Hannah v. Culpepper

104 So. 751, 213 Ala. 319, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 11, 1925
Docket8 Div. 653.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 104 So. 751 (Hannah v. Culpepper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannah v. Culpepper, 104 So. 751, 213 Ala. 319, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 277 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

SOMERVILLE, J.

It is now the settled rule in this state that conveyances of property by aged persons, in consideration of promised support and maintenance, are peculiar in their character and incidents; being contracts for the performance of personal services, and that equity will intervene to cancel such a conveyance, when the grantee fails or refuses to perform his obligation. Russell v. Carver, 208 Ala. 219, 94 So. 128; Ballenger v. Ballenger, 208 Ala. 147, 94 So. 127; Mooney v. Mooney, 208 Ala. 287, 94 So. 131. The bill of complaint sufficiently states a case for relief under this principle, and the demurrer was properly overruled.

*320 In the instant case the complainant had conveyed 40 acres of land to each of his four adult children by deeds of gift. He then conveyed his last 40 acres, the homestead tract, upon which he and his wife lived, to his son, K. E. Culpepper, by warranty deed, for the reciteii consideration of $5. This conveyance was made on October 30, 1912, and, as very satisfactorily established by the evidence, contemporaneously therewith K. E. Culpepper executed a written agreement as follows:

“J. L. Culpepper and Mary Culpepper agree to deed to K. E. Culpepper 40 acres of land as follows: N. W. % of N. E. %, Sec. 22, Tp. 6, R. 6, located in Jackson county to support and care for us as long as we live, if K. E. Culpepper fails to do so comply with this contract it makes the deed null and void.”

Construing the deed and agreement together, it results that the title to the land was vested in the son, K. E. Culpepper, subject to divestiture by condition subsequent, viz., by the failure of the son to support and care for his parents, the grantors, during the remainder of their lives. In the absence of laches Or waiver of the forfeiture by the grantor, a court of equity will declare and enforce the forfeiture of the estate, if the condition has been substantially breached. First Nat. Bank v. McIntosh, 201 Ala. 649, 79 So. 121, L. R. A. 1918F, 353.

The evidence shows that, at the time the deed was executed to him by complainant, the son, IC E. Culpepper, had not completed his medical education, and was not earning a support even for his own wife and children; and that it was not contemplated that he would be able to support, or aid, his parents for several years at lpast. Nevertheless, he built a_new house on the tract in question and moved into it, and his parents lived in the house with the son and his family, and they all cultivated and shared the crops in common. It further appears that he never did in fact help to maintain his parents, but continued to receive help from his father until his own death in September, 1915; and that, after that event, his widow and children continued to-reside on the place in the same house with the parents, as formerly. Complainant assessed the land — this 40 acres, .and the other forty previously deeded to the son — to the son’s widow after the son’s death, down to the year 1923. According to complainant’s testimony, he paid every year one half of the taxes, and the son’s widow paid the other half. This is disputed by the widow, who claims to have furnished all the money paid for taxes. Complainant was appointed as administrator of the deceased son’s estate, and in July, 1919, he reported this 40 acres as the property of the §on, and that the estate was insolvent, whereupon commissioners were appointed and this land was duly set apart to the widow and minor children as their homestead exemption. Soon thereafter the widow married one' Robert Hannah, and, shortly following that event, disagreements- arose between the old people and 'the Hannahs, and the formqr moved out of the new house and 'lived in another house near by. The final result was the institution of this suit in July, 1923.

The respondents (deny complainant’s right to relief, upon three distinct grounds: (1) Because, as alleged, some time after K. E. Culpepper’s death, complainant and his wife executed to the respondents a deed conveying to them this land; (2) because complainant waived his right to claim a forfeiture, by consistently recognizing the respondent widow- as the owner of the land down to the filing of this suit, and treating it as her property; and (3) by laches, involving a delay of nearly eight years in the assertion of his claim.

(1) Notwithstanding the affirmative testimony of a number of witnesses to the existence of the alleged deed, we are not reasonably satisfied thereof, and must reject their testimony as either willfully false, or Innocently mistaken. The verities of the case are strongly against them.

(2) “A condition may * * * be waived, or a forfeiture saved, not only by express agreement, but also by acts showing an intention to continue the estate in the grantee, or voluntarily to forego the benefits of the condition, especially where the grantor’s declarations, conduct, or failure to act, when he ought to act have been at variance or inconsistent with his right to enforce a forfeiture, or have so continued for a long period of time.” 18 Corp. Jur. 377, § 430. But “no waiver is occasioned by a mere indulgence, mere silent acquiescence, or mere parol assent, especially where it does not appear that the grantee understood that there was a waiver, or that he relied thereon in proceeding to do the act claimed to operate as a forfeiture.” 18 Corp. Jur. 378, § 432. However, “a waiver may result from a failure to demand performance, or to enter for condition broken, or where the grantor, although he is entitled to a reasonable time after the breach to claim a forfeiture, does not make such claim for several years, or neglects for many years to bring an action to enforce the agreement.” 18 Corp. Jur. 378, § 434.

An examination of the numerous cases, cited in support of these texts, shows that in practically all of them there was some element of estoppel, which rendered the subsequent claim of forfeiture inequitable, either conduct which indicated noninsistence upon the condition, and induced its nonperformance, or else a claim or retention of some benefit or advantage accruing from the transaction to the grantor, or the imposition of some burden or disadvantage upon the grantee, inconsistent with the rescission of the contract.

Counsel for appellants cite in their brief a number of cases illustrating the doctrine of waiver; but all ol them involve the free *321 choice of the injured party to hold the other party bound by the contract, notwithstanding his own right, because of fraud or breach by the other, to have complete rescission.

In the instant case, the breach of the condition was final and irremediable upon, and by reason of, the death of the grantee contractor. Frazier v. Frazier, 211 Ala. 176, 100 So. 118. Thereafter, there could not arise any question of election by the grantor to stand upon the contract, for he had no election in the matter. Nor was it possible for the grantee to be misled by the grantor’s failure to execute the forfeiture — he being dead. And, so far as the grantee’s successors in estate are concerned, it does not appear that they have suffered any disadvantage of any kind whatsoever by reason of the grantor’s continued recognition of their title, and his forbearance to promptly claim the forfeiture — conduct which was obviously the fruit of parental affection forbidding harsh or hasty action against the widow and little children of his deceased son.

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Bluebook (online)
104 So. 751, 213 Ala. 319, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannah-v-culpepper-ala-1925.