Reed v. Reed

104 A. 227, 117 Me. 281, 1918 Me. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 26, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 104 A. 227 (Reed v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Reed, 104 A. 227, 117 Me. 281, 1918 Me. LEXIS 74 (Me. 1918).

Opinion

Cornish, C. J.

This is an action of forcible entry and detainer to . recover possession of certain real estate in Boothbay Harbor. The plaintiff claims to derive title by virtue of a warranty deed dated and acknowledged September 4, 1907, from his father Chapman N. Reed to Bessie L. Reed, wife of the plaintiff, and by deed from Bessie L. Reed of the same date to himself. The defendant denies the passing ■of the title from Chapman N. Reed during his lifetime and pleads title in his three brothers, one of whom is the plaintiff, and himself as tenants in common, heirs at law of their father. The issue is the efficacy of the deed from the father to Bessie L. Reed, and that depends upon whether or not it was legally delivered, by the grantor to the grantee. If it was legally delivered and title passed, then the plaintiff should recover; if it was not delivered then the plaintiff fails.

The jury having rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant, the . case is before the Law Court on plaintiff’s motion and exceptions. It is. only necessary to consider the motion.

It appears that Chapman N. Reed with his wife Sarah A. Reed, at the time the deed was made, was living in this homestead which they had occupied for many years. He was then a man seventy-two or seventy-three years of age. In order to provide an annual income for himself and his wife, he arranged to convey this property to his son, the plaintiff, then living in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who, in consideration of the conveyance, agreed to pay his father the sum of three hundred dollars a year during the father’s life, and the same amount to his mother, should she survive her husband. In furtherance of this agreement a local attorney was secured who drafted the warranty deed in question from Chapman N. Reed to Bessie L. Reed, the plaintiff’s wife, a bond from Bessie and the plaintiff to Chapman N. Reed, conditioned to make the annual payments, a mortgage to Chapman N. Reed, signed by Bessie and the plaintiff, to secure the performance of the bond, and a warranty deed from Bessie to the plaintiff, subject to the mortgage. These were all a part of one and the same transaction. All these instruments when prepared were taken by the attorney to the Reed homestead, where all the parties were, and were duly executed and acknowledged in his presence. He cannot positively testify that they were delivered by the respective [283]*283grantors to the respective grantees, nor could he be expected to do so as a matter of distinct recollection after a lapse of ten years, but he left them at the house with the parties interested. This has been held to be some evidence of delivery. Lowd v. Bridgham, 154 Mass., 113. To assume that they were not delivered is to conclude that all the labor and expense connected with the transaction were designedly futile. However the plaintiff and his wife, who are the only other living witnesses to the transaction, testify that all the instruments were unconditionally delivered at the time of their execution, the deed by Chapman to Bessie and the bond and mortgage by Bessie and the plaintiff to Chapman. The deed from the father to Bessie as well as the deed from Bessie to the plaintiff were carried by the plaintiff to his home in Massachusetts. None of the documents were recorded until after the father’s death, which was in deference to the wishes of the parents. The plaintiff made various payments under the bond, the exact amount being somewhat in controversy. Sarah A. Reed died in February, 1908, and Chapman N. Reed in February, 1913.

If further proof of the completed delivery of the deed is needed, in addition to the uncontradicted testimony of the plaintiff and his wife, and the inherent reasonableness of the transaction, it is to be found in the concurrent acts of the parties which recognized a transfer of the title. The father’s intention to convey immediately and unconditionally is shown by the fact that he took back a mortgage of the same premises to secure the performance of the conditions of the bond. This is practically conclusive upon the question of delivery of the original deed, and is so held by the courts. Creeden v. Mahoney, 193 Mass., 402; Blackwell v. Blackwell, 196 Mass., 186. If no title had passed to the grantee under the deed, the grantee had nothing which she could convey to the grantor in mortgage, and the grantor knew it. The validity of the mortgage was based on the validity of the deed.

Moreover we have the written and unanswerable admission of Chapman N. Reed himself, made three months after the conveyance. In December, 1907, the plaintiff applied to his father for assistance in raising §1,000. Under date of December 27, 1907, the father replied: “I got your letter last night. I am sorry to hear that you have had such hard luck. I will help you out if I can. But as it stands I can’t do a thing. You have a deed (or Bessie has) of this place and in one sense the place is yours while you carry out the agreement (that is the [284]*284bond) I can’t do a thing with it. If I should go to put a mortgage on it the question would be asked, is it clear of all incumbrances. You see that it would not be while you have a deed of it. Now you send me the deed. None of the papers have been put on record. Then everything will stand the same as if nothing had been done. Then I can answer any questions that may be asked, with a clear conscience. Then I will see what I can do. . . . .”

Acting upon this suggestion the deed was returned by the plaintiff to his father, who thereupon placed a mortgage for $1,000. upon the premises with the Boothbay Savings Bank, in the father’s name, the bank supposing that he was still the legal owner, and the money was turned over to the plaintiff by his father. Subsequently the plaintiff met some of the interest payments on this mortgage and also paid a portion of the principal, ceasing payment on advice of counsel after the question of title had been raised. The father had received nothing from the bank and paid nothing to the bank, and as between father and son it was as if the bank mortgage had been placed upon the son’s property, while as between the father, son and the bank the mortgage had been placed upon the father’s property.

This transaction howevér had no legal effect as between Chapman N. Reed and Bessie L. Reed or the plaintiff, upon the delivery of the deed of September 4, 1907, or the passing of the title thereunder. That deed not having been placed on record and the holder of the $1,000. mortgage having neither actual nor constructive notice of its existence, the bank’s title under the mortgage would be good as against both Bessié and the plaintiff, but as between the father and them his deed had been delivered beyond recall and the son held the title subject to the mortgage for support.

It is needless to discuss the evidence further. The fact of unconditional delivery is completely established. No other inference can reasonably be drawn from the testimony and circumstances. Such was the conclusion reached by this court when the case was first here. Reed v. Reed, 113 Maine, 522. At nisi prius the presiding Justice had directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and the case was taken to the Law Court upon exceptions to that ruling and also upon a motion for new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence. Regarding the direction of the verdict the court said: “We shall not discuss the evidence. We need only to say that a careful study of it leads us to [285]*285the conclusion that a verdict based on non-delivery of the deed could not be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 227, 117 Me. 281, 1918 Me. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-reed-me-1918.