Shaffer v. Fetty

4 S.E. 278, 30 W. Va. 248, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 74
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 4 S.E. 278 (Shaffer v. Fetty) 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
Shaffer v. Fetty, 4 S.E. 278, 30 W. Va. 248, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 74 (W. Va. 1887).

Opinion

GkebN, Judge :

in order to decide properly the question whether the bill in this cause was fatally defective on general demurrer, because it was multifarious, or because it failed to make the necessary defendants, we must have a clear conception of what is a resulting trust, arising from the payment of the whole or a part, of the purchase-money of a tract by some person other than the grantee, and under what circumstances such resulting trust arises, as the bill in this cause claims that the plaintiff has such a resulting trust to a certain extent in one of the tracts of land conveyed to Alpheus A. D. Fetty by Parker, and afterwards, without any valuable consideration, conveyed by Fetty to his wife, Ruth A. Fetty, the defendant. Ever since the case of Wray v. Steele, 2 Ves. & B. 388, it has been held that, when land has been purchased, and a part of the purchase-money was paid by a third person, a stranger to the grantee, there was prima facie a resulting trust to the extent of such advancement in such land to such stranger; and it has never been questioned in this country but that the payment of a part of the purchase-money by a stranger to the grantee will create prima facie a resulting trust to the extent of such payment. See Botsford v. Burr, 2 Johns. Ch. 405, 410; Purdy v. Purdy, 3 Md. Ch. 547; Buck v. Swazey, 35 Me. 41; Pierce v. Pierce, 7 B. [257]*257Mon. 433; Wallace v. Duffield, 2 Serg. & R. 521; Morey v. Herrick, 18 Pa. St. 123; Smith v. Wright, 49 Ill. 403; Case v. Codding, 38 Cal. 191. Such a resulting trust is a pure trust-held by the grantee of the ownership of a portion of the land itself for the stranger who has advanced a certain portion of the purchase-money. It is not an interest in the proceeds of land nor a lien upon it, as the parties to this suit seemed to think, for the money advanced by the stranger for its purchase, nor an equity or right to have the sum of money advanced by the stranger for its purchase raised out of it or upon the security of it. There can be no resulting trust in a tract of land for a specific sum of money advanced for its purchase, leaving the residue of the value of the tract of land, whatever it may be, in the grantee. Wliat’ is meant by a resulting trust is a complete trust of original ownership of the whole or'a definite portion of a tract of land. Thus, if the. stranger has paid a definite portion of the purchase money, — say one third of it, — the grantee will hold as trustee for such stranger, as a resulting trust, one undivided third of the tract of land. And it therefore follows that, unless the payment or advance by the stranger be of a definite part of the consideration money, as such, no trust will result by implication of law. See White v. Carpenter, 2 Paige 218, 238-241; Sayre v. Townsends, 15 Wend. 647, 650; Freeman v. Kelly, 1 Hoff. Ch. 90, 96; Evans’s Estate, 2 Ashm. 470, 482; Smith v. Burnham, 3 Sum. 435, 462, 463; Green v. Drummond, 31 Md. 71; Baker v. Winning, 30 Me. 121; Cutler v. Tuttle, 19 N. J. Eq. 549, 562; McGowan v. McGowan, 14 Gray, 119. But the stranger need not pay a part of the purchase-money in cash, if he pays a definite amount in some other form, as by surrendering to the vendor a debt due from him, or in any other manner. See Slee v. Manhattan Co., 1 Paige 48; Hoyt v. Martense, 16 N. Y. 231; Clark v. Clark, 43 Vt. 685; Blauvelt v. Ackerman, 20 N. J. Eq. 41; Peabody v. Tarbell, 2 Cush. 226. But where the whole or a portion of the purchase-money, instead of being paid by a stranger, is paid by the father of the grantee, who has not already been provided for, this is presumptively an advancement of the grantee as a child, and no trust results to the parent, unless this presumption be rebutted, [258]*258See Dyer v. Dyer, 1 White & T. Lead. Cas. Eq. pt. 1, side p. 203 and note; Partridge v. Havens, 10 Paige 618, 626; Balter v. Leathers, 3 Ind. 558. The same rule is applied when a husband purchases, and conveyance is made to the wife, (Guthries. Gardner, 19 Wend. 414; ) and the same rule is applied, generally, when the party advancing the purchase money stands to the grantee in loco parentis, (Baker v. Leathers, 3 Ind. 558; Taylor v. Fuller, 3 Wend. 403).

The whole doctrine of resulting trusts, arising from the payment or part payment of the purchase-money, has been abrogated in some few of the States by statute, but not in this State. But it is admitted that this doctrine of resulting trusts, arising from the payment of the whole or a part of the purchase-money by a person other than the grantee, should be acted upon with great caution ; and the circumstances from which a trust is to be raised must be clearly proven, (Faringer v. Ramsay, 4 Md. Ch. 33;) and the payment or'advance of the purchase-money must be made before or at the time of the purchase ; and a subsequent payment will not by relation attach a trust to the original purchaser, (see Nixon’s Appeal, 63 Pa. St. 279;) for the trust arises from the fact that the money of the real, and not the nominal, purchaser formed at the time the consideration of the purchase, and thus became converted into land, in view of a court of equity. See Botsford v. Burr, 2 Johns. Ch. 405, 414; Steere v. Steere, 5 Johns. Ch. 1, 19, 20; Jackson v. Morse, 16 Johns. 199; Page v. Page, 8 N. H. 187, 196; Conner v. Lewis, 16 Me. 268, 274. There has been some diversity of ojúnion as to whether, when a widow pays for land conveyed to her child, a resulting trust arises; but the weight of authority is that it is presumed to be an advancement, and no resulting trust will ordinarily arise in such cases. Sayre v. Hughes, L. R. 5 Eq. 376; Murphy v. Nathans, 46 Pa. St. 508. Sed vide Re de Visme, 2 De Gex, J. & S. 17.

It has been argued that a mother is not bound to advance her child, and that a widow does not stand in such a relation to her child as to raise a presumption, when she purchased land, and it is conveyed, not to her, but to her child, that she intended it as a gift. But it does seem to me that as maternal affection is the strongest motive to bounty, that the [259]*259presumption ought to prevail, if not rebutted, that the simple conveyance of the land to the child, by direction of the mother, shows that a gift or advancement was intended, and therefore that the presumption in such case is that there is no resulting trust to the mother. There is no legal obligation on the part of either father or mother to make such advancements ; and in this country there seems to me but little difference in the strength of the moral obligation on the father and mother. There is certainly much less difference in this country than there would be in England. The obligation on the father to advance his child, especially his son, is based there principally on his moral obligation to keep up the family name and position in society, and this obligation rests there morally on him more strongly than on the mother. But in this country, the moral obligation resting on the parent to advance children is based on very different grounds.

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4 S.E. 278, 30 W. Va. 248, 1887 W. Va. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-fetty-wva-1887.