ANABEL WELCH v. JAMES HARVEY еt al.; CYRUS FINLEY et al., Appellants.
SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI.
April 1, 1920
281 Mo. 684
In Banc
ANABEL WELCH v. JAMES HARVEY et al.; CYRUS FINLEY et al., Appellants.
In Banc, April 1, 1920.
- DEED: Construction: The Whole Instrument: Granting Clause: Habendum. In construing a deed, the intention of the parties, as gathered from the entire instrument, together with the surrounding circumstances, are to be ascertained and given effect, unless in conflict with some positive rule of law or repugnant to the terms of the grant itself; and in gathering such intention from the instrument, the court will ignore technical distinctions between the various parts and seek the grantor‘s intention from them all, without undue preference to any, giving due effect to all, even to the extent of allowing the habendum clause to qualify or control the granting clause where it is manifest that the former, in connection with the whole, more nearly expresses the grantor‘s intention.
- ——: ——: ——: ——: Parenthetical Clause. The deed mаde in 1867 recited that the grantors, “in consideration of the regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie E. Finley and of the payment of eight hundred dollars by William Finley,” do “hereby convey and sell to said Fannie and William two hundred and fifty acres......most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to
Fannie.” Held, that the granting clause is a clear and unambiguous conveyance to Fannie and William, and is not limited by the last parenthetical words, which are of doubtful and uncertain meaning and aрplication. Held, by WILLIAMSON, J., dissenting, with whom, BLAIR and GOODE, JJ., concur, that if an estate by the entirety had been intended the intention would have been expressed in some other words than the mere granting clause, and that the instrument as a whole declared an express purpose of a sale of fifty acres to William and a gift of two hundred to Fannie, and that purpose is strengthened by the order in which the grantees are named, in that the granting clause says that the grantors “convey and sell to Fannie and William,” which in effect means that they convey to Fannie and sell to William.
- ——: ——: ——: ——: ——: No Several Tract: Husband and Wife: Change in Law. That the clear words of the granting clause were not restricted by the ambiguous subsequent clause is reinforced by two other facts: first, the deed contains no word or phrase indicating that the grantors intended to convey in severalty to their daughter and her husband distinct parcels; and, second, at the time the deed was made (1867) the notion of unity of property and person of husband and wife was firmly fixed in the popular mind and in the law, and it was not unusual for a father, when he gave real estate as an advancement to a daughter, to deed it to both.
Held, by WILLIAMSON, J., with whom BLAIR and GOODE, JJ., concur, that a gift, by deed, to the daughter alone, had no tendency to divert the title from the descendants of the grantors, and to construe the deed in judgment as a conveyance of an estate by the entirety to the grantors’ daughter and her husband, and the vesting of the title first in him by her death and then in his collateral kindred upon his death is to vest the title in strangers to the grantors’ blood, which is a result in no wise contemplated by the terms used in the deеd.
- ——: ——: ——: The Word Sold. The word “sold,” unaccompanied by others of apter significance, is not ordinarily a word of conveyance, but will be so considered in a proper setting, or where clearly so intended.
Held, by WILLIAMSON, J., with whom BLAIR and GOODE, JJ., concur, that the natural order of the words in a conveyance, and the usual sequence of events, is “sell and convey,” and not “convey and sell;” and this reversal of the order in a deed by parents to a daughter and her husband, by which they “convey and sell to Fannie and William,” is of significance, for there, thе deed expressing as its consideration regard and affection for the daughter and a payment of $800 by
her husband, the meaning is that they conveyed to the daughter (the two hundred acres subsequently mentioned in the deed) and sold to him (the fifty acres mentioned therein).
Appeal from Lincoln Circuit Court.—Hon. Edgar B. Woolfolk, Judge.
REVERSED.
Sutton & Huston and J. Wi. Powell for appellants.
(1) Both the statute law and the decisions conclusively establish that this conveyance created an estate by the entirety in William Finley and Fannie Finley, his wife. Gibson v. Zimmermann, 12 Mo. 386; Garner v. Jones, 52 Mo. 68; Modrell v. Riddle, 82 Mo. 31; Edmondson v. City of Moberly, 98 Mo. 523; Bains v. Bullock, 129 Mo. 117; Hume v. Hopkins, 140 Mo. 65; Wilson v. Frost, 186 Mo. 311; Moss v. Ardery, 260 Mo. 595;
Avery & Killam for respondent.
