Jones v. Comer

13 S.E.2d 578, 123 W. Va. 129, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 19
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1941
Docket9124
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 578 (Jones v. Comer) 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
Jones v. Comer, 13 S.E.2d 578, 123 W. Va. 129, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 19 (W. Va. 1941).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Plaintiffs, grantees of an allegedly defrauded grantor, Jemima Baldwin, filed their bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, against the defendants, Mary C. Comer and B. I. Comer, her husband, praying (1) that a prior conveyance of an undivided one-half interest in eighty-six acres of land from the grantor to Mary C. Comer be set aside as fraudulent; (2) that the land be partitioned between plaintiffs and the Comers and plaintiffs’ undivided interest therein allotted to them as a whole; and (3) that defendants be required to account for the rents and profits derived from said one-half interest from the death of Robert Borror, a life tenant. *131 From a decree sustaining the demurrer to the bill of complaint, refusing its amendment by making Jemima Baldwin a party plaintiff, and dismissing the bill, plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

Under the will of C. D. Borror, who died in 1918, the eighty-six acres of land passed for life to his son Robert, then insane and confined in an asylum, with remainder after the death of Robert to his two daughters, Lucinda Baldwin and Jemima Baldwin, in equal parts. After testator’s death, Lucinda Baldwin died intestate, leaving five heirs-at-law, four of whom conveyed their interest in the property to the defendant, Mary C. Comer, and the fifth conveyed her interest to the defendant, B. I. Comer, Mary C. Comer’s husband. On February 23, 1934, Jemima Baldwin executed the deed under attack purporting to convey her undivided one-half interest in the land to the said Mary C. Comer. On April 19, 1939, Robert Borror died. On the following day, Jemima Baldwin executed a deed purporting to convey the same undivided one-half interest in the property to her seven children, plaintiffs herein. In July, 1932, the defendant, B. I. Comer, was appointed committee for Robert Borror; and in 1936, B. I. Comer, as committee for Robert Borror, with his wife, the said Mary C. Comer, leased said land for oil and gas; and the Comers have received the rentals since Robert Borror’s death.

In addition to the foregoing, the plaintiffs in their bill of complaint allege that by virtue of the deeds from Jemima Baldwin to them and from the heirs of Lucinda Baldwin to the Comers, plaintiffs became tenants in common with defendants; that they believe the land is susceptible of partition, and if not that it should be sold; that the defendants are entitled to only one-half of the rents and profits of the land since Robert Borror’s death, and the plaintiffs to the other one-half; and that B. I. Comer, as committee for Robert Borror, by legal steps dispossessed said Jemima Baldwin of said land. The bill of complaint further alleges that Comer conspired and confederated with his wife, Mary C. Comer, to defraud Jemima Baldwin; that by misrepresentation, deceit and *132 fraud he induced the latter, an illiterate person unacquainted with business transactions, to sign an instrument in writing which was represented to her to affect Robert Borror and necessary in order to get her share of her father’s estate after Robert’s death; and that if she did. not sign and acknowledge it, she would lose her interest in said estate; that she was induced to go to the office of an attorney, the scrivener of the deed of Jemima Baldwin to Mary C. Comer, where she signed the same, believing at the time that it was to preserve her interest in her father’s estate. The bill further alleges that neither the plaintiffs nor Jemima Baldwin knew the real character of the writing until after the death of Robert Borror and the purported conveyance of Jemima Baldwin to the plaintiffs, when plaintiffs learned it was a deed conveying Jemima’s entire interest to Mrs. Comer, for the sum of fifty dollars, an alleged inadequate consideration. It is further alleged that shortly after the execution of said deed, a gas field was developed in the vicinity of the property, rendering it very valuable, and that the conveyance to the Comers of Lucinda Baldwin’s undivided one-half interest in the property was for the consideration of two hundred and fifty dollars, which, in comparison with the fifty dollars paid to Jemima, shows the inadequacy of consideration for the deed from Jemima to Mrs. Comer.

The demurrer is based in the main upon the claimed incapacity of the plaintiffs to maintain this suit. Demur-rants say that as a condition precedent to the maintenance of a partition suit, plaintiffs must first establish legal title. In appraising plaintiffs’ right, we should first ascertain what, if any, title they obtained under the deed of their mother, Jemima Baldwin. This, of course, depends upon whether the deed from Jemima Baldwin to Mrs. Comer is void or voidable. If void, Mrs. Comer got no legal title, and the legal title devolved upon plaintiffs as the only actual grantees of Jemima Baldwin. If, on the other hand, the prior deed is voidable, the legal title became vested in Mrs. Comer, and the grantor had nothing more than a right (1) to rescind the Comer title and (2) *133 to enforce that rescission in a court of equity. Her deed to plaintiffs could not possibly have conveyed any greater rights. Because a fraudulent grantee under a voidable deed may before rescission, notwithstanding the fraud, give good title to a bona fide purchaser for value, the line of demarcation between a void and voidable deed should be sharply drawn. Whether Jemima Baldwin’s deed to Mrs. Comer is void or merely voidable depends upon whether or not the fraud alleged is in the factum, as distinguished from fraud in the procurement, or treaty, of the deed. Fraud in the factum exists where one by fraud or artifice as in the case of substitution of one instrument for another, or artifice in the concealment of an instrument, is induced to sign an instrument other and different from that presented for signature [Norvell v. Kanawha & Michigan Railway Co., 67 W. Va. 467, 68 S. E. 288, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 325; Acme Food Co. v. Older, 64 W. Va. 255, 61 S. E. 235, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 807; Furst & Thomas v. Merritt, 190 N. C. 397, 130 S. E. 40; Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 193 N. C. 769, 138 S. E. 143; Security Finance Co. v. Mills, 195 N. C. 337, 142 S. E. 26]; or where the signature is obtained without fraud by an instrument, the validity of which requires delivery, as in the case of a deed, and delivery is pbtained by fraud. O’Connor v. O’Connor, 45 W. Va. 354, 32 S. E. 276. In the latter case, delivery was obtained by fraud, accompanied by an unauthorized alteration in a writing, providing the condition under which delivery should be made, and this Court held that because of the fraudulent delivery the deed was void.

In the instant case the alleged misrepresentations merely went to the contents of the deed. There is nothing indicating that Jemima Baldwin did not sign the very instrument which was presented to her for signature in the scrivener’s office. True, she is alleged to be an illiterate person of retarded mentality and unaccustomed to business affairs. If she did not know the contents of the deed, it was because it was not read or explained to her. There was no substitution of papers, and the Comer deed was, in fact, delivered unconditionally.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.E.2d 578, 123 W. Va. 129, 1941 W. Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-comer-wva-1941.