Owings v. Owings
Owings v. Owings
Opinion of the Court
The bill in chancery filed in this case charges, substantially, the following facts :
The bill then charges that as the said George was a son of the complainant and the latter had full confidence that he would faithfully fulfill the trust thus vested in him, the complainant did not insist upon a deed being made to him, and none was made; that, in 1845, George married Ruth Owings, by whom he had two children, who are infants, and that George died in 1847, without having made a conveyance to the complainant.
Ruth Owings answered, saying that she has no personal knowledge of the facts relating to the purchase of the land, but is informed and believes that George purchased the land of Carter for his own use; and that if the complainant furnished the money it was in payment of a debt he owed George. She also states that though the complainant is in possession of the land in question, she is informed and believes that he is in upon a lease for life only, or by a privilege which George gave the complainant and his wife to occupy the same during their lives.
A guardian ad litem filed the usual answer for the infant defendants.
The cause was set down for hearing on the bill, answers, and depositions, and the Court decreed a deed to the complainant.
Upon an examination of the testimony taken in the
The decree is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, with instructions to the Circuit Court to dismiss the bill.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Owings and Others v. Owings
- Status
- Published