Springfield v. Jackson
Springfield v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In April, 1846, Boswell B. DeGraffenreid made his will. By the third clause it is provided: “There are now in the possession of my daughter, Elizabeth G., and her husband, Blount Springfield, ten slaves as a loan for the present, and I contemplate shortly to add two more slaves, making in all twelve, and settle them, with their increase from this date, and also with all that part of the Green B. Hamblett tract of land exclusive of the 30, acres assigned to my son' Henry, upon trustees in trust to apply the annual proceeds of the labor of said slaves and use of said land to the support, from year to year, of my said daughter Elizabeth, and such children as she may have, independent of and not subject (the property or its proceeds) to the control, debts or contracts of her present or any future husband, and at her decease the same to go to her child or children that she may have, and the descendants of such, the descendants taking the part the parent would have done if living; and in default of such living child or children, or descendants of such, at her death, the property so given to her use to revert to my estate and be divided equally; that is to say, one-fifth part to my son Henry, one-fifth each to each of my daughters, and the remaining one-fifth part to my said grandsons Edward and Francis Long, -or either; to Henry, his part in absolute title, and the remaining four-fifths to the trustees in this will
In the . last clause it is provided: “ Whereas, in the foi’egoing I will about 306 acres of land to the use of my daughter Elizabeth, and also direct that one-fourth part of my home tract of land be allotted^ off in severalty to the use of such of my said daughters as first arrive at twenty-one years-of age or marries, I have reflected that it may be better for them, and therefore authorize the trustees of each, if in the exercise of a sound discretion they may deem it best, to sell the land allotted to use of either, and apply the proceeds arising from such sale to purchase of other lands, which, when so purchased, is in all respects to stand substituted for the original.”
B. B. DeGraffenreid died in 1856. No one of the appointees ever qualified, except the son.
On August 10, 1869, Blount Springfield contracted to sell to M. L. Jackson 846 acres of land. A title bond, signed by Blount Springfield and his wife, Elizabeth G., and their only child, Baker C. Spring
The two notes first falling due have been paid. On the 4th of August, 1871, Blount Springfield executed a deed for 546 acres of the land, reciting payment of the purchase money. Springfield, wife and son join in a - deed for the 300 acres, retaining a lien for the purchase money, which is stated to be evidenced by the last note before described for $5,000. The notes were all payable to Blount Springfield, the husband and father. The title bond was filed for registration on the 11th of February, 1870, and registered on the 12th of March, 1875. The deeds were not registered until after the com-. mencement of this suit.
On the 17th of March, 1871, complainant, Thos. G. Heal, loaned Blount Springfield $1,200, and on the 12th of April, 1871, he loaned him about $1,823,.
Jackson by his answer admits the purchase and his. readiness to perform, if the title to the 300 acre tract is good, or can be made so. He makes his answer a cross-bill.
At least five-sixths of the record is made of bills, cross-bills and answers.
The first question presented is, did Blount Springfield have the power under the will to sell and reinvest? We think with the chancellor that he did not, and that the sale was void as to the wife. Since the appeal to this court, however, Mrs. Springfield has died, and the title upon her death by the terms of the will vested in her only son, Baker C. Springfield, who was sui juris at the time he joined in the title bond and deed, was an attorney and the draftsman of many of the papers, especially the pleadings of himself, his father and mother, in this cause, in which he claims the sale was a very ad
It appears from the answer of Mrs. Springfield, her husband and son, that the profits from the reinvestment are greatly superior to those of the land devised under the will of her father. A strong prima faeie case is made for ratificatiorf, if presented in a bill for the purpose. From their own standpoint we are forced to - conclude that she received and enjoyed the use and rents of the reinvestment, receiving the full support contemplated by the will, and is thereby estopped to claim rents for the 300 acre tract for the time since Jackson became a bankrupt in 1878. But for her resistance to the cross-bill of Jackson, and concealment of what she in her later pleadings
Neal claims that he is entitled to subject the entire tract of 846 acres to the payment of his debts. As we have seen from the title bond, the sale was an entirety; he Ayas the holder of the note before the registration of the deeds; when he took the note it was governed by the contract in the title bond; he was not consenting to the deeds, nor had notice of their execution, and is not affected by them, but is entitled to the terms of the original contract, which secured a lien upon the entire tract for the full amount o'f the purchase money. The transfer, to Owen was made after he had notice of the existence of the deec[s to Jackson, and after Jackson’s deed of trust for the benefit of other creditors, and he must be postponed to them as to the 546 acres. The 846 acres avíII be sold in two parcels, or in more if practicable and desired by .the deferred creditors, and Neal first paid out of the proceeds; then the trustee, Tucker, out of airy excess in the proceeds of the 546 acres, and afterwards, if there is a balance, it may be applied to Owen’s debt.
Tire unadjudged costs avíII be paid out of the fund before any of the debts.
The decree will be modified as indicated.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.