Rouss v. Rouss

111 S.E. 586, 90 W. Va. 646, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 273
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 586 (Rouss v. Rouss) 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
Rouss v. Rouss, 111 S.E. 586, 90 W. Va. 646, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 273 (W. Va. 1922).

Opinion

Poffenbarger, President:

The decree under review on this appeal sustained the demurrer to the bill filed by the appellant and dismissed- it.

Cancellation of a deed executed for a peculiar purpose and under anomalous circumstances is the object of the [648]*648bill. The opinion filed in. Page v. Rouss, 86 W. Va. 305, reveals the situation of the parties, the nature' of the subject of the deed and facts that may indicate the motives impelling or inducing the parties to enter into, the transaction in respect of which relief is sought.

The exact terms and provisions of the deed in question are not disclosed. It was not made an exhibit of the bill which purports to set forth only its legal effect, by allegation. It is described in the bill as being “a quit claim deed for a life estate” in favor of Bettie A. Rouss, widow of Vm. W. Rouss, in the homestead farm of the deceased husband, known as Shannon Hill, executed and placed in her hands by Peter W. Rouss,' the appellant. ' By the will of her husband the widow was given a conditional life estate in the property, and the appellant a contingent remained in fee therein, upon condition of his payment of six $2,000.00 sums to other nephews and a niece of the testator, or to such of them as should be living at the termination of the widow’s estate. Her life estate was conditioned upon her remaining unmarried. Evidently desiring abrogation of this attempted restraint upon her liberty, she obtained the deed in question. The bill alleges that she personally ap^ plied for it, in New York, the place of residence of the appellant, and obtained it- by persuasion and upon her promise not to make any use of it, until she should have obtained a writing signed by the six legatees, binding them to a postponement of payment of the demonstrative legacies provided for them, by the will, until her death. Execution of the deed was not withheld, however, for procurement of such an agreement. It was prepared by her attorney, executed by the appellant and placed in her hands, upon condition that she should make nó use of it, in advance of procurement of the agreement. The agreement was prepared and executed by the nephew she later married, and an attempt was made to get others of them to execute it. Failing in her effort to- obtain their signatures, she abandoned the attempt. She applied for'-the deed, Jany. 18, 1915, and obtained it, Feby. 6, 1915. Four days after she made the application, she executed a renunciation of the will, but-[649]*649did not then record it. She put tbe deed on record, March 16, 1915, recorded the renunciation March 18, 1915, and married Milton 0. Rouss, one of the demonstrative legatees Aug. 18, 1916. The result is.that she has her former husband’s personal estate, a second husband and a full and unconditional life estate in the whole of Shannon Hill, while the appellant has five of the $2,000.00 legacies due on his hands now and must await her death, to get possession of Shannon Hill, unless he can succeed in this attempt to nullify and cancel the deed..

Careful and mature inspection and analysis of the bill have failed to disclose allegations of fact sufficient, if proved, to establish any fraud in the transaction: Ignorance of the renunciation of the will, on the part of the appellant, at the date of execution of the deed, did not operate in • any way to his prejudice. He knew the widow had absolute right to renounce it at any time within a-year from the date of the probate thereof, and, in the execution of the deed, he did not bind her by a collateral. agreement, or otherwise, not to renounce it. The time of renunciation, with respect to execution of the ■ deed, is not in any sense material. Subsequent renunciation would, have had exactly the same effect as prior renunciation. The application for the deed cannot be deemed to have been a representation or promise either not to renounce or not to marry. The bill makes no such claim. Nor is there any allegation of a promise to obtain the agreement respecting the time of payment of the legacies, with intent at the time thereof, not to perform,(or of any false representation that such an agreement had been arranged fqr in advance, or was .possible of procurement.

If the transaction the bill seeks to abrogate involved no more than a conveyance of real estate, in consideration of a promise on the part of the grantee, to do something beneficial, for the grantor, and failure, after the. conveyance, to perform the promise, there could be.no relief on the ground of failure of consideration, in the absence of peculiar circumstances. Except in the instance of a conveyance in consideration of support of the gr.antor by the grantee, no [650]*650authority has been found for rescission or forfeiture, for nonperformance of the promise constituting the consideration of a conveyance, whether it be one to pay money or to do some other act, in the absence of a forefeiture clause in the deed.’ On the contrary, there is much authority against right to such relief. McGraw Oil Co. v. Kennedy, 65 W. Va. 595; Core v. Petroleum, Co., 52 W. Va. 276; Thompson v. Jackson, 3 Rand. 504; Kellar v. Craig, 126 Fed. 630; Lawrence v. Gayetty, 78 Cal. 126, 12 A. S. R. 29; Rheingans v. Smith, 161 Cal. 362.

However, as this transaction may have included an election to accept the devise and, therefore, may have been more than an 'ordinary conveyance of real estate, in consideration of a promise, it may not fall within the rule to which reference has just been made. The election, if made by execution of the deed, subjected the grantor to a heavy collateral obligation without any reciprocal or corresponding benefit. The widow could marry and thus mature the legacies, without surrendering to the appellant the possession of the property. This result she promised to provide against by procurement of the postponement agreement. Upon that promise the election was made, if made at all at that time. Failure of performance of that promise might be good ground of revocation of the election made in advance of expiration of the period allowed by the will, in which to elect. The appellant was not bound to elect until after the marriage or death of the widow, whichever should first happen. If, under these circumstances, he could have revoked his election, or withdrawn from it, on failure of the inducement to the premature making thereof, it may be that the deed could' have been canceled, it being only a part of an entire transaction a substantial part of which had failed, or was voidable. But this avenue of escape, if any, was effectually - closed by an unequivocal, deliberate, written election made about a year after the execution of the deed, recordation thereof and of the renunciation of the will and failure of the promise. The bill specifically admits this, saying: “Plaintiff did not decide to accept the devise tintil February 10, 1916, when he so wrote the said widow.” [651]*651This election made after failure of the inducement, or ratification of the previous election, if any, cannot be deemed to have been made in ignorance of any material fact or right, or upon any failing inducement, wherefore it is impossible to perceive any ground upon which it can now be revoked. Moreover, the bill does not seek revocation thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 586, 90 W. Va. 646, 1922 W. Va. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rouss-v-rouss-wva-1922.