Huber v. Backus

112 N.W.2d 238, 79 S.D. 342, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 54
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1961
DocketFile 9918
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 238 (Huber v. Backus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huber v. Backus, 112 N.W.2d 238, 79 S.D. 342, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 54 (S.D. 1961).

Opinion

RENTTO, J.

This action to determine adverse claims was brought by the administrator of the estate of William C. Huber, who died of a heart attack February 1, 1959,. to set aside certain deeds executed by the decedent in the summer of 1955 in which defendant is the grantee. It is his claim that they are invalid because (1) they were not properly executed and delivered; (2) they are an attempted testamentary disposition; and (3) they were obtained through fraud and undue influence and are therefore subject to a constructive trust in favor of decedent’s estate. The administrator appeals from the judgment which determined his claims to the property to be void, invalid and groundless.

Decedent, a single man,, had lived in and around Winner, South Dakota, most of his life. He died intestate at the age of 67. His heirs at law were eight living brothers and sisters and the children of two deceased brothers. The defendant, also a resident of Winner, is one of his sisters. That he had been successful in his real estate business and other activities is evidenced by the substantial amount of property he had accumulated. His later ventures into oil and mining apparently were less successful and in a measure motivated the transfers of property here involved.

For a period of approximately fifteen years, until about two' or three years before his death, he had boarded with the defendant and her husband and in a way made that his headquarters, except that he had his own separate sleeping quarters. In addition she did his washing and cut *345 his hair. At the beginning of this relationship he received his board free but as times became financially more difficult for his sister and her family she charged him for board at a rate which started at $2.00 a week and gradually increased to $12.00 a week, which it was when he quit boarding at her home. After this he still ate a few meals there each week and she continued to cut his hair and do some of his washing. Toward this sister and her children, who were younger than his other nieces and nephews, decedent had a kindly feeling arising from this association; and because their financial circumstances were more difficult than those of his brothers and other sisters, whom he had previously assisted, he often stated that he was going to make provision whereby they would be taken care of.

During the winter of 1954-1955 decedent engaged in prospecting for uranium in California and other western areas. For some reason, not made • clear in the record, he concluded that it was a dangerous business in which one’s life was in danger, and required him to be away from Winner much of the time. On 'his return to- Winner from that trip in June 1955 he had a conversation with the defendant and her husband, who was then in poor health, in which he proposed to deed some of his properties to her if she would permit him to continue to- have the rents and profits therefrom and if she would reconvey to him any of such property that he might want sold or returned to him. He also stated that he would pay the- taxes and the upkeep- on the properties so conveyed to her. The defendant agreed to accept the conveyances subject to these conditions.

•In that conversation decedent stated that he would .make out a list of the properties that.he wanted to deed to the defendant and suggested that her husband get a supply of blank -deed forms. This he- -did and from the list of property descriptions furnished him by decedent, defendant’s husband prepared separate deeds for each of the various properties on the list naming the decedent as grantor and the defendant as grantee. These were warranty deeds in the form prescribed by SDC 51.1403. without any reservations, *346 and recited a consideration of $1.00 “and other considerations”. Decedent and defendant's husband then took the deeds to a lawyer’s office where decedent acknowledged his signatures thereon. Promptly after that defendant’s husband had them recorded after which they were kept at defendant’s home where they were also available to the decedent.

Upon other occasions that summer decedent in a similar manner executed other deeds conveying additional properties to the defendant. These conveyances included real estate in South Dakota and one tract in California and another in Omaha, Nebraska. Some of the South Dakota properties so conveyed were subsequently reconveyed by defendant at the request of the decedent. The described conveyances did not constitute all of decedent’s real property and in addition he was the owner of a substantial amount of personal property. In issue here are only the properties in South Dakota not reconveyed by defendant.

It is a general rule that delivery is essential to the effectiveness of a deed. In this state it is required by statute. SDC 51.1304 provides: “A grant takes effect so as to vest the interest intended to be transferred only upon its delivery by the grantor.” To constitute a delivery the grantor must part with the legal possession of the deed and of all right to retain it. Cassidy v. Holland, 27 S.D. 287, 130 N.W. 771. The fact that a deed has been duly executed, acknowledged, and recorded is prima facie evidence of its delivery. 26A C.J.S, Deeds § 187; Wolf v. Wolf, 59 S.D. 418, 240 N.W. 349. Whether there was a delivery is a question of intent to be found from all the facts surrounding the transaction. McGillivray v. Wipf, 64 S.D. 367, 266 N.W. 724; McKenzie v. Birkholtz, 74 S.D. 173, 50 N.W.2d 95. On this record we think the trial court was warranted in concluding that these deeds had been legally delivered by the decedent to the defendant.

This view finds support in the conversation which decedent had with the defendant and her husband ..on *347 his return to Winner in the summer of 1955 and his conduct thereafter culminating in the deeds here involved. Concerning the manner in which decedent handled the deeds after their execution in the lawyer’s office, defendant’s husband testified as follows:

“Q. After Bill had either signed or acknowledged these deeds, what was done with them? A. Bill gave them to me and told me to take them up to the Register of Deeds’ office and have them recorded.
“Q. Did you do that? A. I done it right away. He said, ‘I’m going uptown’.
“Q. You did that? Yes sir, I did. * * *
“Q. Now then, what happened to the deeds after they had been recorded? A. I don’t remember whether he got them or I got them, and I brought them home, and put them in my safe.
“Q. Were these deeds given to you after they had been recorded? A. They were.”

Also significant in this connection is the fact that other deeds were executed on several later occasions that summer, all about three years before his death, without any claim by him during that time that there had been no delivery of them.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 238, 79 S.D. 342, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-backus-sd-1961.