German Mutual Insurance v. Grim

32 Ind. 249
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 32 Ind. 249 (German Mutual Insurance v. Grim) 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
German Mutual Insurance v. Grim, 32 Ind. 249 (Ind. 1869).

Opinion

Elliott, J.

We are compelled'tó examine the important questions presented by the record in this ease without any argument in behalf of the appellees.

The material questions in the case arise upon the third paragraph of Ritter’s answer ■ and cross complaint, which was also adopted by Mrs. Grim, and to which the circuit court overruled a demurrer. Was that ruling correct ?

We will first examine the questions raised bythe complaint and the answer with reference to the' position: and rights of Ritter in opposition to the appellant. The-'points presented by the answer are, that the deed from Ritter to Grim was voluntary and made without any valuable consideration whatever; that it was intended to be- made to Mrs. Grim as a gift, and under the belief’that she was named as the grantee, the deed was delivered' to- her and she was put into the possession of the premises intended to be conveyed," but that by the mistake of the draftsman the conveyance not only failed to contain a proper description of the premises, as alleged in the complaint, but the name of Louis Grim was inserted in it erroneously as the grantee, instead of his wife, Catharine Grim, as was intended by the grantor; and that Ritter, upon the discovery of said mistakes, after the commencement of this suit, executed to Mrs. Grim another deed containing a proper description of the premises. These facts seem to have been regarded by the circuit court as sufficient to raise a superior equity in Mrs. Grim, and to constitute a valid defense to the action on the part of Ritter. The- only averments in the answer which Ritter could possibly rely upon as a defense are, that the deed to Grim was made without any valuable consideration, and that by mistake- of the draftsman it was made to Louis instead of Catharine Grim. The appellant occupies the relation of andnnocent purchaser, for a valuable consideration, from Louis Grim. The-deed from [254]*254Ritter to Grim purports upon its face to have been made for the valuable consideration of two hundred dollars, paid by Grim to Ritter, the receipt of which is acknowledged. It was placed on record on the day of its execution. The answer contains no averment of notice to the appellant, at any time, that the- conveyance to Grim was voluntary, or of the alleged mistake in the name of the grantee. In the absence of such notice, the .appellant was authorized to presume that the deed was made upon a valuable consideration, as expressed upon its face, and that the proper grantee was named therein; and the appellant having become a purchaser for a valuable consideration, in good faith, from the grantee named in the deed, Ritter must be held as es-topped to deny that the deed was made for a valuable consideration, or that the grantee was properly named, and thereby defeat the appellant’s title under it. Guard v. Bradley, 7 Ind. 600; Trimble v. The State, 4 Rlackf. 485. And the fact that the appellant was compelled to appeal to the chancery powers of the court to correct the mistake in the description of the land, does not avoid the estoppel. Such estoppels, when consistent with the principles of equity and good conscience, are recognized and enforced in courts of equity the same as at law. Here, the appellant, relying upon the facts apparent on the face of the deed from Ritter to Grim, became the purchaser under the latter, in good faith, for a valuable consideration, and it would be a fraud on the appellant if Ritter were now permitted to deny the truth of the recitals in his deed, and thereby defeat the appellant’s title, which equity will not sanction.

We will now examine the question as to the claims of Mrs. Grim, and see whether her position is a more advantageous one than that occupied by Ritter.

The claim of Mrs. Grim is, that the conveyance from Ritter, which, in fact, was made to her husband, was intended to be made to her as a voluntary gift from her father.

If, then, the deed had been made to Mrs. Grim, as she claims it was intended to be, she would have occupied the [255]*255position of a voluntary grantee, without a valuable consideration ; but if the conveyance did not describe the premises intended to be conveyed, it would still have been inoperative, and for that reason would not have been an executed gift; and as the conveyance was merely, voluntary, it did not invest her with any equity which she could have enforced, even as against Ritter, and much less as against a purchaser for a valuable consideration, in good faith, from the grantee named in the deed. It is settled, at least in this State, that a voluntary executory contract for the conveyance of land will not be specifically enforced; nor will a voluntary deed be corrected of mistakes on the application of the grantee against the grantor, though it will be on the application of the grantor against the grantee, where, by mistake, the conveyance is for a larger estate than was intended. Andrews v. Andrews, 12 Ind. 348; Froman v. Froman, 13 Ind. 317; Randall v. Ghent, 19 Ind. 271.

In Froman v. Froman, supra, a father made a voluntary conveyance of a tract of land to one of his sons, but, by mistake, described the land as being the south-east quarter of a certain section, instead of the south-west quarter.- Subsequently the father made a voluntary conveyance of the land, by a proper description, to his other children. On an application for partition among the latter, the son to whom the first conveyance was made set it up to defeat the subsequent conveyance, and asked that the mistake in the description of the land might be corrected. It was held, on appeal to this court, that equity would not aid in perfecting a title under a voluntary deed in such a ease.

Oases are found in which a distinction is attempted to be drawn in such instances between a voluntary executory contract or conveyance to a stranger and one to a child, where it is deemed to be founded on a meritorious consideration. The case of Ellis v. Nimmo, Ll. & G. temp. S. 333, is a leading one of this class, in which it was held, that a voluntary contract, in writing, by a father to make a post-nuptial provision, or settlement, upon his-daughter, might be enforced [256]*256against him in equity, as being founded on a meritorious, although not a valuable, consideration. Justice Story, in commenting on that case, says, “But this doctrine has been since denied, and the general rule seems now established, that the court will not execute a voluntary contract, but will withhold assistance from a volunteer, whether he seeks to have the benefit of a contract, or a covenant, or a settlement.” Story Eq. § 793 d. See, also, § 164. A distinction'seems to.be drawn between cases of this character and those of a defective execution of a power, in which it is said relief may be granted in favor of a voluntary donee.

From the decreeu’endered" in the case, it may be inferred that the learned judge who- tried the case in .the circuit court regarded the deed executed by Bitter to Mrs. Grim, pendingdhe suit, as relating back to- the date- of the; eonveyance-to Louis. Grim, and as investing Mrs. Grim with the legal title, as of that date- But it must be remembered that the appellant had, in the mean, time, become the purchaser of the premises for a valuable considei’ation, under the conveyance to Louis Grim, without notice of Mrs. Grim’s claim; and hence the subsequent voluntary conveyance to her by Bitter could not prejudice the rights of the appellant thus acquired. The doctrine of relation cannot

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ind. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-mutual-insurance-v-grim-ind-1869.