Holladay v. Rich

137 N.W. 988, 92 Neb. 91, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 10
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 1912
DocketNo. 17,047
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 988 (Holladay v. Rich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holladay v. Rich, 137 N.W. 988, 92 Neb. 91, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 10 (Neb. 1912).

Opinion

Hamer, J.

- This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court for Valley county dismissing the petition of the plaintiff, who brought her bill in equity to quiet title to the northwest quarter of section 33, in township 18 north, of range 13 west of the 6th P. M., in Valley county, Nebraska, alleging that she was the daughter of Charles Badger, deceased, and that he had died in December, 1906, and that at the time of his death Mary B. S. Badger was his surviving widow, and that Milton College of Milton, Wisconsin, was a corporation organized under the laws of the state of [94]*94Wisconsin; that while she was a member of her father’s family she became possessed of the sum of $300 by devise, and that she gave this money to her father; that she was a teacher, and that she also turned over her earnings as a teacher to her father, and that after her marriage she and her husband both contributed to the support and maintenance of the father; that they assisted him in paying his taxes, debts, and otherwise; that the plaintiff was the owner of 320 acres of land in Valley county, and that she permitted the use of this land to her father for a number of years, and allowed him to retain all the receipts therefrom; that she also owned lots 3, 4, 5 and 6, in block 23, in an addition to the village of North Loup, in Valley county; that the plaintiff became the owner of this property by a conveyance made to her by her husband; that she sold the lots above mentioned for the sum of 500, and that her father collected the money, and gave her the sum of $125 out of the $500, and she permitted him to retain the remainder; that the remaining sum of $375 retained by her father was used in the payment of a mortgage upon the said northwest quarter of section 33, township 18 north, of range 13 west of the 6th P. M., in Valley county, Nebraska., being the land in controversy in this action; that title to said land last above described was by said decree of the district court for Valley county quieted in the defendant William Henry Rich, subject to the lien of the mortgage hereinafter described and held by the defendant Milton College, and which decree quieted and confirmed the title of said Milton College in the said mortgage and the notes which it secured, being the notes made by William Henry Rich to Charles Badger, and by said Charles Badger transferred to the said defendant Milton College.

The father was a doctor on the frontier, and he seems to have always been in poor financial circumstances, After the plaintiff’s marriage, she and her husband went to Kansas City to live, but they made frequent trips to Nebraska, and wore not unmindful of the father. They helped him pay his debts, and they helped him to live, and seem [95]*95to liave been devoted and loyal. There seems to have been an unwritten agreement between the father and daughter by which' he was to have the use of the 320 acres of land that belonged to the daughter, and he was to use the money realized from the use of this half section in paying off the mortgage on the land in controversy, and also toward his own support. About the year 1901 the father and the mother of the plaintiff executed a conveyance to her, but subsequently the father desired to have it returned to him so tli at he might put her husband’s name in the deed, and she sent it to him, but he kept the deed and did not after-wards deliver it to her. There seems to have been no trouble of any kind until after the, first wife of the de: ceased died. She was the mother of the plaintiff, and after the first wife died the deceased married the defendant Mary B. 8. Badger about September, 1899. After the marriage of the deceased to the defendant Mary B. S'. Badger, the plaintiff was induced to trade one of her tracts of land to the said Mary B. S'. Badger for another tract of land of less value, and there seems to have been an understanding that she was to be recompensed for the difference in value, but this was not done. About April 13, 1905; the deceased, Charles Badger, and the defendant Mary B. S. Badger executed, acknowledged and delivered a deed to the defendant William Henry Rich for the said northwest quarter of section 33, and Rich executed and delivered to the said Charles Badger a mortgage upon the said land for $7,000 securing notes of various size to that amount, the first due November 1, 1905, and the last due April 1, 1913, all notes bearing interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. Rich paid no money and gave no consideration for the land except the notes and mortgage. The conveyance to Rich and the mortgage made by Rich to the deceased were executed and delivered in pursuance of an agreement for a gift to the defendant Milton College. Milton College seems to be an educational institution at Milton, Wisconsin, and is run under the auspices of the Seventh Day Adventists. It was one of their preachers [96]*96who seems to have been active in procuring the gift to be made. He was temporarily stationed at that time at North Loup, and seems to have been a traveling evangelist. The defendant Mary B. S. Badger seems also to have been active in procuring this gift to be made, and the evidence would seem to show that she became a beneficiary at or about the same time the gift was made. She was ten years younger than her husband at the time the conveyance to Rich was made. The testimony discloses that the deceased at the time of the execution of the deed to Rich was quite feeble, and that he was infirm in mind and body, being unable much of the time to remember and recognize his neighbors whom he frequently met. He seems also to have been in the habit of taking a white powder, which may or may not have been morphine, but the testimony seems to indicate that it was. He Avas greatly addicted to the use of it. He died within about 18 months after the execution and delivery of the deed to Rich. It was apparent at 'the time that he executed the deed that he did not have long to live. Of course, the traveling preacher Avho received the mortgage and notes made by Rich was aware of that fact when he received them and sent them to Milton College. Milton College agreed to pay interest on the notes to the time of the death of the deceased, and after that to his widow until her decease. Of course, if Rich paid the interest to the college, then the college would not be out any money. It was a gift to the college. In his testimony M. B. Kelly, the traveling preacher, testified: “I had'something to do with it between the college and the doctor.” He says: “He asked me to do the writing for him, which I agreed to do, as corresponding worried him.” He says of himself that he resided at Milton for two years. “I Avas an evangelist, a traveling preacher of the gospel, holding revival meetings.” He testified that his headquarters were at Milton, but that he was not there much. The reasonable inference is that he wasi out traveling in his business as an evangelist. On cross-examination the preacher says of Badger’s condition: “He was [97]*97in what we would call in a decrepitude of age.” He says that he (Kelly) wrote to the president of Milton College, but, with an appearance of being disinterested, he says: “I am not sure it was before or after deed was made.” He also says: “I don’t remember whether I-asked the president to write him. Possibly I may have in regard, to this business, I don’t remember any such thing in the correspondence, deed, the notes, and mortgage made at the samé time.” Again he says: “This correspondence with Milton College in reference to acceptance of this donation and what they would do nearly all transpired through me. I am rather of the opinion the doctor wrote some letters himself.

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Related

Holladay v. Rich
140 N.W. 794 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 988, 92 Neb. 91, 1912 Neb. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holladay-v-rich-neb-1912.