Drake v. Parker

7 S.E.2d 651, 122 W. Va. 145, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 29
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
Docket8990
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 651 (Drake v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drake v. Parker, 7 S.E.2d 651, 122 W. Va. 145, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 29 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

Prior proceedings in this cause were reported in 119 W. Va. 738. From the opinion there it will appear that a tract of 130 acres is in controversy; that at one time it was owned by Almeda Parker, who devised it to plaintiffs; that her husband, J. H., fraudulently obtained it from plaintiffs and devised it to his son Floyd and his daughter Sarah Carper; that the circuit court was affirmed in setting aside the deed to J. H. and his devise *146 to Floyd and Sarah,. but was reversed in sustaining a demurrer to the averments in the answer of an executory agreement affecting the 130 acres, and was also reversed, as premature, in holding that plaintiffs owned the entire tract.

The contract alleged in the answer is that on July 7,1904, by writing duly signed and acknowledged by all the parties affected, Almeda and J. H., “bargained and traded” to Floyd and Millard Carper, the husband of Sarah, the 130 acres, with life estates reserved, in consideration.that Floyd and Millard convey from a tract of 148 acres which they owned jointly, 52 acres to Josie Smith and 96 acres, the remainder of the tract, to her husband “Herby.” Josie was another daughter of Almeda and J. H. The answer alleged that the conveyance was made to Josie but did not mention a conveyance to Herby. We called attention to this failure and remanded the cause for development. Thereupon, Floyd and Sarah amended their answer to show that the 96 acres was conveyed to Herby. Millard, not theretofore a party, was made one, and adopted the averments of Floyd and Sarah regarding the contract. Evidence was taken. The circuit court decreed in favor of defendants.

The contract was not produced or recorded. Proof of its execution and its accidental destruction by fire was attempted. Floyd and his wife, and Millard and Sarah, testified concerning its contents and acknowledgment. They were not competent witnesses because they were interested in the result of this suit, and their testimony related to a personal transaction with J. H. and Almeda, now deceased. Code, 57-3-1; Kilgore v. Hanley, 27 W. Va. 451; Freeman v. Freeman, 71 W. Va. 303, 307, 76 S. E. 657. The contention of counsel is not well taken, that the testimony of Floyd and Millard was rendered competent merely because they were cross-examined concerning what consideration they received for the 96 acres from Herby himself. (More about this transaction later.) Three disinterested witnesses testified regarding the contract, two men who worked for *147 J. H. in 1904, and a granddaughter. The two employees testified that J. H. directed them to go with him down to Floyd’s house in July, 1904, (reason for the order not stated). Both said that the persons alleged in the answer to have been present were there, signed a contract prepared and read aloud to all, by Floyd, and acknowledged the writing before Squire Nathan Westfall (now deceased) ; and that J. H. took it home and deposited it in a chest, having a wooden lock. One employee, aged fourteen years in 1904, said he could not state the details, but “The substance of the contract was that Millard Carper and Floyd Parker was to have the home tract of land at Almeda Parker and J. H. Parker’s death in consideration of a tract of land they owned that they let Herby Smith and Josie Smith have.” This witness further said that he had no interest in the contract, and had forgotten about it by 1916 when he was negotiating with J. H. for a strip of the Parker land, and was reminded by J. H. “You know this land goes to Floyd and Millard at my death * * * ”. The other employee said of the contract: “The whole substance of it was that F. P. (Floyd) Parker and Millard Carper had bought a tract of land, a hundred and some acres, up on Left Hand. And this agreement was to deed the old man Parker this 52 acres, deed it to him and let him — the fact of the matter was, they just made him the deed to this land they had bought, and he suggested they deed Josie his daughter up there 52 acres, but they deeded him the 52 acres and he deeded then the 52 acres to Josie, his daughter — Josie Smith. And that was to be her dower. And then the home place at his death * * * and Almeda Parker, then * * * Floyd Parker and Millard Carper were to have the home place.” It will be observed that the witness did not include a reference to the 96 acres. He became confused on cross-examination as to some of the alleged signatures to the contract and as to the presence at Floyd’s of some of the alleged signers; and admitted that he had no “part of this contract clearly *148 in mind * * * no more than what the old man had told me, you see, afterwards.”

The granddaughter testified that in 1925 she found in the kitchen of the Parker home “sticking in between the clothes press and the wall” a written contract signed and acknowledged (before Nathan Westfall) by the parties whom the answer alleges, but that Herby’s name was not mentioned in the body of the writing; that “It read on about the home place there; Floyd and Millard were to have the home pláce * * * at J. H. and Almeda Parker’s death * * * and I * * * stuck it right back where I got it.” It will be noted that this witness did not say that the writing she found contained any reference to either the 52 or the 96 acres. There is no evidence of any such writing ever being seen again, though the papers of J. H. were searched after his death. In 1932, the curtain of the Parker clothes press caught fire. The man who put it out testified that he noticed nothing within the press injured, except some smouldering clothing which he removed. A domestic in the Parker home at the time, testified that in addition to the clothing, some books and papers inside the press were burned, the papers being destroyed. Several witnesses testified that both J. H. and Almeda had severally said that at their death Floyd and Millard were to have the home place.

The alleged remarks of J. H. and Almeda which tend to support the alleged contract are in conflict with their recorded writings, to-wit: (a) In July, 1904, on the same day the alleged contract was made, they, as grantee conduits of Floyd and Millard, executed to Josie a deed for the 52 acres, which provided that the conveyance was “for or in place of” her prospective heirship interest in the Parker home farm, and that her interest was “to become the property” of Floyd and Millard at the death of J. H. and Almeda. Thus the contractual rights of Floyd and Millard, approved in this deed by J. H. and Almeda and binding on them, relate only to Josie’s expectant interest in the 130 acres, (b) In December of the same year Almeda attempted to convey to J. H. “the *149 remainder of the remainder of real estate owned by her * * * containing 130 acres, be the same more or less”. That deed is treated as invalid by all the parties, but it does show that Almeda and J. H. failed to take into account at that time their alleged obligation, of a few months before, to Floyd and Millard for the entire 130 acres, (c) The will of Almeda was- made jointly with J. H. in 1913, was never changed, and, after her death in 1928, was recognized as valid by J. H. and probated. Its devise of the 130 acres to plaintiffs, shows that J. H. and Almeda, over a long period, continued unmindful of the alleged contract with Floyd and Millard, (d) J. H. died in 1935.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 651, 122 W. Va. 145, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-parker-wva-1940.