Hickman v. Owens
Hickman v. Owens
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
It is alleged in the petition that the purchase and possession by F. M. Owens was made in the year 1855, and his notes then executed for the purchase money. He continued in possession until
He offered to purchase of one of his neighbors a small strip of land that he might add it to his possessions, and made other statements entirely inconsistent with the idea that any rescission had taken place. His possession was long enough to have ripened into a perfect title, and the chancellor, under the circumstances, ought not to have rescinded the contract. His creditors had a claim upon this estate, and the surrender back, if really made, would not defeat their rights.' With such conflicting testimony as to the attempted rescission, the vendor should be1 satisfied if given his purchase money with its interest, and when he obtains that, he .has all to which, in equity or good conscience, he is entitled. A chancellor ought not to deprive a man of his possession and right upon such uncertain testimony. The want of a written memorial did not make the sale void, and possession for a term of fifteen years under a claim of right would authorize the chancellor to presume that the contract was in writing. An entry under a parol purchase is a disseizin, and possession may ripen into a title. Moore v. Webb, 2 B. Mon. 282.
The vendor will not be allowed to say, after such a lapse of time, that the sale was conditional and the vendee was a mere tenant and not a purchaser. It is manifest, however, that a part of the purchase money is unpaid, and the liability of the land therefor is unquestioned. The deceased time and again acknowledged that indebtedness, and when his heirs or his creditors come into a court of equity asking for equity the chancellor will require them to do equity.
This judgment is reversed and cause remanded with directions
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.