Grant v. Swank

81 S.E. 967, 74 W. Va. 93, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 967 (Grant v. Swank) 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
Grant v. Swank, 81 S.E. 967, 74 W. Va. 93, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1914).

Opinion

Lynoh, Judge:

By deed dated February 8, 1908, Alvilda Grant, who was the owner of the fee, and her husband conveyed to John H. Swank and his wife, EL J. 0. Swank, a tract of 102 acres of land in Pleasants county. The deed recites a consideration of ‘ ‘ eighteen hundred dollars, cash in hand, the receipt whereof is here acknowledged, and other considerations hereinafter mentioned”. The only recitals indicative of “other considerations” are that the grantees “doth herein agree to care for and support the said Alvilda Grant and A. J. Grant with money and other necessaries for their support their natural life”. The deed contains no provision indicative of an intent to charge or burden the land, or to reserve a lien thereon to secure the faithful discharge of the obligations assumed by the grantees.

H. J. 0. Swank, by deed of June 2, 1909, purporting to pass the fee in the entire acreage, but in which John EL Swank did not join, granted the land to J. Warren Reed.

Elis wife having died, A. J. Grant instituted this suit, to charge the lands with the expenses paid by him incident to her illness and death, and those incurred in the maintenance and support of himself since her death, and to enforce the same by a sale under the decree of the court. Ele bases his [95]*95right to the relief sought upon the theory that the deed creates a lien on the land conveyed, or a right to charge it with the amounts thus expended, although it does not expressly retain a lien or right to charge it for any purpose. The bill states all these facts in detail, but alleges that the cash consideration was not paid or intended to be paid, but that the sole consideration for the grant was the maintenance and support of the grantors during their joint lives and the life of the survivor. He charges that Reed, at the date of the grant by H. J. 0. Swank, had notice of plaintiff's lien and right to charge the land with the expenses of the maintenance and support for which the deed provided and in consideration of which the land was conveyed to J. H. and IT. J. 0. Swank.

The Swanks and J. Warren Reed are named as defendants, but were not personally served with process. They were proceeded against by publication. Reed tendered an answer, which the court permitted him to file, and to which plaintiff replied generally. H. J. 0. Swank did not appear for any purpose. While one of the decrees entered in the cause recites the tender and filing of an answer by J. H. Swank and general replication thereto, no such answer appears in the record. If filed, we can not ascertain what it contains. Although in other respects Reed denies the averments of plaintiff’s bill, he does not controvert the statement contained therein as to the real consideration for the grant to the Swanks. Nor does he offer any proof to show that Mrs. Swank was, at the date of her deed, in fact divorced from her husband, warranting the failure to join him as grantor therein; nor does he directly aver that she had obtained a divorce. The only averment of the fact of divorce is'that at the date of her deed she was a single woman, “having been divorced from her former husband, John Swank”. The mere recital in the deed that the grantor was “usually called Oregon Swank, formerly wife of John H. Swank”, and in the certificate of acknowledgment that she. was ‘ ‘ a single -woman of lawful age”, do not negative the continuance of a relation existing only a year before.

Having found “that there was reserved a life estate (in the Grant deed) for the’ support of the grantors therein”, and “that the life estate so reserved in said deed is a charge [96]*96and lien on said 102 acres of land and liable for the life support and maintenance of the said Alvilda G-rant and A. J. Grant during their natural lives”, and "being unable at this time to ascertain the true amount plaintiff is entitled to recover on account of the expenses and money expended for Alvilda Grant in her life-time, including her funeral expenses and all other expenses incident to her death, and also the amount A. J. Grant is entitled to be paid for his life support and maintenance”, the court directed a reference to a commissioner to ascertain and report the amounts thus incurred and paid, and the amount requisite for the support of plaintiff subsequent to the death of his wife to the date of the decree.

The death of J. Warren Eeed being noted of record, the court directed the cause to proceed against Cecil P. Reed, his only son and heir at law; and, confirming the findings of the master, decreed "that.the plaintiff do recover of and against the defendants herein the sum of $72.70 with interest from September 2, 1912, and the sum of $615, being the item for support and maintenance found due in favor of the plaintiff for the period of 123 weeks at the rate of $5 per week from September 23, 1908, until February 8, 1911, with interest” from the date last named; that said sums "be and they are declared to be a charge upon the real estate of the defend-' ants”; and directed a sale of the land to satisfy the sums so charged thereon.

Thereafter, but before sale, Cecil P. Reed appeared and tendered his petition, averring the death of J. Warren Reed intestate, that petitioner was his only child and heir at law, that during the previous proceedings in the cause and at the time of filing the petition he was a non-resident of this state, and that he had not therefore been served with process or appeared as a party in the cause. He copies and adopts the answer of his father theretofore filed, and prays to be admitted as such party. The petition, however, contains no prayer for a rehearing or review of the previous proceedings in the cause. But, having found no error, the court approved and confirmed the preceding decrees. Hence this appeal by the petitioner.

While courts of other jurisdictions have, in an apparent [97]*97effort to protect aged grantors from the result of their imprudence, held provisions similar to that in the Grant deed effectually creative of a lien; charge or equitable mortgage, this court has held otherwise, except in cases distinguishable from that now under review. If the language used in the Grant deed may be said to create any lien on the land conveyed, or any right to charge it with the support of the grantors, the lien or charge can only be implied. There is no express provision or reservation to that effect. Its language is rather suggestive of an agreement or undertaking by the grantees for maintenance and support. In Brawley v. Catron, 8 Leigh 522, McCandlish v. Keen, 13 Gratt. 615, both binding authorities in this state until disapproved; Crim v. Holsberry, 42 W. Va. 668; Taylor v. Lanier, 7 N. C. 98, 9 Am. Dec. 599; Cornell v. Maltby, 165 N. Y. 557, 56 N. Y. S. 1105; Hiscock v. Norton, 42 Mich. 320; McKillip v. McKillip, 8 Barb. 552; Meigs v. Dimock, 6 Conn. 458; Peters v. Tunell, 43 Minn. 473; Arlin v. Brown, 44 N. H. 102; Salyers v. Smith, 67 Ark. 526, similar provisions are held insufficient to create such lien or charge on the land conveyed.

Though Bates v. Swiger, 40 W. Va. 420, McClure v. Cook, 39 W. Va. 579, and Pownal v. Taylor,

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 967, 74 W. Va. 93, 1914 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-swank-wva-1914.