Blanchard v. Knights

146 A.2d 173, 121 Vt. 29, 1958 Vt. LEXIS 137
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 5, 1958
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 146 A.2d 173 (Blanchard v. Knights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanchard v. Knights, 146 A.2d 173, 121 Vt. 29, 1958 Vt. LEXIS 137 (Vt. 1958).

Opinion

Mulburd, J.

The petitioner, Ellen Blanchard, is seeking "to foreclose” the "equity of redemption” of the petitionees, by reason of certain provisions pertaining to her maintenance and support appearing in a deed from her to the petitionees, Knights. Following hearing below the Chancellor entered a decree dismissing the bill of complaint. The petitioner is here on her exceptions to the decree and to certain findings made or refused by the Chancellor.

We start with the situation as disclosed by those findings which have been unattacked by exception.

On March 15, 1947 the petitioner conveyed by warranty deed to Ward A. and Hazel B. Knights, her son-in-law and daughter respectively, three described parcels of land in Pownal, Vermont. In this conveyance, following the covenants of warranty, appears the language upon which the petitioner bases her claim for relief: the grantor, it says, warrants the *31 premises "free from' every encumbrance except that the consideration for this deed is the agreement on the part of the said grantees, for themselves, their heirs and assigns to support and maintain said grantor in sickness and health on parcel I hereinabove described, and in case the home on .said premises should be destroyed by fire, then to maintain and support said grantor in some suitable home in said Town of Pownal.

"It is further mutually agreed that the said grantees are to pay the funeral expenses and burial expenses of the said grantor and to pay the taxes assessed on the within described premises, to make all necessary repairs at their sole cost and expense and to keep the buildings on said described premises suitably insured at their sole cost and expense.

"It is further mutually agreed that this agreement is to be binding upon the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of the said grantees.”

The grantees went into possession under the foregoing conveyance (which has been duly recorded in the land records) and the petitioner lived with them on "Parcel I” without complaint for a number of years. In the fall of 1947 and again in the summer of 1950 the Knights conveyed away a portion of the "Second Parcel” to petitionees Barber. The Barbers, in turn, conveyed a portion of the premises conveyed them, to petitionees Deery.

Following these transactions, the petitioner, in December, 1953, went to live with her granddaughter, Dorothy Hewson. This was done by an agreement between Ellen Blanchard and the Knights. Under it, the petitionees were to pay, and did pay, the petitioner’s board at the rate of $10.00 a week to the Hewsons. This arrangement, after about two years, was succeeded by various others, each separately and mutually entered into, whereby the petitioner made her home with different grandchildren or relatives, each of whom was paid by the Knights for the petitioner’s room and board. In all these moves a friendly relationship prevailed between the petitionees Knights and the petitioner. She frequently visited them during the period, and they maintained, at all times, a room for her occupancy at their home on "Parcel I.”

During all this time, Ellen Blanchard had a bank acount *32 of her own which stood in the joint names of herself and her son, William. From time to time, since 1948, she directed him to pay various odd bills from this account. In no instance where this was done was there any request ever made beforehand of the Knights by Ellen Blanchard for payment of the bills in question nor was any demand for reimbursement made, prior to suit, after she had paid them. Any withdrawal from the joint account necessarily decreased the interest of the son, William, as joint tenant. v .

In August, 1957, William was appointed guardian for his mother who was then seventy-five years of age. Early in the spring of 1957 the petitioner had suffered a slight stroke and in August the petitioner was moved to the Sourdiffe Convalescent Home in Bennington. This brings us to the first exception which we wish to consider. The Chancellor found (finding No. 15) that the moving of the petitioner to the Sourdiffe Convalescent Home was made without consultation with the petitionees Knights. The petitioner excepted to this finding as being "irrelevant to any issue in this case and the testimony of Olive Morey in this regard is uncontradicted.” Taking this exception at face value it avails the petitioner nothing, for a finding, even if unwarranted, is not ground for reversal where it does not pertain to an essential element of the case. Partridge v. Cole, 98 Vt 373, 378, 127 A 653; Turner v. Bragg, 113 Vt 393, 398, 35 A2d 356; Cole v. Cole, 117 Vt 354, 359, 91 A2d 819. The real question, as between the petitioner and the Knights, was not whether the latter were "consulted” when the petitioner was put in the convalescent home, but whether they agreed that she might be placed there. Neither the evidence nor the findings support such a view. The evidence was that the petitioner could have been cared for in a private home if well-attended. The most that the Knights ever agreed to was that if the petitioner "had” to be moved to the convalescent home, "it was all right.” Thus the basis of any consent by the Knights is lacking. Thus for not one but for several reasons the exception to finding No. 15 is not sustained.

The petitioner excepted to the following finding:

*33 'T2. That payments were made by the Knights to William Blanchard for Ellen Blanchard’s use of the tenant house and that payment has not been refused by the Knights of any balance that may be due;” on\the following grounds:

"a. The finding that 'payment has not been refused’ is a conclusion of law not supported by previous findings.

''b. As a matter of law, payment has been refused.”

The foregoing finding related to one of the places where the petitioner stayed in her various moves and to miscellaneous bills which William Blanchard paid at his mother’s direction and for which reimbursement is now claimed. There was testimony that the petitioner never complained to petitionee Knights about the payment of any bills and Knights himself testified that he had never refused to pay any bill presented to him for the care and support of Mrs. Blanchard. As applied to this case the appellant has failed to point out why a finding based on this testimony is a conclusion of law. We cannot see that it is.

Finding No. 17 made by the Chancellor reads as follows:

'T7. That there were at the time of this hearing certain bills due to Dr. Manes of Bennington, and to the Putnam Memorial Hospital for the care of the said Ellen Blanchard. That payments have been made on these bills by the petitionees, Knights, and that they have assumed payment of said bills, and that the said creditors look to the Knights for their payment.” The petitioner’s exception to the foregoing points out no respect in which the finding is improper. It recognizes that the court might find all that it did and more besides: the balances due should have been included as well, the petitioner claims. A failure to find, upon proper request, is to be dealt with as such. Nothing in the petitioner’s exception attacks the finding as made.

The petitioner also excepted to findings No.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A.2d 173, 121 Vt. 29, 1958 Vt. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanchard-v-knights-vt-1958.