Lucas v. Parks
Lucas v. Parks
Opinion of the Court
This is a controversy involving the title to
1. On November 30, 1874, the defendant John Parks was the owner in fee-simple of, and with his wife, Maria T. Parks, lived upon, the premises. At this date he was very sick, and not expected to live, and conveyed, in anticipation of his death, the land to his wife by warranty deed, but without any money consideration. At the time of the execution of this deed, there was a mortgage upon the premises running to one Thomas McBlain, in the sum of $500. This mortgage was executed March 1, 1872. After the deed from Parks to his wife, and on October 24, 1876, John Parks executed a mortgage on the same lands to his brother, William Parks, for $238. Maria T. Parks joined with her husband in this mortgage.
2. In 1877, Maria T. Parks died, leaving two minor daughters, Mary Jane, now the wife of,, Charles S. Hurlbert, and Carrie Parks, as her sole heirs, aged respectively about 10 and 5 years at the date of their mother’s death. The legal record title at the time of Mrs. Parks’ death stood in her name, subject only to the McBlain and William Parks mortgages. McBlain commenced proceedings to foreclose his mortgage by advertisement before the death of Mrs. Parks, and on January 12, 1878, the premises were sold upon such foreclosure to Thomas McBlain, the mortgagee, and a sheriff’s deed executed and delivered to him. On January 9, 1879, McBlain and wife conveyed the lands by quitclaim deed to John Parks. The deed was dated on the 6th, but acknowledged on the 9th, of January. McBlain lived in Geneva, N. Y., and the deed was executed there. After the death of Mrs. Parks, William Parks foreclosed his mortgage, and at a sale had thereunder, May 30, 1878, John Parks became the purchaser at the sum of $330.76.
3. These proceedings put the apparent legal title back into John Parks, and February 3, 1879, he conveyed by warranty .deed the west 70 acres of these lands to John P. Simmons. March 28, 1882, Simmons and wife deeded the same to August Watt. Watt paid Simmons $1,850 in cash, and gave a mortgage back to him for the balance of $2,000. Simmons afterwards died, and his widow, the defendant Nancy Simmons, became the owner of this mortgage, which she now holds. The defendant Eeuben Kempf also holds a mortgage for $1,200 upon this 70*207 acres, given by Watt as security for money borrowed of Kempf to pay Simmons on the purchase of the premises. Simmons moved upon the land and made improvements. Watt, upon his purchase, took possession of the land, and has occupied it ever since, and also improved it. These improvements, consisting of buildings, orchard, etc., are valued at from $1,500 to $2,000. This is the history of the 70 acres.
4. The original homestead was upon the remaining 100 acres. John Parks, after his wife’s death, remained upon this portion of the premises, and managed and dealt with it as his own, until his second marriage, in 1882, when he moved upon his wife’s farm, renting this place to Charles- S. Hurlbert, his son-in-law, who paid him rent, and now lives upon it. While' Parks lived upon this 100 acres, his children resided with him. Carrie Parks, who was' not of age at the time the testimony was taken in this suit, has, since her father moved away, made her home with her brother-in-law, Hurlbert.
5. While Parks was in the occupancy of this 100 acres he gave several mortgages, as follows: John Parks to Thomas McBlain, November 11, 1880, $1,100; John Parks and wife to Samuel E. Hart, November 15, 1883, $1,600; John Parks and wife to A. J. Baldwin, November 19, 1883, $100. To discharge these mortgages, and obtain a lower rate of interest, John Parks borrowed of the defendant Barbara Langenbacher the sum of $3,200, and he and his wife, November 7, 1885, gave her a mortgage to secure that sum upon the land, the 100 acres, which she now holds. With the money obtained from Mrs. Langenbacher, he paid up the three mortgages above noted, and they were discharged of record.
6. February 1, 1886, Mary Jane Hurlbert, formerly Mary Jane Parks, executed a quitclaim deed of all her right, title, and interest in the whole 170 acres, being an undivided one-half interest in the same, as heir at law of her mother, Maria T. Parks, to the complainant James W. Lucas.
