Hoadley v. Hoadley

39 A.2d 769, 114 Vt. 75, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 89
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 A.2d 769 (Hoadley v. Hoadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoadley v. Hoadley, 39 A.2d 769, 114 Vt. 75, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 89 (Vt. 1944).

Opinion

Sherburne, J.

The plaintiff is the widow of Bradley S. Hoadley, late of Lowell, and the mother of defendant Clayton H. Hoadley. The defendant Florence S. Hoadley is the wife of Clayton H. Hoadley. In her bill of complaint the plaintiff avers that on May 26, 1943, she was the owner of the home farm of the late Bradley S. Hoadley, including the Long Place, so-called, and of certain live stock, and tools thereon, and that on said date she conveyed and delivered said real estate and personal property by a conditional deed, with a bill of sale included therewith, to her son, the defendant Clayton. This deed was conditioned as follows:

“The foregoing premises and property is conveyed on condition that the said Clayton H. Hoadley allow the said Myrtie M. Hoadley to have and occupy as a home on the premises the same rooms on the place that she has been occupying heretofore and that said Clayton H. Hoadley shall support his mother as a dutiful son should in sickness and in health and provide her with a suitable amount of pocket money for *77 small items and shall give her a Christian burial at her decease, that in event that he fails so to do that this property and premises shall revert to this grantor.

The bill then goes on to show that the plaintiff with her late husband and daughter, Lillian, had occupied the premises as a home for many years, and that prior to the death of her husband the house thereon had been divided into two tenements, and that she and her husband and daughter had lived in one part and the defendants in the other part, and that when the deed to the defendant Clayton was made it was intended by the parties thereto that she was to continue to occupy that part of the house formerly occupied by her and her daughter and husband. The bill further shows that the plaintiff is 67 years old and has been for several years afflicted with high blood pressure, and has been advised by her doctor to avoid active physical exertion and nervous excitement; that her daughter Lillian has always lived with her at her home, and has looked after and cared for her, doing the arduous household chores and giving her the medicines prescribed by her doctors; and that the plaintiff has seven children, six of whom are married, and that her relations with them and their families have always been close and affectionate, and that there had been frequent calls made by them and their families to her home, and by her to theirs; all of which the defendants well knew. It is alleged that after the conveyance of the property the defendant Florence entered the plaintiff’s part of the house 'and turned off the electric lights and prevented the plaintiff from using an electric flatiron, and quarreled with her and threatened her with violence to such an extent that she fears to be left alone with the defendants; that the defendant Clayton has told her that she and his wife could not get along together and that she would have to leave and he would move her to another house; that after she refused to leave he has locked the doors of her home and has continually refused to let her and her daughter Lillian enter, and has notified her that he had taken possession of all of her rooms, and that if she came back she would have to live where he should decide, and that in no event can the said Lillian live with her nor any of her children visit her on the premises, and that he is the owner of the premises and that henceforth she would have to do as he dictated; that he has refused to *78 supply her with sufficient money for small items which she requires for herself and for proper medical attention, and that she has had to depend upon money for these purposes from her other children. She further avers that she desires to live the rest of her life in her home, and have her daughter Lillian live with her to give her the necessary care that she now and will hereafter require. The bill alleges that the defendants are about to sell and encumber the said real and personal property in order to deprive the plaintiff of her interest therein, unless restrained, and that the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law to compel the defendants to convey the property to her and to restrain them from selling and encumbering the same; and prays “that the court find that the defendants have forfeited their rights under said deed, and that the defendants be ordered to convey said real and personal property by proper deed and bill of sale to the plaintiff and that a writ of possession be issued restoring to the plaintiff said real and personal property; and that the defendants, their servants and agents, be enjoined from selling and/or encumbering any and all of said real and personal property; and that an injunction order be forthwith issued; and for such other and further relief in the premises as to this court shall seem meet.”

The defendants separately pleaded to the bill. We will, therefore, first take up the case against the defendant Clayton H. Hoadley. Until we take up the case against the other defendant we shall use the word “defendant” as referring to said Clayton. The defendant filed an answer in which were incorporated a demurrer and a special plea, and also added thereto a cross-bill. The plaintiff filed a replication to the answer and a demurrer to the cross-bill and set the plea for hearing. Defendant’s demurrer was overruled, subject to defendant’s exception, and the benefit thereof was saved until final hearing, the plea was adjudged insufficient and was overruled and plaintiff’s demurrer to the cross-bill was sustained, to all which the defendant excepted. After hearing the evidence findings were made and decree entered for the plaintiff.

We will take up the numerous exceptions in the order briefed. The first ground of the defendant’s demurrer is in substance that the bill prays for a forfeiture on the facts alleged, and that it is outside the province and function of a court of equity to set up and enforce a forfeiture. A somewhat similar situation was presented in Abbott v. Sanders, 80 Vt 179, 66 A 1032, 13 LRANS *79 725, 130 Am St Rep 974, 12 Ann Cas 898. There the bill set up a conveyance of real and personal property to the defendant husband, conditioned that the grantee support the plaintiff during her life, and alleged a substantial breach of the condition, and prayed for a decree declaring the defendants’ rights forfeited, and their title and equity extinguished and foreclosed. The defendants demurred and contended that the case presented was one of forfeiture, and that forfeitures will not be enforced by a court of equity. The demurrer was overruled below, the bill adjudged sufficient, and decree was entered according to the prayer of the bill; and upon appeal the decree was affirmed. It is there said, omitting citations: “The form that the equitable remedy will take in this State is determined by our holding regarding conditional deeds. With us a conditional deed is treated as a mortgage to secure the grantee’s performance of the condition contained in the deed.....The situation being the same as if the condition were omitted from the oratrix’ deed and contained in another deed given back by the defendant husband, it is clear that the rights of the defendants may be foreclosed by bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 769, 114 Vt. 75, 1944 Vt. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoadley-v-hoadley-vt-1944.