(1) Fannie having preceded William in death, the 50 acres belonged to William absolutely, and there is no estate in entirety, in either the one or the other, but the
RAGLAND, C.—This suit was instituted in the Circuit Court of Lincoln County by the plaintiff as one of the collateral heirs of Fannie E. Finley, deceased, against the remaining heirs of said deceased and the collateral heirs of William Finley, deceased, for the partition of certain lands in said county. The defendant heirs of Fannie E. Finley filed no answer; the heirs of William Finley answered, denying that the plaintiff and their codefendants, heirs of Fannie E. Finley, had any right, title or interest in the lands sought to be partitioned,
The facts are brief. William Finley and Fannie E. Finley were husband and wife on the 28th day of August, 1867, and continued so to be until the death of Fannie, which occurred about the year 1909; William died January, 1916. They left no descendants. Appellаnts are the collateral heirs of William, and respondent and the remaining defendants are the collateral heirs of Fannie. Fannie E. Finley was a daughter of James and Lucy Reid, who on the 28th day of August, 1867, executed the following deed:
Know ye all persons whom a knowledge of this transaction may, concern that we James Reid Sen. and Lucy, his wife, of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, do by these presents for and in consideration of the regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie E. Finley and of the payment of eight hundred dollars lawful money of the United States well and truly paid, by William Finley of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged hereby convey and sell to said Fannie & William the following described tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres eighty-five acres described as the land we bought of the widow and heirs of James Downing deceased the remaining one hundred and sixty-five acres described as follows. Begin at a stone corner of D. H. Whitesides. Then with the northern line of said Whitesides south sixty-eight degrees west sixteen chains and twenty-five links to corner in the spring branch. Then north twenty-one and half degrees west with the northeast line of the Downing tract of land twenty-seven chains and sixty-five links to the northeast corner of said land on the line of S. Weeks. Then with said line north sixty-eight degrees east thirty-one chains and twenty-five links to corner of said Weeks. Then north twenty-one and a half degrees west one chain and eighty links to a stone corner of James Willson. Then north sixty-eight degrees east fifteen chains and thirty
links and set a stone for corner from whiсh a white oak twelve inches bears south forty-nine degrees east twenty-nine links distant. Then south twenty-one and a half degrees east forty-seven chains and set a stone for corner from which a white oak twenty inches bears north ten and a half degrees east twenty-two links distant. Then south eighty and a half degrees west ten chains and fifty-nine links to a corner of D. H. Whitesides with a buckeye bearing tree. Then north seventy-nine degrees west twenty-three chains and sixty-eight links and set a stone from which a white oak eighteen inches bears south eighty degreеs east thirty links. Then north twenty-one and a half degrees west two chains and fifty-five links to the place of beginning containing in all two hundred and fifty acres most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to Fannie reserving to ourselves the right of way through said tract of land where said way may be least prejudicial to the same to a tract of we own and joining to and east of it all of which land is in and part of Survey eighteen hundred and thirteen or as some number it eighteen hundred and nineteen a grant of four thоusand arpens to Peter Jamin situate in Township No. fifty-one and range one east and one west to the said Fannie and William with all and singular the appurtenances to the same belonging free and clear of all legal incumbrances whatsoever. In Testimony of which we hereunto set our hands and affix our seals this twenty-eighth day of August eighteen hundred and sixty-seven. JAMES REID SR. (Seal)
LUCY REID (Seal).
It is respondent‘s contention that the foregoing instrument conveyed severally to William Finley the most eastern fifty acres of the land therein described and to Fannie E. Finley the remaining two hundred acres. It is this two hundred acres that she seeks to have partitioned. If her contention is sound, it follows that upon the death of Fannie without descendants her husband, William, under the statute, became vested with the title to an undivided one-half interest in the land and the
The trial court first found for appellants and rendered judgment accordingly. Later, deeming its conclusion erroneous, it sustained a motion for a new trial. This appeal is from that order. It is apparent that the proper construction of the deed is the only matter for our determination.
Whether the deed conveys the entire tract of land to both grantees, or whether it сonveys to each of them severally a separate portion thereof, must be ascertained from the four corners of the instrument itself. For the rule has long obtained in this State, that, in construing a deed, the intention of the parties, as gathered from the entire instrument, together with the surrounding circumstances, shall be ascertained and given effect, unless in conflict with some positive rule of law, or repugnant to the terms of the grant itself, and that in gathering such intention from the instrument the court will ignore technical distinctions between thе various parts and seek the grantor‘s intention from them all, without undue preference to any, giving due effect to all, even to the extent of allowing the habendum clause to qualify or control the granting clause where it is manifest that the former, in connection with the whole, more nearly expresses the grantor‘s intention. [Tennison v. Walker, 190 S. W. 9; Adams v. Highland Cemetery Co., 192 S. W. 944.]
