Cunningham v. Taylor
Cunningham v. Taylor
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
We have heretofore held that a deed, quite like this one in terms, vested but a life estate in the married woman for whose separate use it had been made, notwithstanding the grant of an estate in fee simple to the trustee. Dengel v. Brown, 1 App. D. C. 423-427. The surrounding circumstances in that case were different from those shown here. The deed was executed by Sarah Moore, the mother of the beneficiary, who on April 3 of the same year, made a will devising the same land to the beneficiary in fee simple. As the action to recover the land was by the heirs of Sarah Moore against parties claiming title under the beneficiary and devisee, the construction of the deed was comparatively unimportant, for the failure to obtain the fee by the deed was cured by the devise.
Assuming, without necessarily deciding, that the deed to Poulton, trustee, on its face creates but a life estate in the beneficiary, Susan Fitzgerald, we pass to the consideration of the facts and circumstances relied on to show mistake on the part of the scrivener. We are of the opinion that these are sufficient to support the decree for correction. Having been substantially set forth in the statement of the case, there is no occasion to repeat them. The object and circumstances of the purchase, the consideration paid, indicate quite clearly that the grantors intended to sell, and the grantee to purchase, the fee-simple estate. The subsequent conduct of the parties confirms this. The grantee made valuable improvements that would hardly have been made by a reasonably prudent person upon property held for life only. The grantors remained in the community, and were frequent visitors of Susan Fitzgerald. They saw the valuable improvements that she was making. Both were present when Poulton, trustee, made the conveyance of the legal estate to her in fee. One of them was living when Mrs. Fitzgerald sold part of the premises and conveyed the fee-simple estate therein. The scrivener, since deceased, was not a lawyer, and must have thought that the re
The right to ask for a correction of the deed is-not barred by laches of the appellees.
The possession was in their devisor until her death, and was succeeded to by them thereupon, without adverse claim or disturbance.
They did not know, and could not reasonably have known of the mistake in the deed until the objection was raised; and then they promptly filed their suit.
The decree is right, and will be affirmed, with costs.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CUNNINGHAM v. TAYLOR
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Married Women; Grants; Deeds; Equity; Reformation of Deeds; Estoppel; Laches. 1. Quwre, whether the grant of an estate in fee to a trustee for the sole use and benefit forever of a married woman vests in her a life estate only. (Citing Dengel v. Brown, 1 App. D. C. 423.) 2. It would seem that a bill for the reformation of a deed so as to make it convey a fee, instead of a life estate, would have to be dismissed if it appeared that the deed in fact conveyed a fee. (Citing Welden v. Stiekney, 1 App. D. C. 343.) 3. A decree reforming a deed of land to a trustee for the sole and separate use of a married woman, so as to show an express conveyance of the fee to the beneficiary, was affirmed, where it appeared, among other things, that the deed was given in consummation of a purchase of the land from the grantors for a sum largely in excess of the value of a life estate; that it was prepared by a non-skilled scrivener; that the beneficiary had subsequently acquired the legal title from the trustee, had made valuable improvements of the property, and afterwards sold part of it, with the knowledge of the grantors and their heirs, who made no claim to the reversion until after the death of the beneficiary, when a title examiner reported that only a life estate had been conveyed to her. 4. A hill by the heirs of the beneficiary under a deed for its reformation so as to show the grant of a fee, instead of a life estate, is not barred by laches, although the deed is nearly forty years old, where the land was in the possession of the beneficiary until her death, five years before the filing of the bill, and the complainants did not know and could not reasonably have known of the mistake in the deed until objection was raised by an intending purchaser, whereupon the suit was promptly commenced.