122 Ala. 619 | Ala. | 1898
— When a lost or destroyed deed or will is sought to be established, the proof of its contents
Another well recognized principle is, that when intimate personal and business relations exist between the parties, and one has advantage or superiority over the other, the validity of a deed made between them for the benefit of the one occupying such superior advantages, should be scrutinized with jealous care, and the bona ■fides of such transaction and its entire freedom from fraud and undue influence should be fully shown. — Ryan v. Price, 106 Ala. 584.
“In determining whether an instrument be a deed or will, the main question is, Did the maker intend any estate or interest whatever to vest before his death and upon the execution of the paper? Or, in other words, 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; and it is immaterial whether he calls it a will or deed, the instrument will have operation according to its legal effect.” — Gillham v. Mustin, 42 Ala. 366; Trawick v. Davis, 85 Ala. 342; Abney v. Moore, 106 Ala. 131.
Another rule of construction is, that if the paper is on its face equivocal, the presumption is against its operating as a testamentary disposition, unless it is made clearly to appear that it Avas executed animo. testandi, or being intended by the maker to operate as a posthumous disposition of his estate. — Abney v. Moore, supra.
The evidence in the case tends to show that the instrument by defendants’ father, Z. M. Johnson, under which they claim, Avas a deed, and in some of its phases that it Avas testamentary in character. It is made certain that he executed a paper of some sort, either a deed or will, in Avhich he granted defendants, Nancy Whitten and her husband, John Whitten, his property. It is also certain, that he afterwards destroyed the instrument.
We have carefully examined the evidence in the cause, and are unable to agree with, the learned chancellor in his conclusions. Having reference to the competent evidence which was introduced, it appears that the instrument was a deed and not a will. It particularly described the land that was conveyed as it was described in the deed of the grantor’s grantor, by its land office numbers, unusual in a will. That deed was used for the purpose of an accurate description of the property in the one that was made. It was acknowledged before a justice of the peace, — an unusual and unnecessary procedure in execution of a will, — in the manner to make it a deed, and in all his references to the paper, after its execution, the grantor referred to it as a deed and never as a will.
There were two witnesses examined for defendants, who are uncontradicted and who, if their testimony is to be believed, make it satisfactorily clear that it was a deed the grantor executed. So far as appears, they were disinterested, and without motive to misstate the facts they knew. One was I. M. Richardson, the justice who took the acknowledgment. He gives the date of the acknowledgment; states that he received a message from the grantor to come to the grantees’ house where he lived to do some writing for him; that the grantor told him on his arrival, that he did not know how long he had to live, and how much trouble he was going to be, and desired to get his business fixed up so that if he should take another spell and die, his daughter, Nancy, (the defendant) with whom he had then for some time been living, Avould get AArhat ■ he had; that he had got John (Whitten)- — the husband of Nancy, and both of whom were the grantees in the deed — to write the deed, and he guessed he wrote it all right, as he had
Dr. J. W. Lee, the attending physician of the grantor, testified, that the grantor told him in the presence of Mr. Whitten, that he was going to let him and Mrs. Whitten have his property Avith the understanding that they were to take care of him for his lifetime, pay his expenses, bear his burial expenses and the expense of putting a tomb-stone at his grave; that when he had a paralytic stroke before that time, he told witness to tell Esquire Richardson to come to Mr. Whitten’s and take his acknowledgment of the deed to the property on Cypress creek; that his mental condition was good.at that time for one of his age, but he was unbalanced before he died. He also testified that he had no other place that he knew of, except the one referred to as Cypress creek place.
The evidence also shows, that the grantor was seventy-eight years old; had before he made the instrument suffered a paralytic stroke which affected one whole side, from which he partially recovered; that he had a short while before, lost his wife and was in deep distress
It is always a matter of more or less difficulty to establish the contents of a lost deed or will. It would seem, the evidence in this case is about as full and clear as can ordinarily be had for such purpose. It is not denied, as we have stated, that the paper was executed. The expressions of the grantor in the instrument, that after his expenses were paid, including his doctor’s and funeral bills and the cost of an inexpensive monument, he desired his daughter to have his property, — without which expressions the suggestion of a will could not have arisen, — did not change its character from that of a deed to that of a will, nor prevent the title to the property ■from vesting under it, in the grantees.
The decree of the chancery court is reversed and one will be here rendered dismissing the cause out of the court below.
Reversed and rendered.