Clark v. Creswell

76 A. 579, 112 Md. 339, 1910 Md. LEXIS 118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 14, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 76 A. 579 (Clark v. Creswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Creswell, 76 A. 579, 112 Md. 339, 1910 Md. LEXIS 118 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves a consideration of the effect of alterations made in a deed, after execution and delivery, under the circumstances disclosed by the record.

It appears that Margaret A. Lizear purchased certain land for her daughter, Eveline Creswell, who is the appellee in this case. The deed as prepared at the instance of the vendor conveyed' the property to “Eveline Creswell to hold during her life and no longer, at her decease to become the property of her heirs, their assigns, in fee simple.” It was duly executed and acknowledged and was delivered by the grantor to Mrs. Lizear, who paid the purchase money. This was on September 30th, T896. About two months later and before the deed was recorded, Mrs, Lizear, in order to gratify the desire of John Creswell, husband of Eveline, that his name be inserted in the deed, returned with it to the grantor, who at her request interlined the husband’s name in the granting clause. He also, apparently upon his own motion, changed the word “her” preceding the word “decease” to “their” so that the clause was made to read “unto Eveline Creswell and *341 J ohn Creswell, her husband, to hold during her life and no long’er, at their decease to become the property of her heirs, their assigns, in fee simple.” The deed was not re-executed or re-acknowledged. It was returned to Mrs. Lizear and latei on it was recorded and then sent by the clerk to the appellee. The latter learned from her husband, before the deed reached her, that it had been changed so as to include him as one of the grantees. At that time the appellee was in possession of the property and has so continued to the present time. She did not consent to any change in the deed. Mrs. Lizear had other children, and to each of these, about the time of the conveyance to Mrs. Creswell, she made a pecuniary gift nearly equal to the amount of that purchase. It was undoubtedly her primary purpose to give the real estate in question to her daughter, the appellee, as a home, and it is evident from the record that her son-in-law was not originally an object of her bounty and that he was not considered in connection with the conveyance until after the property had been bought and paid fór and the deed had been formally executed, acknowl-" edged and delivered by the grantor.

• The proceedings before us are due to the fact that the appellee sold the property and the purchaser declined to take the title because of its supposed infirmity resulting from the alterations of the deed referred to, and the assertion by the appellee’s husband of an interest in himself under the deed. In order to remove this cloud from the title the bill in this ease was filed by the appellee as plaintiff against her husband, their children, the heirs at law of Mrs. Lizear, who died in 1905, and the grantors in the deed, as defendants. The bill alleges the facts we have mentioned and prays that the interlineation of the name of J ohn Creswell as a grantee, and the change of the words “her decease” to “their decease,” in the deed, may be declared null and void, and that the cloud upon the title thereby created may be removed and the plaintiff decreed to have quiet enjoyment of the property as against the parties to the cause. The defendants were all duly summoned. After answers filed by some of them and a decree. *342 pro confesso against the remainder, including’ John Creswell, who has made no appearance or defense, testimony was taken establishing without contradiction the facts already stated.

The Court below decreed that the attempted alteration of the deed was a nullity and that the plaintiff have quiet enjoyment of the property as prayed. In this determination we concur.

A deed duly executed and acknowledged is effective from the time of its delivery. Barry v. Hoffman, 6 Md 78. There is a consummated delivery when the instrument has passed from the grantor, without right of recall, to the grantee or some third person for his use. Hearn v. Purnell, 110 Md. 465; Duer v. James, 42 Md. 492; Woodward v. Camp. 22 Conn. 457. The test of delivery is the relinquishment by the grantor of the custody or control of the deed. When he has formally executed and acknowledged it and has delivered it unconditionally to the grantee, or one acting for him, the con veyance is completed and'the title has passed. Note to Munro v. Bowles, (Ill.) 54 L. R. A. 865; Shrader v. Bonker, 65 Barb. 615.

Even though the grantee may he ignorant of the delivery of the deed to another for his use, yet his assent is presumed from the fact that he is benefited by the transaction. Moore v. Giles, 49 Conn. 570; Bryan v. Walsh, 7 Ill. 557; Stewart v. Weed, 11 Ind. 92; Note to Munro v. Bowles, supra; Robbins v. Rascoe, 120 N. C. 79.

In this case the only person, under the facts shown by the-record, to whom the title, both legal and equitable, could be transferred by the deed at the time of its execution and delivery was the appellee. She was the only grantee then named in the deed; and the fact that the property was bought and intended for her, as well as the relationship of parent and 'child, prevented a resulting trust from arising in favor of her mother who paid the purchase money. Walsh v. McBride, 72 Md. 45; Hays v. Hollis, 8 Gill, 357; Mut. Ins. Co. v. Deale, 18 Md. 26. The grant to her for life with re mainder to her heirs invested her with the fee simple title *343 under the rule in Shelley’s Case. Waller v. Pollitt, 104 Md. 172.

It seems clear, therefore, that the grantor in the deed, when he executed', acknowledged and delivered it on September 30th, 1896, divested himself absolutely of the entire title, and that it was immediately transferred by the deed to the grantee to whom the conveyance purported to be made and for whom the property was in fact purchased. The title being thus effectually vested in the grantee, it could not be impaired by the subsequent alterations in the deed, especially when they were made without the grantee’s consent.

A deed is merely the medium for the transfer of the titli from the grantor to the grantee,'and when its purpose is once fully accomplished its subsequent disposition cannot affect the title it has conveyed. It may be altered, mutilated, lost or destroyed; its executory provisions may be rendered inop erative by fraudulent changes or otherwise; but the title which has passed by it will remain undisturbed.

As was said by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in' Chessman v. Whittemore, 23 Pick. 233 : “When deeds of eon veyance of real, or bills of sale of personal property, are completed and possession delivered under them, so far as the change of ownership depends on them they Bare executed, and the property passes and vests in the grantee. .

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Bluebook (online)
76 A. 579, 112 Md. 339, 1910 Md. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-creswell-md-1910.