Omitting the long descriptions of the land conveyed and of the right of way reserved, the deed under consideration is as follows:
Know ye all persons whom a knowledge of this transaction may concern that wе James Reid Sen. and Lucy, his wife, of the County of Lincoln and State of
Missouri, do by these presents for and in consideration of the regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie E. Finley and of the payment of Eight Hundred Dollars lawful money of the United States well and truly paid, by William Finley of the County of Lincoln and State of Missouri, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged hereby convey and sell to said Fannie & William the following described tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres . . . most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to Fannie reserving to ourselves the right of way through said tract of land. . . to the said Fannie and William with all and singular the appurtenances to the same belonging free and clear of all legal incumbrances whatsoever. In Testimony Whereof etc. this 28th day of August, 1867.
If the words which we have italicized were omitted there would be no possible basis for construction, for the plain import of the language would questionably show a conveyance to both Fannie and William of the entire tract of two hundred and fifty acres, henсe if there is an uncertainty as to whether the grantors intended to convey fifty acres to William and two hundred to Fannie, or whether they intended to convey the entire tract of two hundred and fifty acres to both Fannie and William, it arises solely from the use of the words, “most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to Fannie,” between the description of the land granted and the exception therefrom reserved to the grantors. Necessarily the uncertainty thus created, if any, is whether the wоrds last quoted were intended by the grantors to limit, or qualify, or explain the language of the granting clause. That clause is: “We . . . do by these presents . . . hereby convey and sell to Fannie and William the following described tract of land containing two hundred and fifty acres.” It is so clear, unambiguous and positive in its declaration that the grantors convey the en-
The recital is not only parenthetical in structure, but, considered in respect to the thought it conveys in connection with that expressed by the language which precedes and follows it, it seems to be a mental “aside” as well. After stating that they convey to both Fannie and William all of the land, which they describe at length, they incidentally remark, as it were, “most eastern fifty acres is the land sold William Finley the other two hundred acres we give to Fannie.” The circumstances of the parties considered it is more than probable that the grantors intended by the recital to amplify their previous statement of the consideration. They were giving their daughter a certain two hundred acres of land as an advancement, her husband had bought fifty acres adjoining for eight hundred dollars, and, for purposes of their own, they desired the deed to recite the entire transaction, and thereby disclose the motives that actuated them in making the conveyance. Had their thought been fully expressed it would no doubt have been somewhat as follows: “most eastern fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley the remaining two hundred acres we give
We are further confirmed in the view that the recital is but an amplification of the consideration clause by the fact that there is not in the entire instrument, outside of the recital, a single word or phrase indicating that the grantors were intending to convey severally to the grantees distinct parcels of the land. It is difficult to conceive how the scrivenor, whether he was skilled or unskilled, could have written the remainder of the instrument and never used a word that even hinted at a several conveyance of the two.
Considered independently of the language of the deed itself, there is no presumption that the father in giving his daughter the land in controversy intended to convey it to her alone rather than to her and her husband. At the time it was made the ideas of “mine” and “thine” as betweеn husband and wife were not so sharply accentuated as at the present time. The notion of the unity of the property, as well as of the persons, of husband and wife was firmly fixed in the popular mind as it was in the law. It was not unusual for a father when he gave his married daughter personal property as an advancement to deliver it direct to her husband, and when he gave real estate, to deed it to both. In the exceptional case he conveyed it to her sole and separate use.
For the reasons herеinbefore expressed, we deem the conclusion first reached by the learned trial court to be the correct one. Its order granting a new trial is, there-
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion of RAGLAND, C., after reargument in Court in Banc, is adopted as the decision of the court. All the judges concur, except Williamson, Blair and Goode, JJ., who dissent, and express their views in an opinion by WILLIAMSON, J.
WILLIAMSON, J. (dissenting).—The conclusion reached in the majority opinion seems to me to be in violation of the intention of the grantors in the deed under consideration. This deed, in reality, is simply two deeds in one. Had it been so in fact, no suggestion of the creation of an estate by the entirety would be tenable for a moment. No intimation of the existence of the relation of husband and wife between the grantees is contained in the deed. The consideration is plainly stated as the “regard and affection we have for our daughter Fannie” and “eight hundred dollars” from “William Finley.” There is evidence that the fifty acres was worth аbout that sum. The grantors are at pains to say that “fifty acres is the land sold to William Finley,” and “two hundred acres we give to Fannie.” This deed was the product of an unskilled hand. The writer obviously had about such knowledge as may be derived from an occasional reading of a printed form, and it is hardly to be inferred that even a blank form was before him when he wrote this inartificial conveyance. Such a writer is apt to use such technical terms as he may recall at the moment, in order to give an air of legal knowledge to the dоcument, but he usually has little realization of the significance of the words he employs. To him they are mere matters of form. When he intends, however, to express the controlling thought he has in mind, he naturally drops into the vernacular of the home and the fireside. Hence the blunt declaration of a sale to William and a gift to Fannie. Had an estate by the entirety been meant, no
