Larison v. Taylor

266 P. 217, 83 Colo. 430, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 258
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 19, 1928
DocketNo. 12,014.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 266 P. 217 (Larison v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larison v. Taylor, 266 P. 217, 83 Colo. 430, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 258 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action by Hannah C. Larison, widow, seventy-four years of age, is against her married daughter, Anna B. Taylor, and its object is to have cancelled and discharged of record a warranty deed of real estate to Mrs. Taylor as grantee which the plaintiff executed but did not deliver, and which, as she says, was intended solely as in the nature of a testamentary disposition to take effect, *432 unless previously revoked, only at the time of grantor’s death. The answer contains a general denial and an affirmative defense that the deed in question is a warranty deed and was intended to be, and was, an absolute deed conveying full title to the "defendant and was delivered by the plaintiff grantor to the defendant grantee and thereafter recorded. The same matter is pleaded as a counterclaim in the answer and denied in the replication, wherein the defendant asks that title to the premises be quieted in her. On trial to the court without a jury, findings were against the plaintiff on the issues tendered by the complaint and the answer, and in favor of the defendant, and upon defendant’s counterclaim the findings were for defendant and title in her was quieted accordingly.

The evidence exhibits a lamentable family controversy which courts are sometimes compelled to settle. The general rule with us, as in appellate courts generally, is that findings of facts by the trial court or jury are conclusive upon reviewing courts in the absence of what, in the record itself, clearly and affirmatively shows that the case as made comes within some recognized exception to the general rule. A careful and prolonged study of this record convinces us that, partly through a misconception by the trial court as to the burden of proof, to the indefinite and unsatisfactory character of the testimony of the witnesses for the defendant, to which the trial court attributed undue weight and importance; to the conduct and behavior of the defendant and her husband during the course of the trial and after the case was taken under advisement by the trial court; considered in connection with material and newly discovered evidence that probably would, and should, require different findings and a decree for failure to discover which before the trial plaintiff is not to be penalized; and because of our profound conviction that the trial court incorrectly attached undue probative effect to the testimony of the defendant’s several witnesses concerning the alleged de *433 livery of the deed as an intended conveyance of present title; we are compelled to set aside its .findings and decree and remand the cause for a new trial.

It is within their recognized province, and courts have not infrequently, and properly, set aside findings and judgments or decrees, to which a series of questionable and improper rulings or actions or conduct of the trial court or jury have contributed, no one of which probably would of itself, disassociated from the others, authorize or justify a reversal; but which combined, in justice and equity, entitle the aggrieved party to a new trial.

1. It is apparent from the record that because of her age and physical disability, plaintiff’s mental faculty was somewhat impaired and her memory, though not as to the main issue but as to collateral matters, may be at times not strictly accurate. In all material respects her story is plausible, natural and it accords with human experience. About April 8,1919, the plaintiff was the owner of three lots in the city of Boulder on which was a dwelling house in which she lived as her permanent home. She had been married twice and at the time of the trial had at least two children, one of whom, the defendant Mrs. Taylor, was a child of her second marriage. Both of her husbands were dead. She had one son but whether he was of the first or second marriage does not appear. She was a working woman doing domestic service in homes and work in offices by the day or hour as she could secure employment. She had a savings account at the bank and had accumulated as the result of her labors, and possibly from one or both of her husbands, and possessed at one time several thousand dollars in money, but at the time of the trial she had only about $300 in money in a savings account and the home place, that she owned and in which she lived and it was practically her only property and it came to her from her first husband, not from the defendant’s father. It was her purpose and intention, however, that her daughter, Mrs. Taylor, at her death should receive this home place, but she desired to *434 retain ownership and possession thereof during her lifetime. Because of her inexperience in such matters, not being able to determine for herself the way to carry out her desire, the mother took steps to accomplish the purpose she had in mind by consulting her attorney, who, after ascertaining her intention, at first suggested making of a will, but because of the costs and expenditures that would be incurred in the probate, which she wished to avoid, the attorney then explained to her that by making a deed of conveyance of her home to her daughter as grantee, and retaining possession of the deed until about the time that she was satisfied she was about to die and then delivering it to her daughter, the purpose she had in view could be accomplished at less expense, and that at any time she saw fit, during her lifetime, to change her mind she could destroy the deed or make other disposition of the property at her pleasure. Acting upon his advice she requested her attorney to prepare such a deed, which he did, on April 11, 1919, the instrument being a warranty deed in form, and she duly acknowledged the same and after acknowledging it she kept it in her possession in the drawer of a bureau or sideboard of her home when it was not in a safety deposit box in a Boulder bank. There was no money consideration from the grantee, Mrs. Taylor, to the plaintiff as grantor for this conveyance. The plaintiff had never spoken to her daughter about it and the latter admits that she never knew of her mother’s purpose, or that any deed had been executed to her as grantee until December, 1922, about Christmas time, more than three years after the date it was signed and acknowledged. Both the plaintiff and her attorney, Mr. McHarg, testified positively and explicitly that it was the fixed purpose and intention of the plaintiff to retain title, possession and control of her home place and of this deed, until about the time when she felt that she was about to pass on and at such time, unless she desired to, and did, cancel and destroy the deed prior to such event, to deliver it to her daughter, the defend *435 ant Mrs. Taylor. The plaintiff testifies positively that she never delivered this déed to her daughter or authorized its delivery and that, though the daughter after-wards obtained possession of the deed and had it placed upon the record, it was without her knowledge or consent and contrary to her fixed intention and purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
266 P. 217, 83 Colo. 430, 1928 Colo. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larison-v-taylor-colo-1928.