In August, 1886, this bill was 'filed by Lucas and Carrie Parks, by her next friend, praying that the title to the whole premises be decreed to be in them, and that the mortgages held by the defendants Nancy Simmons, Beuben Kempf, and Barbara Langenbacher be delivered up-
The evidence was taken in open court before the Honorable Vernon H. Smith, then judge of the Clinton circuit court, who dismissed the bill of complainants upon two grounds:
1. That it was not the intent of John Parks, at the time he made the deed to his wife, to convey the absolute title to her at once, but that it was-delivered upon the condition that if he recovered it should not be valid, or of any effect, — if he died it was to be valid, if he lived it was to have no effect; and that Mrs. Parks received it under this understanding.
2. That the equities of the defendants are such that the complainant James W. Lucas, who bought the title upon speculation, is estopped by his own knowledge, and that of his grantor, Mary J. Hurlbert, and her acts, from disputing the mortgages; and that August Watt was a good-faith purchaser of the 70 acres, without any knowledge of any fraud in the obtaining of the title by Parks.
We are satisfied that the bill ought to be dismissed
In relation to the 100 acres, it is conclusively shown that the money advanced by Mrs. Langenbacher was all used, except, perhaps, a few dollars, in payment of existing and valid incumbrances upon it, — mortgages put upon the premises by John Parks, while the legal title stood in him, — and with no proof that any of them were fraudu
“ Q. Mrs. Langenbacher's money gave you a breathing spell until you could find this fellow [Lucas] to sell it*211 to, and then let them fight it out and let your wife out?
“A. Yes, sir.
“ Q. Your idea was to take your wife out from under this yoke, and let this fellow fight it out, was it not?
“A. You bet it was.”
It is also apparent from the testimony that Mrs. Hurlbert and Lucas were both cognizant of and parties to this scheme to let Mrs. Langenbacher take up by her money these mortgages then past due, and being pressed for payment, and take her mortgage on long time, so that they could be given leisure in which to assert Mrs. Hurlbert’s claim to the premises, or one-half of them. Lucas admits that he bought a chance, and was to run all risks and expenses of the lawsuits necessary to maintain the title of the heirs. He claims that the bargain was to pay each of them $2,500. He paid Mrs. Hurlbert $800 down, and ’gave her security for the balance. With Carrie Parks he had to trust to her ratifying the purchase when she became of age, and therefore paid her nothing. We think they have no equities as against Mrs. Langenbacher.
But as against John Parks, it is different. He has admitted the fraud upon his children, as alleged in the bill, both by his default and his testimony under oath. I am disposed to let him lie in the bed he has made. There is sufficient testimony in- the case to sustain the finding or opinion of the circuit judge that this deed was never intended to take effect unless John Parks died of his then illness. But he did not move before his wife’s death to have the title restored to him, and he himself positively denies in his testimony that the deed was any other than one intended to take effect at once, and to vest the title absolutely in his wife. And I am thoroughly satisfied that there would never have been any litigation or trouble in this case had it not been for this same
It is contended very strenuously that the record title, as it stood, was notice to purchasers of the wife’s title, and that, therefore, no one could be a good-faith purchaser, as the heirs of the wife were continuously in the possession of the premises; that the record of the mortgage foreclosures, upon which John Parks based his title, showed that the result of those proceedings was but a payment of John Parks’ own debts, and that as in equity Parks could not acquire title to the land by purposely or otherwise making default in the payment of his own debts, and bidding the land in as his own, and as the law would consider it a payment of his own debts and a cancellation of the. mortgages, the purchaser, after examining the title, and finding it in this condition, was bound to look further, and inquire into the rights of the heirs of the wife. This might be true, so far as the McBlain mortgage was concerned, which was security for the note of John Parks alone, ’ and which it may be
My conclusion is that the bill was properly dismissed, and the decree must be affirmed as against all the defendants except John Parks, with costs of both courts. As to the 100 acres, the decree will be modified so that the title to the same will be decreed in the complainants, .subject to the payment of the mortgage to Mrs. Langenbacher, which is hereby declared to be a valid lien upon .such premises.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James W. Lucas and Carrie A. Parks, By Her Next Friend v. John Parks
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- 1 case
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- Published