Marling v. Marling

9 W. Va. 79, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 12
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 9 W. Va. 79 (Marling v. Marling) 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
Marling v. Marling, 9 W. Va. 79, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 12 (W. Va. 1876).

Opinion

Green, Judge:

Mary Marling and Elizabeth Marling, brought a suit, in chancery, in the. circuit court of Ohio-county, in 1873, against their father, Elijah Marling, to compel him to convey to them a certain farm, in that county. It appears that in 1845, Elijah Marling bought this farm of Hardesty, and it was conveyed to him; that, shortly there[80]*80after, he put his said daughters in possession thereof and 'they have ever since lived upon this farm. On May 3, 1863, in consideration, only, of his love and affection to them, he executed and delivered to them this paper :

“I sine all my interest and claim unto Mary Marling and Elizabeth Marling, the farm they now live on, coled the Harsty farm, as witness my hand and sel.
Elijah Mauling.”

The circuit court of Ohio county ordered Elijah Marling to execute, with special warranty of title, a deed of said farm to them. From this decree, Elijah Marling has appealed to this Court.

The question presented to this Court, for the first time is, whether a court of equity should furnish its aid in making effective a gift, of land, by a father to his child where the gift is evidenced by an unsealed instrument, executed by the father, and, formally, delivered to the child.

Where there is no consideration of any kind, the courts have decided that where a trust is, actually, created, and the relation of trustee and cestui que trust established, a court of equity will, in favor of a volunteer, enforce the execution of the trust; although it will not create a trust, or establish the relation of trustee and ces-tui que trust, by giving effect to an imperfect conveyance in favor of a volunteer, Ellison v. Ellison, 6 Ves. Jr. 656, 1 Ld. Cas. in Eq. 199. It has also been held that a declaration, by a party, that property shall be held, in trust, for the objects of his bounty, though unaccompanied by any deed or other act divesting himself of the legal estate, is an executive trust, and will be enforced ; and it the property is personal, such declaration may be by parol, without any writing. Pye, ex parte & Dubost, 18 Ves. Jr. 140; McFadden v. Jenkyns, 1 Hare 458; S. C. 1 Ph. 153. A court of equity, in such cases, not being governed by the analogy of uses, for a use could not arise by parol agreement, without a deed, except where the consideration is valuable—Jones v. Morley, 12 Mod. 161. When [81]*81•th-e -consideration’-is meritorioué, süc h as-the'obligktioh of a-parent to provide for his child, will a court of -equity.establish'the relation oí trustee' and cestui, que-trust, "by .giving effect to an imperfect .conveyance, or by .en.for.cr Jn^the specific performance.of an executory agreement? There ¡are expressions, in the -opinion of Lord Eldon in the case of Ellison v. Ellison, and of Lord Thurlow, in the case of Colman v. Sorrell, 1 Ves. Jr. 50, which show 'that they ¡supposed a court of equity, wo,uld, in such case-, afford aid, if the consideration -was-meritorious,: though •this question was-not before .the ’ court in these leases: And in the case of Ellis v. Nimmo, L. and G. temp. Sugden 333, 10 Cond. Eng. Ch. 534, Lord Sugden decided this question jn the affiraqative, after, the most • mature consideration..' Iir that case- the-father,' John Nimmo, agreed with his son-in-law, Brabazon Ellis, that he woiild settle upon his daúghtér Mrs. Ellis, fifty pound’s a -year, .during her life, to be raised out of a certain- estáte own! -.ed.-by. him. -.Thé agreement was reduced to writing ¡and signed by John Nimmo, -but not sealed. The - Lord Chancellor says: ' ‘“In this case the question is, whether the consideration is sufficient to support á post nuptial agreement- in writing, entered into by a father'in favór •of his child. T should -say the agreement ought to' be specifically exeduted, if we look back we shall find what was the consideration necessary, to raise’ a use before and after the statute. In Gilbert on Uses 92, it is laid down, “if a man, in consideration of natural love and affection, covenants to stand' seized to the use of his son or brother, nephew or cousin, this is a good use.” Upon a covenant to stand seized, for the benefit of a wife or child, equity held such a consideration sufficient to bind the estate. That was a use before the statute ; that use the statute executed and turned into a possession ; still it rested upon the original equity. A covenant to stand seized was, merely, an agreement founded on, a good .or m'eritorious consideration, and the statute executed the agreement.

[82]*82.But.though covenants to stand seized, before the stat“ute, were mere contracts, which equity, specifically, enforced ; yet as the statute operated upon them, they were, at once, distinguished from mere agreements or contracts, resting in fieri, to settle an estate, just as bargains and'sales, which, before the statute, were contracts to sell, became actual conveyances, by force of the statute, and Were not confounded, after the statute, with simple contracts to sell; and which, from their nature, could not be deemed executed. How far the consideration, which, before.the statute, was sufficient to support a covenant to stand seized, or a bargain and sale, could sustain a contract, to sell or settle an estate, since the statute, so as to enable equity to, specifically, enforce it, has been the subject of much judicial investigation. In Fothergill v. Fothergill, 2 Free. Ch. 250, it was held “that whenever a conveyance was made upon a good consideration, if there be any defect in the execution of it, that this court hath always supplied the defect; and though provisions, for a wife and children, after marriage, are not valuable considerations ; yet they are good considerations, and were always helped in this court.” In Chapman v. Gibson, 3 Bro. C. C. 228, a surrender was supplied, in favor of the wife, against the heir-at-law. Lord Alvanley saying, that he thought the execution of a power and a surrender of a copyhold go hand in hand precisely on the same ground. Now equity always assists a defective execution of a power, voluntarily executed, in favor of a wife as depending upon the natural obligation. But the court did not treat every consideration, which would have raised a use before the statute, as sufficient to justify its interference after the statute.'

In Watts v. Bullas, 1 P. Wms. 60, (a case found fault with by Lord Hardwick in Goring v. Nash, 3 Atk. 189) a voluntary conveyance to a brother of the half blood, defective, in law, Avas made good in equity. The Lord Keeper’s opinion .was that as a eestni que use, before the statute, in such case, could have compelled an execution [83]*83of the use, in a court of equity, so would this imperfect conveyance raise a trust, in respect of the consideration of blood, and, consequently, ought to be made good in equity. The principle was correct, Lord Hardwick thought, but it was carrying'it too far; for it wouldcarry it to the remotest' blood, that could-raise a use in law, and which this court does not regard;” the Chancellor then reviews the cases of Stephens v. Trueman, 1 Ves. Sen. 73; Goring v. Nash, supra, Osgood v. Strode, 2 P. Wms. 249; Colman v. Sorrel, 3 Bro. C. C. 127 and 1 Ves. Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
9 W. Va. 79, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marling-v-marling-wva-1876.