Yost v. Miller

74 Ind. App. 673 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1921

Enloe, J.

This action was brought by appellee against appellant to set aside and cancel a deed to certain lands, executed by one William H. Yost to appellant. The grounds upon which such cancellation was sought were failure of consideration, and alleged nondelivery of said deed. A demurrer to this paragraph of complaint was overruled.

The cause was submitted to the court with a request that the court make a special finding of the facts and state its conclusions of law thereon. This was done. Appellant excepted to the conclusions of law as stated, and also moved for a new trial, which was overruled, and he prosecutes this appeal and presents as error: (1) The overruling of said demurrer; (2) overruling motion for a new trial; and (3) error in conclusions of law. . .

The conclusions of law as stated by the court were in harmony with the theory of the paragraph of complaint to which the said demurrer was overruled. The finding of facts follows closely the averments of said paragraph of complaint. The controlling findings are in substance as follows: That Charles O. Yost is the son of William H. Yost; that on August 15, 1911, said William H. Yost and said Charles O. Yost (appellant herein) went to the office' of an attorney in the city of Winchester, Indiana, and there had two warranty deeds prepared by said attorney, the deed in which said William H. Yost was grantor, naming said Charles O. Yost as grantee, and the deed in which Charles O. Yost was grantor, naming said William H. Yost as grantee; that *675said deeds were then and there duly signed and acknowledged by said grantors before the attorney who had drawn them, he being a notary public; that the deed from William H. Yost to Charles O. Yost described the lands involved in this suit; that, when said deeds had been so signed and acknowledged, they were each placed in a separate envelope, which was then and there sealed; that there was then and there placed upon the back of the envelope containing the deed so executed by said William H. Yost the following:

“The within warranty deed from William H. Yost is hereby delivered to Macy, Nichols and Bales, to be held by them and delivered to the grantee therein, Charles O. Yost, upon the death of the said William H. Yost, and to be surrendered by them to the grantor, William H. Yost, in the event of the death of the said Charles O. Yost, before the death of the said William H.”

That said memorandum was signed by said William H. Yost; that the said deed so executed by said William H. Yost was then and there delivered to and left with said Macy, Nichols and Bales, who kept the same until after the death of said grantor, and then delivered it to said grantee, Charles O. Yost, who, on June 20, 1918, caused it to be recorded.

The court further found that the deed so executed by appellant was also placed in one envelope and left ■with said Macy, Nichols, and Bales, and that on said envelope was an indorsement similar in terms to that on the envelope containing the deed of said William H. Yost; that prior to the death of said William H. Yost said Charles O. Yost, his wife joining therein, had by his warranty deed conveyed the same lands described in said deed so left with Macy, Nichols and Bales to said William H. Yost. Many other facts were also found by the court, but, in the view we take, they are of no controlling influence, and will not be here set out.

*6761. 2. An escrow has been defined as “a written instrument which by its terms imports a legal obligation, and which is deposited by the grantor, promissor, or obligor, or his agent, with a stranger or third party, to be kept by the depositary until the performance of a condition or the happening of a certain event, and then to be delivered over to the grantee, promisee, or obligee.” 10 R. C. L. 621, and authorities there cited. A deed in escrow conveys no title until final delivery. Burkam v. Burk (1884), 96 Ind. 270; Black v. Shreve (1860), 13 N. J. Eq. 455; Tiedeman, Real Property §815.

3. Under the authorities, there can be no question that the deed in question was in escrow. It was, according to the findings, duly executed, and its final delivery was in strict accord with the directions contained on said envelope. The fact that the son afterwards executed his deed, in place of the one by him left in escrow, for the benefit of his father can make no difference. No modification of the father’s contract is pleaded or found. For aught that appears in the findings of the court, this second transaction was entirely independent of the first one, under which the deed in question was deposited. The fact that the father remained in possession of. said lands and took all the rents and profits therefrom during his life is of no legal effect as against said deed so placed in escrow; the father simply exercised his legal right, which was in entire harmony with his said deed to his son, it being in escrow.

Under the facts alleged in said complaint and found by the court, the appellee was not entitled to have said deed canceled and set aside, and the court should have so stated. The other alleged errors need not be considered. The judgment is therefore reversed, with directions to the trial court to set aside its judgment *677heretofore rendered herein, to restate its conclusions of law, in harmony with this opinion, and to render judgment accordingly.

Nichols, J., not participating.