Dickson v. Neal

2 F.2d 533, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2098
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1924
DocketNo. 6641
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 533 (Dickson v. Neal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickson v. Neal, 2 F.2d 533, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2098 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

FARIS, District Judge.

Plaintiffs in error, as plaintiffs below, sued divers persons, in separate actions to recover certain parcels of land situate in Conway county, Ark. These several actions, which involved identical facts and issues (the parcels of land alone being different), were consolidated, and the consolidated case tried below by the court, upon an agreed statement of facts.

Defendants’ answer set up divers equitable defenses, which (a jury having been waived as to issues triable to a jury) were, with the whole case, heard by the court and the issues found for defendants and a judgment and decree entered, quieting title in them. To test the correctness of these findings and judgment, plaintiffs prosecute this writ of error.

One William C. Stout is the common source of title. At and prior to the 1st day of October, 1867, said Stout held the paper title to the lands in controversy, comprising in all some 2,400 acres. On the day last mentioned, he and his wife, Mary E. Stout, joined in a conveyance of these lands to one Thomas B. Stout, as trustee; in trust, however, to hold and administer them "for the sole use and benefit of the aforesaid Mary E. Stout, during the term of her natural life and for the children of her body forever.” By this trust instrument, the rents and income from the land were to be paid annually, - by the trustee to Mary E. Stout. It was further provided that whenever the trustee should be requested by Mary E. Stout “in writing under her hand and seal” to do so, he should convey these lands “to Mary E. Stout for the term of her natural life, and unto the heirs of her body forever, in fee simple.” (Italics are ours.)

This conveyance in trust recited, as matters of explanation, inducement, and partial consideration, that the lands had been bought by WEliam C. Stout with moneys obtained by him from the separate estate of his wife, Mary, and that they were in equity her property.

The trustee never in fact took possession of these lands, or exercised any dominion or control over them, or over the rents and income accruing from them. Seemingly— though the fact nowhere appears except by broad inference—WEliam C. Stout resided upon them with his wife, Mary E. Stout, and controlled them and collected the rents and income from them tEl his death in 1886. Thereupon Mary E. Stout retained possession and sole control of them, and rented them and used them wholly as if she owned them in fee, tiE they were sold under mortgages as hereafter set out. In 1889, some part of these lands, exactly how much in acres is not clear, were conveyed by the trustee to Mary E. Stout, by a deed which recited that the grant was to her “for the term of her natural life, with remainder in [535]*535fee simple to the heirs of her body/ trustee died in 1893, without ever making any other or further conveyance of the lands. This

Plaintiffs below, Thos. P. Stout and Mary I. Lane, are the two living children, and plaintiff Mary E. Dickson is the sole surviving heir of a deceased child of Mary E. Stout, and together these three comprise all the children and descendants of children, and all of the heirs of the body of Mary E. Stout, who died April 22, 1922.

In the years 1889 and 1890 certain mortgages of the fee in this land wore made to the Topeka Land & Investment Company, and to others by Mary E. Stout, to seeure the payment of money borrowed by her. Subsequently, these mortgages were foreclosed by a consolidated action in equity, in which plaintiffs Thos. P. Stout and Mary I. Lane were made parties defendant, and wherein they did not sot up any claim of title as remaindermen. Under these decrees in foreclosure, the lands were sold in 1896, to Miller and Ragland, who later sold them to one Martin, who held possession of them till his death; whereupon, they passed by deed from Martin’s heirs to these defendants, who hold them, thus, through the above mortgages by mesne conveyances. One of these mortgages, at least, was given to seeure payment of money loaned to the firm of Mary E. Stout & Co., in which firm plaintiffs Thos. P. Stout and Mary I. Lane were partners with their mother.

After the foreclosure sale, and in 1896, an action was brought by plaintiff Mary E. Dickson, then an infant (but who is now 45 years old), and her brother, who has since died, intestate, to recover their interests in these lands, wherein such proceedings were had in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas, as resulted in a decree by consent in favor of these infants for the sum of $3,250, which sum was paid to their guardian for them.

On the 3d day of March, 3890, plaintiffs Thos. P. Stout and Mary I. Lane conveyed, by warranty deed, to their mother, Mary E. Stout, all that pai-t of the lands in controversy here which lie in township 5, and 40 acres in township 6. So, by the well-known rule embodied in section 1498 of Crawford & Moses’ Statutes of Arkansas, which carries, perforce the warranty, an after-acquired title to the vendee, even though the vendor had no title when he conveyed, such part of the land as is situate in township 5, and 40 acres in township 6, or 560 acres in all, need no longer concern us, so far as these two plaintiffs are concerned. In 3.889, these same two plaintiffs conveyed to their mother, the life tenant, by quitclaim deed, which however used the words grant, sell, and quitclaim, the residue of these lands, all of which lie in township 6.

It will have been noted that the conveyance in trust to Thomas B. Stout purports in the habendum clause and by large inference in the granting clause to be for “Mary E. Stout, during the term of her natural life and for the children of her body forever.” A subsequent provision of this deed in trust provided for the conveyance of this land to Mary E. Stout upon her request in writing under her hand and seal, and set forth that such conveyance shall be, as to the remainder therein limited, to the “heirs of her body forever.” Clearly, the language of the granting clause and the habendum clause prevails over the language last above quoted, and the grant must be construed as a grant to Mary E. Stout for life, with remainder over in fee to such children as may be borne by her. Thus, an estate tail was created, which under the provisions of section 1499 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest of the Laws of Arkansas, then and yet in force in Arkansas, was automatically converted into an estate for life in Mary E. Stout with remainder over in fee to the children born to her. A remainder thus created is ordinarily held to be a contingent remainder till the children, who are to take, are in esse; hut when they are born, the remainder becomes vested. Blanchard v. Blanchard, 1 Allen (Mass.) 227; Doe v. Considine, 6 Wall. 458, 18 L. Ed. 869. That this is the general rule at common law and in practically all of the states of the Union cannot be doubted or seriously questioned. Golladay v. Knock, 235 Ill. 412, 85 N. E. 649, 126 Am. St. Rep. 224; Bunting v. Speek, 41 Kan. 424, 21 P. 288, 3 L. R. A. 690; 23 R. C. L. 498; Doe v. Considine, 6 Wall. loc. cit. 476, 18 L. Ed. 869.

But it is contended by plaintiffs that under the settled law of Arkansas the remainder created in the children of Mary E. Stout was never a vested estate or interest till 1922, when the particular estate fell in by the death of the tenant for life. In other words, the settled rule in Arkansas, regardless of the rule elsewhere, is that the remainder created in these children was at all times, till the death of their mother, a contingent remainder, and therefore not capable of being aliened by a bare quitclaim deed.

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17 F.2d 710 (Eighth Circuit, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F.2d 533, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-neal-ca8-1924.