167 Iowa 436 | Iowa | 1914
On December 3, 1908, Daniel Logue, being the owner of a certain forty acres of land in Mahaska county, executed and delivered to his two sisters, Sarah Logue and Alice Logue, a deed, the material part of which reads as follows:
Know all men by these presents: That I, Daniel H. Logue (single), of the county of Mahaska and state of Iowa, in consideration of the sum of one dollar.in hand paid, do hereby sell and convey unto Sarah Logue the undivided one-third interest in the property hereinafter described. I do hereby sell and convey unto Alice Logue the undivided one-third interest in the following described premises, situated and lying in the state of Iowa, Mahaska county, to wit: The northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 22, township 75, range 16 west of the fifth P. M. It is agreed between the grantor and the grantees named in the deed that they all have the right to occupy the property so long as they remain single. If the grantor or either one of the grantees get married, the ones that are married cannot occupy the property, without the consent of those that are not married, so long as the grantor and grantees remain single, they can occupy the property as a house free of rent. In case of the death of the grantor, the grantees are to inherit the undivided one-third interest of the grantor, and in ease of one of the grantees dying first, the grantor and the surviving grantee are to inherit that portion of the property that is owned by the grantor and grantee that are deceased. It is understood between the grantor and grantees herein that the one dying last is to be the absolute owner of the property herein described, and he or she may dispose of the entire property by will or in any other way that he or she may desire.
The repugnancy, to defeat the habendum, must be such that the intention of the parties cannot be ascertained from the whole instrument, or, if ascertained, cannot be carried into effect. If, from the entire instrument and attending circumstances, it appears that the grantor intended to enlarge, restrict, or even repugn the conveyancing clause, the habendum will control.
See Beedy v. Finney, 118 Iowa, 278, and eases there cited.
Referring to the same subject, the compiler of the article on “Deeds” in 13 Cye. 618, after citing numerous authorities justifying his conclusion, says:
The strictness of the ancient rule as to repugnancy in deeds is much relaxed, so that in this, as in other, cases of construction, if clauses or parts are repugnant, the intention is to be gathered from the whole instrument, instead of from particular clauses.
This rule is too manifestly just to leave room for discussion, and we can conceive of no good reason for departing from it. If, then, upon examination of this deed in its entirety, both granting clause and subsequent clauses, it clearly appears that the parties intended to create a joint tenancy with right of survivorship, then there is no fatal repugnance in the terms of the instrument, and if such estate is not
The deed now before us is not drawn with the technical nicety and exactness which might have been used by a learned professional conveyancer, but it has the virtue not always present in even more formal instruments of so expressing the purpose of the parties thereto as to- leave its intended effect too clear for doubt. It is very manifest that the paramount or general intent of the transaction which is thus evidenced is to make the grantees joint owners of the land with the grantor, and to provide for the right of survivorship between them, or, to use the language of the deed, “the one dying last is to be the absolute owner of-the property, and he or she may dispose of the entire property by will or in any way he or she may desire.” It is true the word “inherit” employed in the deed is not technically correct as applied to the acquirement of title by survivorship, but, when read in connection with the entire instrument, it is clear that it was so employed by these parties. To hold
. The court erred in overruling the defendant’s demurrer to the petition and in ordering a sale of the land, and said