104 Ky. 670 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898
iielivered the opinion oe the court.
The Holcombs — O. G., H. O. and John — claimed to be the owners of some two hundred acres of land in Letcher •county under a survey made, it appears/ subsequently to other surveys and patents to Altemus and others. Whilst so claiming the land, 0. G. and H. C. Holcomb sold to Sibley, a number of trees standing thereon, and executed to him a deed of general warranty therefor. Sibley paid the purchase price to O. G. Holcomb, and it does not appear that John Holcomb had any connection with the transaction or got any benefit therefrom. When approached by Fairchild, the deputy clerk, to obtain his acknowledgment of the deed, he declined to sign it on the ground that he had no confidence in the title obtained under the Holcomb survey, and had no interest in the transaction. He was assured by Fairchild that it was only a quitclaim timber deed, and passed no interest nor affected him in any way, unless he did have some interest under 'the survey. He could not read or write, and signed the instrument, with his wife, upon the assurances of Fairchild. It turned out to be a deed of general warranty, and, when sued by Sibley on the warranty, he pleaded that the deed had been obtained by the false representations of Fairchild, who in this matter was acting for Sibley. The proof conduces to show that one Kroll was the general agent of Sibley in the purchase of land and timber in Letcher county, but that, in some cases, deeds and checks were delivered to Fairchild, 'who was to obtain the acknowledgment to the •deed, and then deliver the checks to the parties entitled thereto. In the present instance he was intrusted with the check for- the purchase price of the timber, which was payable to O. ' G. Holcomb, and was to deliver it to him after obtaining the acknowl
But aside from tbe question of Fairchild’s agency, tbe instrument was not in fact tbe deed of appellee, in tbe form it is in, and was property held by tbe chancellor to be only a quitclaim. In Pollock’s Principles of Contracts, p. 401, this principle is thus illustrated: A -layman who was unlettered bad a deed tendered to him which be was told was a release for arrears of rent only. Tbe deed was not read to him. To this be said, “If it be no otherwise, I am content,” and so delivered the deed. It was in fact a general release of all claims. It was adjudged that the instrument was not bis deed. Tbe effect is that if an illiterate man have a deed falsely read over or falsely represented to him, and be then signs and delivers it, it is nevertheless not bis deed.
Judgment affirmed.