King's Heirs and Others v. Thompson and Wife

34 U.S. 204, 9 L. Ed. 102, 9 Pet. 204, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 34 U.S. 204 (King's Heirs and Others v. Thompson and Wife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King's Heirs and Others v. Thompson and Wife, 34 U.S. 204, 9 L. Ed. 102, 9 Pet. 204, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 346 (1835).

Opinion

Mr Justice M’Lean

delivered the opinion of the Court..

This is an appeal from the decree of the circuit court for the District,, of Columbia.

The defendants here, who were trie complainants m the circuit court, filed their bill, stating that-in the year 1812, they were married; and that the wife of the complainant is the daughter of George King, who at that time lived in. George-, -town,, and was extensively engaged in a profitable mercantile business. That his credit wag high, and complainants believe he was possessed of a large active capital; and in addition had. a large real estate, consisting of houses and lots in Georgetown. That it was' universally believed he would have a large surplus property after paying his debts, which would enable him to provide handsomely for his children.

. That a few days after the riiarriage, George King proposed to grant to the complainant, Thompson,.a house and lot on Cecil alley, in Georgetown, which was very much out of repair and almost untenantable, provided he would repair the same so as to make it a comfortable residence; and that the said King at the same time stated, he intended the property for the wife of the complainant.

. The complainant accepted tire property, and expended upwards of 4000 dollars in making repairs of the house and other *216 improvements on the lot. That he occupied it as a residence about four years, and then removed to tlife western country. Before his removal, a correspondence took place between him and the said King in relation to the title; and the complainant made King his agent to collect the rents, &c.

The complainant further states that the said King died intestate ; leaving, in addition to the, wife of the complainant, certain children who are made defendants; and a decree for a legal title is prayed, or if that cannot be decreed, that the property may stand charged to the amount of the repairs and improvements.

George King died in the year 1820, insolvent. His debts amounted to 36,000 dollars, and his whole estate, both real and personal, when sold, did not pay more than thirty-nine per cent of his just debts. The property claimed by the complainant was sold for 1660 dollars, by a trustee, under.a decree of chancery, obtained by the creditors of George King, but the sale has not been ratified.

Raphael Semines, the trastee of George King’s creditors, and Charles King, one of the. principal creditors, filed'their answers to the bill of the complainant, in which they-deny that the improvements were made on the property as set forth in the bill, and insist that George King, at the time of the intended gift, was embarrassed and unable to pay his debts; and they insist that the right set up by the complainants is fraudulent and void as against creditors.

There are some irregularities in the record which it is not material to notice, as these statements show the points to which the evidence applies.

The first inquiry is, whether a contract was made between the complainant and George King for the property in question.

It is insisted, by the complainant’s counsel, that the correspondence between .the .parties, which is contained in the record, establishes the contract.

The first is a letter from George King to the complainant, dated 17th April 1816. In this letter King says, “that in order to remove any suspense in regard to the property on which the complainant then lived, that he held himself bound to give a deed to a trustee, who shall hold it in trust for the complainant and his wife during their lives,” &c.

*217 This letter is answered by the complainant, 26th April 1816, . in. which he declines the terms proposed, and suggests the following.

1. Let the property be valued at the time, it was put into his possession, -and that he would pay the amount over to King, &c.

2- That the improvements should be estimated, and King, on paying the amount, should receive a relinquishment of all the right of the complainant.

' 3, That a deed should be executed for the property to the wife of the complainant..

On the 29th of April 1816, King replies, “ I make no’hesitation in complying with your first proposal, for it is just what I proposed in my first to you, and I will do it another way, giving you your choice: viz. I will deed the dwelling house and'all above it to you, and about twenty feet below it; and then all below that, I will deed to Betsey,” the wife of the complainant, “ provided she will never deed it, or dispose of it, except by will, which she shall always be at liberty to make, when and how she pleases.”

On the 14th of August 1819,. King writes tcf the complainant, “ Mr Kennedy has left your house since the first of July last, and I have not been able to get a tenant since. Houses are very dull here now; rents have fallen very much,” &c.

And on the 23d of March 1831, George King, son it is presumed of George King deceased, writes to complainant, I am sorry to inform you that Mr Jacob Payne has laid an attachment on your property in Georgetown, &c.,” referring to the property in controversy.

This is all the evidéhce to show a contract, except what might be presumed from the occupancy and improvement of the house and iot.

Specific propositions were made by each party, jn regard to the title of the property, but It does not satisfactorily appear that either was finally accepted. The complainant in the first place objects to the conveyance of the property to a trustee, for the benefit of his wife; and he proposes to pay to King the value of the property at the time it was put into his possession, which sum, at the pleasure of the donor might be vested for the benefit of complainant’s wife. To this King replies that he *218 has' nó hesitation in accepting the proposal,-but he accompanies this acceptance with a proposition to deed the 'dwelling .house, with a certain part of the lot, to the complainant, and the residue'of the lot to'his Wife.'

Whether this last proposition, or the one made by the complainant, and assented to by King, formed the contract; is uncertain;' or indeed whether any definite agreement was'finally, made

From the occupancy of the property, and the amount of money"expended in improving it, there can be no doubt, that there was an understanding between the parties, that the property, in some manner; should be.possessed and owned by the complainant:' The evidencé,'however, shows that King did not intend to vest the property^absolutely in the complainant; but that the value of it, befo:e the improvenients, should in some form, be secured to the complainant’s wife.

This court are now called on to'decree a.specific execution of this contract; and what are its terms ? Shall the title be vested in fee in the complainant, without condition; or shall a part of the property be vested in trust for the benefit of his wife 'l Or shall the title be vested in the complainant, on his paying into the hands of trustees, for the benefit of his wife, the value of the property when he first received it %

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Bluebook (online)
34 U.S. 204, 9 L. Ed. 102, 9 Pet. 204, 1835 U.S. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kings-heirs-and-others-v-thompson-and-wife-scotus-1835.