Faris v. Dunn

70 Ky. 276, 7 Bush 276, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 13, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 70 Ky. 276 (Faris v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faris v. Dunn, 70 Ky. 276, 7 Bush 276, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 53 (Ky. Ct. App. 1870).

Opinion

CHIEE JUSTICE ROBERTSON

delivered the oranou oe the court.

This has been a prolonged and vexatious litigation, and this court has hitherto reversed three successive orders of the circuit court, and remanded the case, each time for further preparation; but in no instance concluding or affecting the appellant, Mrs. Faris, in her title to her home, which is the ultimate question involved. And now, though we think that the circuit court again erred in rejecting the cross-petition of the appellants against William A. Hoskins, yet considering the case sufficiently prepared for a final decision so far as the appellants are concerned in the fundamental question which can not be affected by collateral controversies, we will at once proceed to consider that vital question, and to that extent close this case.

Before the year 1852, William Hoskins- — -upright, industrious, economical, and provident — owned his homestead tract of about five hundred acres of first-rate land in Garrard County, at the forks of the turnpike from Lexington to Danville and to Lancaster, equidistant from the bifurcation; and also seven valuable slaves, three of whom were excellent blacksmiths, [279]*279and a corresponding personalty. Becoming too old for such cares, and being to some extent embarrassed by advancements to most of his children and responsibilities for some of them, he sold his land to his son-in-law, “Dick Robinson,” who sold to John S. Hoskins, who sold to Richard Robinson, who sold to ¥m. A. Hoskins, who resold to the said Robinson, the son-in-law of said ¥m. Hoskins, to whom the legal title was conveyed on the condition that the original vendor’s daughter, Eliza V. Hoskins, now Faris, who had devotedly dedicated a long celibacy to the care of her aged parents, and had never been advanced, should have one hundred acres of the land, or its equivalent, ten thousand dollars, to secure her a home whenever needful. Her mother refused to relinquish her dower unless that provision should be made, and finally made the relinquishment in consideration of that plighted lien for her faithful and otherwise unprovided-for daughter. She preferring another hundred acres in sight of the old homestead, and Robinson being pleased with her choice, her father, true to the trust, bought for her the selected tract; paid for it with her money received and held for that purpose; and, as we may presume from the record, without her knowledge he took a conveyance of the legal title to himself, which, when informed of the fact, she urged him to convey to her; but he deferred it to his will, and assured her that her title should in that way be secured. Immediately after that purchase in the year 1852 her father put her into possession of the land so bought for her, where ever since she has resided as her only home, and so always recognized by her parents, her brothers and sisters and neighbors, and for a long time by her brother-in-law, “Dick Robinson” himself, for whom “Camp Rich Robinson” was so named. Her father died in December, 1862, and in 1866, during the pendency of this suit, her mother, who lived with her, being also dead, she intermarried with her co-appellant, James "W. Faris.

[280]*280On the 12th of February, 1859, her father, having become indebted to several persons about eight thousand dollars on his son William’s account, as we feel authorized to believe, .mortgaged his slaves and her “ home ” to indemnify the mortgagees, Dunn and Eichardson, and the said Dick Eobinson, for their undertaking to pay within a year that aggregate debt. .She did npt consent to the mortgage of her land, and her father resisted it until overcome, as one of them admitted, by the persuasion of the mortgagees; and doubtless he finally yielded under the belief that his son William would redeem the mortgage, and that if he should fail to do so the other mortgaged property would save her land — as it might and probably would have done had the slaves been opportunely Sold by the mortgagees.

In August, 1863, the mortgagees filed a petition to foreclose their mortgage, which the appellant, Eliza, resisted as to her land on various defensive grounds. The circuit court, however, decreed the sale of that land alone. At the sale by the commissioner under that decree, to prevent the embarrassment and difficulty that might resxilt from a purchase by a stranger, she, advised, as we infer, by her brother William (who promised to become her surety, and who, as appears to us, said he would pay the debt), bought the land for the amount required to satisfy the mortgage, and executed bonds with the said William as her surety.

To compel him to relieve her from these bonds, not yet collected, was the principal object of her cross-petition against him; and that litigation in some form may survive ou‘r judgment in this case, even though her cross-petition was dismissed by the decree appealed from, and by which she was also ordered to pay off the sale-bonds or give up her home.

Upon the facts proved this court is satisfied that, waiving questions of champerty and limitation on account of long and adverse possession, the appellant, Eliza, for not only a good [281]*281but a valuable consideration, is entitled to the land in contest under a valid and available resulting trust. Such right would be clear at common law; and as she does not appear to have consented to the conveyance of the legal title to her father, and he moreover disregarded the trust by that nominal conveyance, the 20th section of the chapter on real estate (2 Stanton, page 130) does not affect her equitable right as recognized and protected by the modern common law against purchasers with notice of it; but the 22d section of the same chapter excepts and saves it.

And in this case Robinson, as one of the mortgagees, being also a party to the trust, had indisputable and conclusive notice of all the facts from which the trust resulted, and, though not necessary, the other mortgagees had presumptive notice. They all took the mortgage therefore subject to her prior and still subsisting equity, which, combined with her long ;possession under a verbal contract not void, would be sufficiently defensive against them, even if not enforceable as a trust had they been in the adverse possession, and she, as plaintiff, had sued them. She is not estopped by bidding for the land and executing the bonds for the price. She bid for only what was beneficially her own, and thereby did the mortgagees, who knew that they had no right to sell her land, no harm. Her bonds therefore were executed without any binding consideration, and are held on an implied trust of revocation by her volition.

There is no estoppel here, nor in her conduct as nominal executrix associated with the mortgagee, Dunn, as acting-executor ; nor in any of her personal conduct, active or passive, properly considered, do we see anything that should estop a helpless and confiding woman, always ignorant of her rights and of the law, and most of the time covert, from continuing to assert her meritorious and enforceable claim to the land ; and insisting on her exoneration from the burden of again paying for it, and releasing her from the bonds, and thereby [282]*282devolving the whole obligation on her co-obligor, W. A. Hoskins (who is equitably prosecuted), will do no injustice to him or to the mortgagees.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ky. 276, 7 Bush 276, 1870 Ky. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faris-v-dunn-kyctapp-1870.