Carter v. Carter

82 Va. 624, 1886 Va. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 82 Va. 624 (Carter v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Carter, 82 Va. 624, 1886 Va. LEXIS 81 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

having stated the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants assign for error first the action of the circuit court in overruling the demurrer. For ground of demurrer they submit that there is nothing on the face of the bill, either in its original form or as amended, to show any right in the complainant to bring or to maintain this suit.

It is undeniably a fundamental rule that every bill in equity must clearly show on its face that the plaintiff is entitled ’to the relief demanded, or such an interest in the subject matter as clothes him with a right to institute and maintain a suit concerning it. 1 Danl. Chy. Pr. 314; 1. Barton’s Chy. Pr. 349-350.

In this case, it is too obvious for argument that the original bill does not disclose any title or interest in the plaintiff upon which to found a right to bring or maintain this suit. The original bill seeks relief only against the deeds of 28th of August, 1880, which are filed as parts thereof. As to these it says: “Your orator will be content for the present to charge only that the two deeds of 28th August, 1880, were signed by Mrs. Carter under a mistake of fact; that they are not the deeds she intended to and thought that she was executing. As to how the alleged mistake on her part was brought about, he makes no charge at this time, and hopes that it will be unnecessary-to make it at all.”

[633]*633Now, one of these deeds conveys “Palser’s Springs” to H. Heaton, in trust for the grantor for her life with remainder over to B. G. Carter or his children. The other conveys to B. G. Carter “Bellefield,” and all the personal property of every kind, including portraits, pictures, furniture, &c., now on said tract, which may belong to the estate of Geo. Carter, deceased, and form a part of the rest and residue thereof.” It will be observed that Mrs. Carter’s “right,title and interest” in “Palser’s Springs,” which, by her deed of 6th of March, 1883, she conveyed to the complainant, the deed for which be sets up in the original bill, was only an equitable interest for her own life in “ Palser’s Springs.” That interest she conveyed to the complainant, and it is not pretended that the defendants, or either of them, dispute his right thereto; and yet the prayer of the bill is that the deed to H. Heaton be annulled. There is no conflict or competition between that deed and the deed of March 6th, 1883—nor does the original bill claim that if the former were annulled, the grantee in the latter would be entitled to the fee-simple of “Palser’s Springs.”

Again, the will of the testator gave to Mrs. E. O. Carter “Bellefield,” and the personalty aforesaid, and much other property constituting the residuum of his estate, to be by her given to his two sons in such proportions as she might deem proper. The deed to B. G. Carter confines the grant of personalty to such as formed part of that residuum, and does not pretend to grant any part of the personalty which, with “ Oat-land’s,” was bequeathed to the complainant. Besides, the original bill does not set up any title in the complainant to any part of the personalty conveyed by Mrs. Carter, with “Belle-field,” to B. G. Carter. And yet the prayer is that the latter deed be corrected as to the portraits, &c. There can be no pretense, therefore, that the original bill was not open to demurrer.

[634]*634The amended bill repeats the allegations of the original, and adds the circumstances of the interview between Mrs. E. O. Carter with her then counsel and others on the 30th and 31st of May, 1883, and the execution and delivery of the deed of 31st of May, 1883, and other things alleged to have happened since the filing of the original bill, and distinctly charges that the deeds of 28th of August, 1880, and the deed óf 26th December, 1882, were executed by Mrs. E. O. Carter without her knowing their contents, and when she was incapable of making such conveyances, and that they were obtained from her by her co-defendant, B. G. Carter, by misrepresentations and undue influence. And in addition to the prayer of the original bill, it prays that the deed of 26th December, 1882, be annulled. The several deeds are made part of this bill.

As respects the deed to H. Heaton, trustee, and the deed to B. G. Carter for “Bellefield,” and the personalty, &c., the amended bill adds nothing to the allegations of the original bill, and as to those deeds, it makes no better case than does ■the original.

It may be true that it alleges grounds on which, if established by proof, a court of equity would annul those deeds, and that of 26th of December, 1882, likewise, at the suit of Mrs. E. O. Carter; but she has brought no suit to that end. It may also be true that had she been dead when this suit was brought, and the complainant had asserted his claims to the property conveyed by those deeds, either as her devisee or as her heir, the court might have entertained his suit, and, upon sufficient proof, have granted him relief against those deeds. Kerr on Frauds and Mistake, p. 371. But, under any circumstances, he would have to allege expressly and distinctly his claim and title to the subject matter in controversy.

As to the deeds of August, 1880, the insufficiency of the amended bill is readily demonstrated by what has been said in regard to the original bill.

[635]*635It remains to consider its sufficiency as to the deed of 26th December, 1882.

The bill avers that by her deed of 31st May, 1883, Mrs. E. O. Carter conveyed to George Carter the “Moorland” tract, after she had conveyed the same to his brother, B. G. Carter. But it also avers that the prior deed to B. G. Carter was made by her under a mistake of fact, when she was mentally incapable, and under the grantee’s undue influence, and was procured by him by fraud, and prays to have it annulled. If it were annulled, then the later deed to the complainants would be effectual, and vest in him a good title to “ Moorland.” This last, and, it would seem, essential averment, the amended bill does not contain. The fact of the two competitive conveyances by the same grantor of the same property would, were the last grantee a grantee for value, undoubtedly make a proper case for equity jurisdiction, if suitable averments were made. See Warren v. Dailey, 80 Va. 512.

We are, therefore, of opinion that upon the case made by the bill the complainant was not entitled to the relief asked for, or to any relief, and that the circuit court erred in its said decree of January, 1884, in overruling the said demurrers, when the same should have been sustained, and the bill dismissed.

Here, this case would ordinarily stop, but both parties have expressed an earnest desire for an expression of opinion on the merits of the controversy, and we think it best to do so in order to put at rest this unfortunate bitter family strife, in which one brother is arrayed against another brother and the mother of both. The contest has fieen urged, not only with unusual acrimony, but has, unfortunately, been characterized by personal bitterness and strife even between counsel. But this court cannot be made the arena for the arbitrament of such matters. We, therefore, turn away -from them to the principles which must dictate our conclusions.

[636]

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Bluebook (online)
82 Va. 624, 1886 Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-carter-va-1886.