McGowan v. Lockwood

176 P. 298, 65 Colo. 264, 1918 Colo. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 3, 1918
DocketNo. 9054
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 P. 298 (McGowan v. Lockwood) 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
McGowan v. Lockwood, 176 P. 298, 65 Colo. 264, 1918 Colo. LEXIS 371 (Colo. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action by plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, is in form to quiet title to certain lots, upon two of which is situated the dwelling house in which the plaintiff and his deceased wife lived at the time of her death, and two other lots in the city of Denver. The cause was tried to the court and judgment rendered against the plaintiff, who brings the case here for review.

There is no conflict in the testimony as to any material fact in the case.

It appears that the plaintiff, Henry McGowan, married Emergene McGowan, his deceased wife, in 1876, and they lived together until the time of her death. At the time of their marriage Mrs. McGowan was the mother of two girls by a former marriage, since married, and now Lodena Lockwood and Estella O’Grady, then living in distant states— the latter now deceased — but both living at the time of the death of their mother. The plaintiff can neither read or write, except to sign his name. Mrs. McGowan, died November 8th, 1904. At the time of her death the title to the lots in question was standing in her name. The lots upon which the dwelling is situated were purchased by [265]*265the plaintiff, and the deed taken in his own name December 29th, 1888. He conveyed the lots to his wife April 18th, 1894.

McGowan constructed the dwelling on the lots, and at the time of the commencement of it, he had $1,700.00 in the bank, which was used for that purpose, and he did much of the labor on it personally. He testified that, “we kept but one pocketbook in our house. I didn’t know when I had a suit of clothes or a shirt. She bought all my clothes. She bought the coal and done the business, and I gave her my money, and she took good care of me.” So far as the record discloses, their family life appears to have been ideal. The following unquestioned testimony from the plaintiff best shows the relationship between these two, as going to the question of intent in the matter of the conveyance here in dispute.

“In 1888 I got a deed to this property from a man by the name of Clayton. My wife and I went up to Leonard & Montgomery’s office, and we paid three hundred dollars cash, and he took one and two-year notes for the rest. I trusted to my wife.

I got a patent for the ranch in Weld County from the government. I never dealt in real estate. These are the only lots I ever bought in my life.

I proved up on the land in Weld County according to law, and I got a patent. I believed the patent came to the house addressed to me. It was in my name. My wife opened the envelope. She opened all the mail that came to me. She done the business, really, because she had an education and I trusted to her. My wife didn’t work and earn her own money all the time. We had a little girl, and she was about four years old when she died, and she didn’t work during that time; and then again about three years before she died she didn’t work. She went East twice, she was sick; and then she sent about five-hundred dollars of her earnings to take this Mrs. O’Grady from Australia,”

[266]*266Mrs. McGowan became severely ill several weeks before her death, and on the 15th day of October, 1904, or about three weeks prior to her death, sent for a notary public and executed a quit claim to her husband for the premises involved. The consideration being “the love and affection she bears toward her husband, Henry McGowan.” This was without the knowledge of plaintiff.

Plaintiff testifies that three or four days before her death, and just after he had telegraphed her daughters as to her condition, he entered her room and she said: “Henry, I am never'going to get off this bed.” ‘Well/ says I, T have seen you through three or four bad spells, and I think you will pull through this.’ ‘Now/ she says, ‘go to the closet, in the stocking bag, there is a hundred or ninety dollars,’ I couldn’t say which, ‘and take that down and put it in the tool chest, but don’t carry it down town.’ She says, ‘there is a great many coming in and out here, and I can’t watch them; and go to that cupboard there and get me the envelope, a big envelope/ she says. I did, and under the bottom drawer was a secret drawer, and I did, and she looked at it, and she says, ‘That is not the one/ she says, ‘Get the one with the blue cover.’ I done it, and she looked at it, and she says, ‘That is the one. Put that down in your tool chest and lock it; put the key in your pocket/ She says, ‘You know the girls don’t like you.’

He says that she did not tell him what was in the envelope, and that he did not know until about three months afterward, when he asked a Mr. Hart, who had written letters for him, to examine the paper, and who advised him that it was a deed from his wife to him for the premises involved, and that this was his first knowledge that the paper contained in the envelope was a deed to him. This is corroborated by Hart.

Jesse Crook, the notary public who took her acknowledgment, testifies that Mrs. McGowan said at the time, in addition to formal statements, that .she wanted the home to go to Mr. McGowan.

[267]*267Mrs. LaBrie testified that she lived as a neighbor to the McGowans for six years prior to Mrs. McGowan’s death; that in June, 1904, she had a conversation with Mrs. McGowan about the property, and again about three or four weeks before she died, in which she said she was going to make a deed for it to Mr. McGowan, and at a later date, in which she said she had fixed it all up.

A few days after Mrs. McGowan’s death the two daughters and McGowan proceeded to the office of Mr. Schlosser, an attorney, where a deed was made by the sisters to McGowan, giving him a life interest in the property, and also when McGowan executed a deed to the sisters for his farm in Weld County, reserving a life estate. This seems to have been done at the instigation of the defendant, Lodema Lockwood, who insisted that this was the desire of the deceased wife. McGowan at that time had no knowledge that the paper in his possession was a deed to him for the premises.

Schlosser, the attorney who drew and acknowledged these instruments, says he was not acquainted with McGowan at the time and was introduced by Mrs. Lockwood; that Mrs. Lockwood did all the talking. Schlosser further testified:

“They (the sisters) seemed to be so much pleased with it, with the understanding, that they wanted it the way Mr. McGowan apparently consented to. I don’t think Mr. McGowan understood the provision. He really wasn’t conscious of it. That is my impression after learning subsequent facts. At that time, I think we didn’t talk it all over in common, nothing more than the bare statement as they explained to me; I didn’t have an opportunity of examining anything.”

It is clear that Mrs. Lockwood and her sister had no inheritable interest in the Weld County land, for the title was in McGowan under a patent from the government.

It is plain that these daughters, through Mrs. Lockwood, were attempting to secure title to both properties, under the plea that such was the desire of Mrs. McGowan before [268]*268her death; at a time when he was without knowledge as to the deed, in ignorance of legal forms, and when he was suffering from grief because of her death.

Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P. 298, 65 Colo. 264, 1918 Colo. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-lockwood-colo-1918.