Oates v. Oates

33 S.E.2d 457, 127 W. Va. 469, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 12
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1945
Docket9622
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 33 S.E.2d 457 (Oates v. Oates) 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
Oates v. Oates, 33 S.E.2d 457, 127 W. Va. 469, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 12 (W. Va. 1945).

Opinions

Lovins, President:

Ruth Oates complains of a decree made and entered by the Circuit Court of Mineral County, in a suit in which her husband, Edward H. Oates, is plaintiff, and she is defendant, and the litigants will be hereinafter so designated.

Plaintiff and defendant were married January 4, 1936, *471 at which time he was approximately seventy-eight years of age and she thirty-three. The marriage was never consummated. Prior to the marriage plaintiff, a bachelor, lived alone on a farm near Keyser in Mineral County, and the defendant was engaged in teaching school on a part-time basis.

There is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether plaintiff or defendant proposed the marriage. It is sufficient to say that plaintiff was lonely and desired the companionship of a woman, and defendant was in need of money to pay her debts and to assist ailing relatives in procuring medical treatment and hospitalization.

Admittedly the marriage was one of convenience. The plaintiff desired someone to car.e for him and defendant’s primary interest was the property she expected to receive on entering into the marriage. There was an arrangement or oral antenuptial agreement between plaintiff and defendant that the latter should care for the former and should receive all of his property in consideration of the marriage and the future care she bestowed on him.

Plaintiff owned personal property consisting of bonds issued by the United States of America, a deposif in a closed bank, all of which aggregated $6,671.75, and in addition owned a farm of 336 acres, on which he resided, and on which a number of cottages for rental were located. All of the bonds were delivered to defendant shortly after the marriage, but later a thousand dollar bond was returned to plaintiff who pledged it as collateral security for a loan. On the day of the marriage, an automobile was purchased for defendant with money belonging to plaintiff, and the residue of his money was deposited in a bank to their joint credit. After the marriage plaintiff made a will by which he devised and bequeathed all of his property to defendant, and, in the event she died before him, it was provided that the property should go to defendant’s two sisters and a brother.

At the time of the marriage the residence on plaintiff’s farm was in bad repair, without modern conveniences, and the furniture then in use by plaintiff left much to be de *472 sired. Defendant used funds derived by gift from her husband to repair the residence, install electrical lighting, cooking, heating and water facilities, and furnished the home with sufficient furniture.

The relations of plaintiff and defendant were satisfactory until the return of defendant from a ten-day trip to Florida, which she took in the autumn of 1938, after the death of her sister. Defendant on her return was told that plaintiff had executed another will by which he devised his land to a nephew. She thereupon caused a deed to be prepared by which plaintiff’s farm would be conveyed to her in fee simple, and which he refused to execute. The plaintiff, however, by deed dated and acknowledged on December 27, 1938, conveyed his farm to' defendant but reserved to himself a life estate therein. The pertinent portions of the deed read as follows:

“* * * That for and in consideration of the sum of $10.00, cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and for the further consideration that the said party of the second part shall attend to and provide a home for the party of the first part, at the home place known as ‘Oats Farm’ located on Patterson’s Creek, Mineral County, West Virginia, the said party of the first part, reserving unto himself a life estate in and to the real estate hereby conveyed, doth hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the party of the second part, * * * TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the above described real estate * * * subject however to the life estate of the said Edward H. Oats * *

Plaintiff now seeks a rescission of the conveyance and prays that his deed of December 27, 1938, be set aside on the ground that defendant has not complied with the provision requiring her to “attend to and provide a home for” him.

Plaintiff and defendant rely on many incidents and conditions which, if true, disclose a singular lack of regard for the comfort, peace of mind, and well-being of each other. Plaintiff testified that defendant struck him on several occasions; that she frequently applied to him improper and *473 vulgar names; that she sold hay produced on the farm without his knowledge; that she had secretly attempted to sell valuable timber standing on plaintiff’s land; that she had interfered with tenants of the cottages rented by plaintiff, and in two instances had evicted tenants; that she was extravagant; that she drank to excess and had left the home and stayed for long periods. Defendant charges that plaintiff was filthy in his habits; that he engaged in loathsome conduct in her presence and in the presence of invited guests; that he accused her of prostitution; that he threatened to poison her; that he had adulterated gasoline used by defendant in her automobile; that he refused to pay for electric current consumed at the residence so that further service was denied and she was thereby prevented from using the electrical apparatus and facilities in the home; and that he refused to provide food except the kind he desired.

Defendant admits that on two occasions she struck plaintiff, the first being when he applied to her a vulgar name, and the second being on an occasion when he interfered with some of the tenants in the cottages. She justifies her action by saying that she was angered by the name he called her on the first occasion, and on the second that she did not hurt him, although the evidence shows that she beat his face, head and arms with a broom. With the exception just noted, the parties each deny the accusations of the other. Defendant prays for affirmative relief in that part of her answer in the nature of a cross bill, averring that the antenuptial agreement should be specifically enforced and that she be decreed to be the owner of the farm in fee simple.

The greater part of the evidence was taken in the form of depositions before a notary public, and some was heard by a commissioner in chancery and the trial chancellor. Upon the submission of the cause, the trial court entered a decree by which the deed from plaintiff to defendant was set aside, and defendant perpetually enjoined from interfering with the use and occupancy of the land owned by plaintiff. In the same decree defendant was given leave to *474 file an amended answer, which set up a claim for improvements placed on the farm and paid for out of her own funds, and the court, over the objection of plaintiff, referred the cause to a commissioner to ascertain the facts with reference thereto.

The defendant appealed from the decree above mentioned, and now contends that she has been and is now ready and willing to perform all of the duties set forth in the deed of conveyance of December 27, 1938, but that plaintiff has prevented such performance by his own misconduct which precludes the relief prayed for by him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.E.2d 457, 127 W. Va. 469, 1945 W. Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oates-v-oates-wva-1945.