Sheldon v. Carr

103 N.W. 181, 139 Mich. 654, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 990
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1905
DocketDocket No. 162
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 N.W. 181 (Sheldon v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheldon v. Carr, 103 N.W. 181, 139 Mich. 654, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 990 (Mich. 1905).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

The substance of the averments of the bill of complaint is here set out: On- May 3, 1883, there was conveyed by warranty deed to Sarah Carr and defendant Allen G. Carr, certain preinises. The deed was recorded, and a copy of the record is annexed to the bill. The entire consideration of $2,000 was paid by Sarah Carr, and the undivided one-half of the premises was given by Sarah Carr to Allen G. Carr as his share as an heir at law of her estate. On August 12, 1889, Allen G. Carr, who was son and one of two heirs at law of Sarah Carr, for the purpose of defrauding said Sarah and the heirs of her body other than himself, promised said Sarah that, if she would convey to him her undivided interest in the premises, he would, after her decease, sell the premises, and from the proceeds pay Etta Sheldon, his sister, the sum of $400; if Etta Sheldon was then dead, he would pay that sum to her heirs. Allen G. Carr never intended to perform his said promise, but made it with the deliberate and fraudulent intent of not performing, and of beating Etta Sheldon and her heirs out of their rightful share of the property of Sarah Carr. Sarah conveyed to Allen her undivided half interest in the premises without other consideration than the said promise, and relying upon the promise, and the deed was not recorded until December 17,1900. From May, 1883, to the time of her death, June 4, 1890, Sarah Carr continued to occupy and control the said premises as though they were her own. The heirs of Sarah Carr living at the time of her death were defendant Allen and his sister, Etta Sheldon. Etta Sheldon died December 8, 1900, and complainant is her only surviving heir. Defendant frequently informed Etta Sheldon during her lifetime that as soon as he sold the premises she should receive $400, as agreed between himself and his mother. Defendant sold and conveyed the premises April 2, 1902, giving a warranty deed therefor, to the other persons made defendants, whose good faith as purchasers is not attacked; receiving in payment other real estate and a mortgage on the premises sold. Since the said sale by defendant, defendant has ap[656]*656parently avoided meeting complainant, who has not been able to attempt to obtain a fulfillment of the said promise.

The answer of defendant Allen G. Carr puts in issue the payment by his mother of the entire consideration for the premises, the promise to pay any sum at any time to Etta Sheldon, and the procuring the deed from Sarah because of any such promise. It also asserts that another daughter of Sarah Carr (Emeline Hadley) is living; that no administrator of the estate of Etta Sheldon has ever been appointed.

Upon the filing of this answer, a papar appears to have been filed, of which the following is a copy:

“ [Title of cause. ] And now comes the said defendant [?] and amends the bill of complaint heretofore filed in this cause by making Emeline Hadley, who is a half sister of Etta .Sheldon, mentioned in said bill of complaint, and a daughter of Sarah Carr, deceased, a party complainant. Said bill to be and remain in all other particulars the same as filed, with the exception of adding the name of Emeline Hadley as one of the complainants thereto. [Signed by counsel for complainant.] ”

Authority to make this amendment does not seem to have been challenged in the court below. The fact is mentioned as explanatory of the theory upon which the bill was filed.

The prayer of the bill is that the court will decree complainants to be entitled to a one-half portion of the note, mortgage, and real estate received by defendant in exchange for his property, and to one-half the rents and profits of the land after the decease of Sarah Carr; also that defendant Allen be required to assign to complainants such portion of the proceeds of sale of the land as would have been theirs if the deed from Sarah to Allen had not been made. There is a prayer for general relief. The relief prayed could only be given by setting aside the deed from Sarah to Allen, and finding that Allen had no interest in one-half the proceeds of the land.

The court below found that Allen G. Carr ^received the [657]*657conveyance from his mother with an understanding and promise to pay his sister (mother of Harvey Sheldon) $400, and he determines that this sum defendant Carr shall pay within 60 days, and establishes a lien for its payment on the note, mortgage, and real estate which defendant received in the trade.

We might dispose of the case without further reference to the facts. The bill, however, charges the defendant with fraudulent conduct, and the court below has, in effect, found that charge sustained by the proofs. For that reason, and because it will lead to a better understanding of the case and of our conclusions, w;e make a brief reference to the testimony:

The entire consideration for the deed and land was not paid by Sarah Carr. She was from some time before 1865 until her death a widow. Defendant was her only son, and a cripple. He has never married, but lived with his mother until her death. When her husband died, Sarah Carr sold some land, paid some debts, and, according to the testimony of Allen, she distributed a part of the remainder; giving to her daughter Etta Sheldon her share, or one-third. Then she and Allen together bought 10 acres of land, the title being taken in the name of Allen. Later she received a back pension of some $1,900. With some of this money and with the proceeds of a sale of the 10 acres the land in question was purchased, the deed running to Sarah and Allen. Seventeen hundred dollars was paid down, and a mortgage for $300 given for the balance, and this mortgage was afterwards paid. There is no evidence tending to show that the joint deed had any reference to, or was in any way connected with, a distribution of property, or that it was a setting off of property to Allen as heir. There is no proof that the deed from Sarah to Allen, made in August, 1889, was in consideration of a promise of Allen that he would pay to Etta Sheldon or her heirs $400, or any other sum, at the decease of Sarah, or out of the proceeds of a sale of the premises, or at any other time, unless found in inferences [658]*658to be drawn from certain of the testimony. There was no valuable consideration paid by Allen to his mother for this deed, excepting his lifelong care of her. She lived to be 73 years old. The testimony referred to is that of complainant and of the witnesses Martin and Mary Cole, Charles Phillips, and Charles Roscoe. Of this, the testimony of complainant was and is challenged as incompetent, because facts stated by him were equally within the knowledge of Sarah Carr. The testimony of this witness is to be weighed, as to value, somewhat by the manner of its extraction. He was 30 years old when sworn (1902), and, after stating that he was present at a talk in harvest time, 1888, between his mother, Allen, and Sarah, the following occurred:

Q. State to the court what that conversation was.
“A. Why, my grandmother was talking of deeding him a farm, and he was to pay my mother $400.
Q. That was talked between your grandmother and Allen and your mother ? ■
“A. Yes, sir.
Q. What did Allen say with reference to that arrangement ? Did he consent to it ?
“A: He did'.
Q.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.W. 181, 139 Mich. 654, 1905 Mich. LEXIS 990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldon-v-carr-mich-1905.