Emmons v. Harding

70 N.E. 142, 162 Ind. 154, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 34
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1904
DocketNo. 20,260
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 142 (Emmons v. Harding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emmons v. Harding, 70 N.E. 142, 162 Ind. 154, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 34 (Ind. 1904).

Opinion

Gillett, C. J.

This action was brought by appellant against appellees to quiet title to certain real estate., There was a trial by jury, and on the conclusion of the evidence the court directed a verdict in favor of appellees. Over a motion for a new trial, judgment was rendered on the verdict.

It is objected by counsel for appellees that the assignment of errors is defective, in that the name of the court to which the appeal was taken is not shown. Appellant, presumably by oral direction, caused the appeal to be docketed in the Appellate Court, and an order of submission was afterward entered. That court alone has original appellate jurisdiction over cases of the class to which this belongs. If the case had been filed in this court, it would have been our duty to transfer it. §1362 Burns 1901. The procedure of appellant in the particular stated was irregular, but the Appellate Court acquired jurisdiction by the steps taken, and as the irregularity is not serious we regard it as our duty to consider the appeal on its merits.

It remains to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to entitle appellant to go to the jury. The question was as to the delivery and acceptance of a deed. The real estate in question belonged to- one Erastus H. Emmons, and was part of an eighty-acre tract of land. In the spring of 1900 Emmons signed and acknowledged eleven deeds, describing in the aggregate said tract of land. The deeds were .in favor of his eleven children, respectively, except that as to the portion intended for the benefit of [156]*156his son Henry the deed was.made in favor of the latter’s wife, the appellant here. The land covered by said deed is the property in suit. It consists of about ten acres, on which is a house and a barn.

In August, 1900, Emmons sent for a friend and neighbor, one Blue, and handed him said deeds, and also a writing which contained directions concerning the disposition of said instruments. Emmons was at the time an old man, in failing health. He had resided with appellant and her husband upon said eighty acres of land for many years. We have only secondary, and somewhat fragmentary, evidence as to the writing which accompanied the deeds. It is in evidence that it contained a direction to Blue to hold the deeds until Emmons’ death, and at “his death to deliver them to each one of the heirs.” Said writing contained some further provisions to the effect that the crops were to be sold, and, if necessary, timber was to be sold (whether the timber was upon the tract embraced in the deed in favor of appellant does not appear) to meet the expense of Emmons’ support, and to pay the cost of his burial. A number of oral statements were made to Blue by Emmons at the time of the delivery of said papers. Thus, when the deed to appellant was turned over to Blue, Emmons said, “This is Henry’s,” and upon Blue stating that it was made to Ellen (appellant), Emmons answered, “Yes, I made it to her.” He then explained that he had done so because Henry was in debt, and he added that he thought it best to deed the land to her so that she and Henry could have a home. In the course of said conversation Emmons further said that he did not owe any man a dollar; that he “did owe Henry some, but made that all right with him in deeding the land to pay him.” He further said, with reference to his having lived with Henry and his wife, that “he had been sick, and a good deal of bother to them,” and that “he thought it was right to give Henry that much.” The [157]*157bill of exceptions also shows the following in connection with the testimony of the witness Blue: “What did he [Emmons, Sr.] say about making this deed to Ellen Emmons ? A. He told me that Henry Emmons was in debt some, and for them to have a home he made it to-. The defendant objects. The court: What did he say about executing this deed to Mrs. Emmons, whether he did or not? A. Yes, sir, he did.” At the time said papers were turned over to Blue, Emmons had and retained in his possession a box, which had a lock and key, wherein it was his habit to keep his personal papers.

A few days after the above-mentioned conversation, one Smith, who was acting for appellant and her husband, stated to the elder Emmons that Henry and his wife requested that he “let the deed stand as it was, and they would give no further trouble at all from any book account or anything of that kind.” Emmons answered that he would allow the deed to remain if there would be no further account, and if said Smith would be a witness to that fact; an assurance which the latter thereupon gave. A little later Emmons called on Blue, and stated that he had “changed things,” or “changed his mind,” and he demanded and received said deeds and the paper which had been delivered with them. On August 30, 1900, Emmons, Sr., and appellee Harding concluded an oral negotiation for the sale to the latter of said eighty acres. He paid $1 down, and on the next day he received a deed and made an additional payment. Said appellee admitted upon the stand that he had heard of the making of said former deeds, and that said Blue held them, and said witness further admitted that he destroyed said deeds, at the request of said Emmons, at the time he concluded his negotiation for ‘the purchase of said land. Emmons died in April, 1901, before this suit was commenced.

So far as described in the evidence, the deed in favor of appellant was unconditional. Appellant, at least, had [158]*158nothing to surrender to avail herself of the deed, if it was delivered for her use and benefit. If it can be said it was delivered with an express agreement between the father and Henry that the latter’s account was to be canceled, there is room for the inference, from the statement of the elder Emmons that Henry had agreed to it, so that nothing remained to surrender. The evidence also tends to show a subsequent acceptance by appellant, and a waiver of all claim to an account upon the part of Henry.

It is insisted by counsel for appellees that as the grantor took the deed from the hands of the person to whom it was entrusted, and executed a deed of the land subsequently, the court should not treat the first deed as a conveyance of the land. A delivery of a deed to a third person to be by the latter delivered upon the grantor’s death, would appear at first thought to be open to the objection that there was lacking that meeting of minds which is essential to the validity of contracts, nevertheless it is hornbook law that a subsequent acceptance of the instrument or a ratification of the transaction may, by the operation of the fiction of relation, validate the deed.

It is to be observed that the instrument on its face purports to run in favor of the grantee, thus bringing him, in a sense, into privity with the grantor. Gibson v. Chouteau, 13 Wall. 92, 20 L. Ed. 534. It is required that the delivery to the third person be of such a character that all dominion over the deed upon the part of the grantor should terminate. The transaction is to be distinguished from an escrow. The instrument has been lodged with the third person to await the lapse óf time, and not the performance of any condition, and there is nothing to prevent it from becoming the grantor’s deed presently. Foster v. Mansfield, 3 Metc. (Mass.) 412, 37 Am. Dec. 154. In fact, the authorities proceed on the theory that a deed so delivered is for some purposes a present conveyance. Osborne v. Eslinger, 155 Ind. 351, 80 Am. St. 240, and cases [159]*159there cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 142, 162 Ind. 154, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emmons-v-harding-ind-1904.