Cobb v. Knight

74 Me. 253, 1882 Me. LEXIS 144
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 Me. 253 (Cobb v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Knight, 74 Me. 253, 1882 Me. LEXIS 144 (Me. 1882).

Opinion

AepletoN, C. J.

This is a bill in equity by the complainant, to enforce a trust in her favor, and to compel a conveyance to her of real estate conveyed to the female defendant in trust for her benefit, and .through her (said defendant’s) agency and procurement, conveyed to her husband without consideration and with a full knowledge of the trust on his part.

The evidence is very voluminous, but the following facts must be deemed as fully established.

Reuben Q. Brackett, the father of Mrs. Cobb and the husband' of Mrs. Knight (who married her co-defendant in 1853 or 1854), died on the twenty-fourth day of March, 1846. The complainant, their only child, was born May 6, 1843, and was married to her present husband January 1, 1862, so that she has ever been and still is under such disability as may arise either from infancy or coverture.

Mr. Brackett at his death owned a farm, (the homestead,) worth twenty-five hundred dollars, but subject to a mortgage of six hundred dollars, and another lot (Back Cove), subsequently sold for six hundred dollars, and farming utensils and other personal property of not great value. He had likewise effected an insurance of five thousand dollars on his life, payable in case of his decease to his wife, and in case of her decease to her children. The policy was procured in part, for the purpose of paying his debts, and ivas in his possession' and under his control: That his debts were to be paid out of the sum received was well understood by his wife and received her assent.

Samuel Brackett was appointed administrator on the estate of his deceased brother. No guardian was appointed for Huldah [255]*255Ellen, Ms infant daughter. After consultation between the widow and the administrator, it was arranged that two thousand dollars should be reserved from the insurance fund and held in trust by the widow for her daughter till she should become of age, — that it should then be paid her without interest, the mother meanwhile having the interest and boarding and talcing care of the daughter without charge, which was done. The mortgage on the homestead was paid from the insurance money, and the farm mortgaged was then conveyed by the administrator to the widow*.

Shortly after this arrangement and undoubtedly in pursuance of it, the parties, the administrator and the widow, met on June 9, 1846, at the office of John Neal, through whose agency the policy of insurance had been effected, and then and there two thousand dollars were paid and placed in trust for the complainant. John Neal gave his note "for fourteen hundred dollars, payable to Orilla L. Braclcett as trustee, for the benefit of Huldah Ellen Brackett, payable in five years. He secured this note by his mortgage of the same date, in which he recites that "in consideration of the sum of fourteen hundred dollars, paid by Orilla L. Brackett, of Westbrook, Maine, widow, as trustee for the benefit of Huldah Ellen Brackett, infant daughter of said Orilla, by her late husband Reuben Gr. Brackett,” he does hereby give, grant, bargain, sell and convey "unto the said Orilla, for the sole and exclusive use of the said Huldah Ellen Brackett,” a certain tract of land, describing it, to have and to hold to the "said Orilla, her successors, assigns to her and their use forever as trustee, or trustees as aforesaid,” &c. "provided nevertheless if the said Neal shall pay to said Orilla, trustee as aforesaid, her successors, his note of fourteen hundred dollars,” &c. "then both to be void, otherwise to remain in full force.”

On the same day James N. Winslow gave a note similar in its terms, for six hundred dollars, running to Orilla L. Brackett, trustee, &c. The mortgage by which this is secured, recites the consideration to be "the sum of six hundred dollars paid by John Real of Portland, agent for Orilla L. Brackett, of Westbrook, Maine, trustee of Huldah Ellen Brackett, infant daughter of said [256]*256Orilla, and her late husband Reuben G-. Brackett.” The mortgaged premises were conveyed to "said Orilla L. Brackett, trustee as aforesaid, her successors and assigns, to the use of said Iiuldah Ellen, forever, &c. These mortgages are for the sum held in trust, and are both discharged on the record by the mortgagee, Orilla L. Brackett.

The first named mortgage was discharged May 7, 1851, on which day John Neal gave a new note to Mrs. Brackett, and a mortgage to her, " in consideration of four hundred and fifty dollars paid by her, as trustee for Huldah Ellen Brackett, infant daughter of the late Reuben G-. Brackett,” conveying the mortgaged premises to "said Orilla L. Brackett, her successors, foi'ever, nevertheless in trust, to the sole use and behoof of the said infant, Huldah Ellen.”

About the time of the marriage of this complainant, Mrs. Brackett, (now Knight,) gave her daughter the last named note of Neal, and the note of J. N. Winslow on which was due about three hundred dollars, which is all the respondent alleges her daughter has received. The balance received from the insurance (except what together with the proceeds of the Cove lot — six hundred dollars,— went to pay the debts of the estate), and the homestead farm went into the hands of the defendant, Orilla L. Brackett, (now Knight,) by a deed from the administrator of her first husband.

The defendant, Mrs. Knight, denies the existence of any trust, and says that she was not aware that the notes and mortgages were running to her as trustee for her daughter, but the inferences necessarily to be inferred from her conduct, her admissions, her evasions, as well as from the notes, the deed, and the mortgages to which she was a party, and ■ from the testimony of Samuel Brackett, the administrator, and others, leave no doubt that her statements and denials are not entitled to credence. Indeed, she would seem to be estopped by the notes and mortgages to which she was a party, to sit up her present claim.

No formality is required to create a trust. It may be proved by letters, memoranda, recitals in a bond, or by any writing which shows the fiduciary relations between the parties. 1 Perry [257]*257on Trusts, § 82. But bore the trust relates only to the personalty — the money or the notes. The mortgages were only for security. But where the trust is of personal property, it is not within the statute of frauds and may be created by parol. Benbow v. Townsend, 1 Mylne and Keene, 506. In Jones v. Lock, 1 L. R. Ch. Appeal Cases, 25, Lord Cbakwobth says that "a parol declaration of trust of personalty may be perfectly valid even when voluntary. If,” he adds, "I give any chattel, that, of course, passes by delivery, and if I say, expressly or impliedly, that I constitute myself a trustee of personalty, that is a trust executed and capable of being enforced without consideration. I do not think it necessary to go into any of the authorities cited before me; they all turn upon the question, whether what has been said was a declaration of trust or an imperfect gift. But when there has been a declaration of trust, then it will be enforced, whether there has been consideration or not.”

But upon the facts established here was a trust on ample consideration. Beside the love of a mother for a child, the pecuniary consideration was sufficient. The complainant was sole heir to her father. She was entitled to the homestead subject to the mortgage and dower, and to the' Cove sold for six hundred dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Me. 253, 1882 Me. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-knight-me-1882.