Roberts v. Coleman

16 S.E. 482, 37 W. Va. 143, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 14
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 482 (Roberts v. Coleman) 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
Roberts v. Coleman, 16 S.E. 482, 37 W. Va. 143, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 14 (W. Va. 1892).

Opinion

BraNNON, Judge:

This was a chancery suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson county by Nancy Roberts and others against Thomas B. Coleman and others for the purpose of dividing the personal and real estate owned by Thomas Coleman, deceased, among numerous children and grandchildren ; the bill alleging, that various advancements had been made to certain children, and asking, that they be taken into account [146]*146in the division. The appellants assign and the appellees cross assign errors.

It is claimed that the court erred in allowing Raney Roberts three hundred and ninety dollars against the estate for keeping Sarah E. Coleman, her sister, an imbecile daughter of Thomas Coleman, because she was far above majority, and the charge should be against her, not the estate. There was evidence tending tto show the father’s promise to pay it. The commissioner reports this allowance'upon the evidence, and as it depends upon the -weight of and inference from it, and the court has confirmed it, we shall not disturb the allowance. It is also said against the allowance that, Raney Roberts being a married woman, the demand is her husband’s, as he is entitled to the wife’s earnings, and she has no claim. A wife’s earnings, at common-law prior to chapter 109, § 14, Acts 1891, belonged to the husband, Jones v. Reid, 12 W. Va. 353; Bailey v. Gardner, 31 W. Va. 94 (5 S. E. Rep. 636); but here the promise was made to the wife, and the bill in which the husband is plaintiff, alleges that the promise -was made by Thomas Coleman to her, and that she is entitled to the demand. This protects the estate against any claim by him, as does the decree also estop him. If the debtis just, the estate can therefore have no grievance in its being decreed to the wife. If a husband consents that his wife’s earnings shall be hers, they are hers, except as to the husband’s creditors. Happily, though late, the legislature has changed the hard rule of the common-law giving the wife’s earnings to the husband aud his creditors, after it had reigned and done much injustice for centuries.

It is next contended that the court erred in holding lands conveyed to two sons, Thomas B. Coleman and Henry R. Coleman, to be advancements. In McClanahan v. McClanahan, 36 W. Va. 34 (14 S. E. Rep. 419) this Court stated the doctrine that, where a father confers title to real or personal estate upon children, the question whether it was an advancement depends upon the intention of the father, to be ascertained from the evidence aúd surrounding circumstances, such as the value of the entire estate, the number of children, etc. An important element also is the value of the property conferred upon the child.

[147]*147By deed dated May 15, 1872, Thomas Coleman conveyed to his son Thomas B. Coleman a tract of six hundred and twenty five acres, two roods, and eighty poles of land, stating the consideration to be' love and affection and one thousand five hundred dollars for which the grantee executed his bond. By a similar deed of sarnie date Thomas Coleman conveyed to another son, Henry R. Coleman, a tract of four hundred and fifty five acres, one rood and sixty six poles, the consideration stated being love and affection and one thousand five hundred dollars for which said grantee executed his bond. The commissioner fixes the value of tlie tract conveyed to Thomas B. Coleman at seventeen thousand dollars when conveyed and eleven thousand at the death of his father, in 1890, and that of the tract conveyed to. Henry R. Coleman at fifteen thousand dollars when conveyed, and ten thousand dollars at the death of his father.

By a deed of the same date with the two conveyances to Thomas B. and Henry R. Coleman, they leased to their father during his life the lands conveyed to them, thus making the conveyances to them operate as conveyances of the remainder after his life.

The commissioner ascertained that said decedent’s estate at his death amounted to nine thousand nine hundred and sixty two dollars and seventy two cents in personalty, sixteen thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars in realty, and that he had advanced various children to the total value of forty three thousand three hundred and forty dollars, making the whole estate seventy thousand one hundred and fifty nine dollars and sixty two cents.

If these two tracts are not treated as advancements, then the father was guilty of harsh partiality among his children and of crying injustice, because the result would be that these tracts, the very core of his landed estate, would go to those two sons clear, and they still come in for equal shares in the estate left by the father at his death; for he after-wards released without payment the two bonds given in part consideration for the conveyances.

A conveyance of land by a father to a child on a merely nominal or voluntary or good consideration, where the [148]*148deed is silent as to the intention, will be presumed to be an advancement until the presumption he repelled. So, too, a transfer of a substantial amount of personalty. McClanahan v. McClanahan, supra; Watkins v. Young, 31 Gratt. 84; 4 Kent, Comm. 418; 1 Tuck. Comm. 181; McDearman v. Hodnett, 83 Va. 281 (2 S. E. Rep. 643); 2 Lom. Ex’rs. 367; Parks v. Parks, 19 Md. 323; Clark v. Willson, 27 Md. 693. The..reason of the presumption is that the law infers that the father intends fairness and equality among all his children, and does not intend that one shall keep property of value passed to him, and yet get an equal share in his remaining estate with others equally entitled to his love and bounty, who have received nothing, or not so much as the child advanced. Before enforcing inequality, especially one so glaring as that involved in this case, courts must have strong evidence that the father intended it.

The argument made to us is that these conveyances were sales; but the deeds declare that in part, at least, the conveyances were not for valuable consideration, but moved by love; and, in view of the value of the tracts, love was by far the major consideration. As T see it, the very insertion of the money consideration as a part of and along with that of love tells us that the grantor considered it a sale only to that extent. It disproves a sale.

It is also argued that a policy on the part of the father, as manifested in ten conveyances to other children, extending from 1857 down to and including one dating after the conveyances to these two sons, manifests a design not to consider said conveyances to these two sons advancements, and that policy is that in other deeds, when he intended them as advancements, he fixed the value of the land, and declared how much was to be advancement and how much to be paid for.

Another argument is that where he conveyed lands to daughters, when he exacted any money consideration, he neither took bonds nor retained a lien, whereas in the two conveyances to the two sons he did both; and it is urged that this circumstance stamps these conveyances as sales.

These circumstances are not sufficient to overrule the [149]*149plausible theory that equality among his children is to be presumed as the father’s intention, and the prima fade presumption that such a conveyance is an advancement..

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 482, 37 W. Va. 143, 1892 W. Va. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-coleman-wva-1892.