57 Fla. 529 | Fla. | 1909
The appellees, as complainants below, filed their bill in equity against the appellants as defendants below, in the Circuit Court of Jackson County for partition of 520 acres of land in said county. The bill alleged in substance' that said land was owned by one Peter Taylor at the time of his death, and who died intestate; that said Peter Taylor had six children, viz: Lydia Taylor, W. H. Taylor, Mary Taylor, Louis Taylor, Jesse Taylor and Rena Taylor. That Lydia Taylor intermarried with one H. C. Everett, and died intestate prior to the death of her father,Peter Taylor, leaving surviving her two children, the complainants, W. H. and W. E. Everett, who are her sole heir at law to her interest in the estate of her said father; that Rena Taylor married one Robert Stapleton, and, since the death of her father, has died intestate, leaving as her heirs at law her children, Robert Stapleton, Taylor Stapleton and Barnie Stapleton, who subsequently married one Percy Wilson; that Mary Taylor married one Hillery Sewel, who has since died; that through their said mother, Lydia T. Everett complainants are entitled between them to one-sixth interest in said land. The defendants answered the bill admitting all the allegations thereof except that it denies that the complainants are entitled to a one-sixth interest in said 520 acres of land, but alleges that after the marriage of said Lydia Taylor, the mother of complainants, her father, the said Peter Taylor, who then owned 600 acres of land and then had six living children, conveyed to her for her permanent home eighty acres of said land in consideration of natural love and affection, and the nominal sum of one dollar,
Since the appeal in the case it has been suggested on the record that Mary Sewell has died and her heirs at law, Josie Wilson and James N. Wilson, her husband, and Bulah Pender and W. T. Pender, her husband, have been substituted as parties appellants here in her place and stead.
The -court below erred in making this decree. The proof showed that the common ancestor, Peter Taylor, during his life owned 600 acres of land and had six living children; that the mother of the complainants, Lydia Taylor, his daughter, married H. C. Everett durher father’s lifetime, and was very poor and without a home, and that her father, Peter Taylor, in consideration of natural love and affection and the nominal sum of one dollar conveyed to her eighty acres from his 600 acre tract, leaving the 520 acres in dispute, and that she and her husband settled thereon and lived there as their
A voluntary, conveyance of land, by a parent to a child is presumed to have been intended as an advancement, and the burden of proof is on the party claiming that it is not. Scott v. Harris, 127 Ind. 520, 27 N. E. Rep. 150; Ruch v. Biery, 110 Ind. 444, 11 N. E. Rep. 312; Holliday v. Wingfield, 59 Ga. 206.
The decree of the court below appealed from in said cause is hereby reversed and the cause remanded with directions for the entry of a decree in said cause in conformity with this opinion, the cost of this appeal to be taxed against the appellees.