall on the 25th day of June, 1918, and that the plaintiff had no interest whatever in the proceeds which Mrs. Hall might acquire from the sale of the land.
Again, it is insisted by the plaintiff that John B. Hall and his wife agreed to make a will in favor of the plaintiff in consideration of her support during their natural lives, and that this agreement on her part was substantially performed by her to such an extent that equity should grant her relief equivalent to specific performance, and should impose a trust upon the property for her benefit. If it be conceded that the facts bear out her contention in this respect, she is barred of relief by the statute of limitations, which was pleaded by the defendant Reddin. John B. Hall died on the 21st day of *1183
April, 1915, leaving a will in which he devised the land in question to his wife with absolute power of disposal, and the remainder to the plaintiff. This will was duly offered for probate, and Mrs. E. F. Hall became the executrix. The plaintiff and her husband assisted in the probate of the will, and it is fairly inferable that plaintiff knew of the claim of Mrs. Hall to the property under the terms of the will. In any event, plaintiff was put on notice of the claim of Mrs. Hall when she conveyed the land to W. R. Reddin, on the 25th day of June, 1918. The present suit was not instituted by the plaintiff until December 16, 1925, so it will be seen that, under any statute of limitations, the plaintiff would be barred of her relief under this contention. Goff v. Beaty,
The main reliance of the plaintiff to uphold the decree is that the facts establish a parol agreement on the part of John B. Hall and Eliza F. Hall to convey the land in question to her for the services she and her husband should render towards the support of Hall and his wife during the remainder of their lives, and that possession was delivered to her, and that she made valuable improvements in reliance on said parol contract. If it be conceded that the facts establish her contention and bring the case within the principles of law applicable thereto, as decided by this court in Ashcraft v. Tucker,
The result of our views is that the chancery court erred in not finding that the plaintiff was barred of relief in this action; and for that error the decree must be reversed, and the cause will be remanded with directions to the chancery court to dismiss the complaint of the plaintiff for want of equity. It is so ordered.