St. Louis County National Bank v. Fielder

260 S.W.2d 483, 364 Mo. 207, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 13, 1953
Docket43270
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 260 S.W.2d 483 (St. Louis County National Bank v. Fielder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis County National Bank v. Fielder, 260 S.W.2d 483, 364 Mo. 207, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 584 (Mo. 1953).

Opinion

HYDE, J.

Action to:detérmiñe title'to’real' estate. Plaintiff' claims title as testamentary truátée’' under the' will of Paul A'.’ *211 Kessler, deceased, executed September 17, 1947. Defendant claims under a quitclaim deed, executed by Kessler,.June 2; 1949, and recorded on that date. Kessler died July 24, 1950. The question- for decision is whether the deed is void as an invalid testamentáry disposition as contended by plaintiff. The trial court found the ■ deed void, adjudged title in plaintiff and defendant has appealed.

The case was tried on an agreed statement of facts. Kessler’s will left all his estate, real and personal, to 'plaintiff as trustee for his daughter and three grandchildren, the corpus to go- - to the -grandchildren at the daughter’s death. The deed conveyed Kessler’s residence to defendant. It was in regular form but contained the following reservation: • “ The said party of the first part hereby reserves a Life Estate in and to said property, with power to. sell, rent, lease, mortgage or otherwise dispose of said property during his natural lifetime. ’ ’ Kessler continued to reside in the property until his death, and at no time did he sell, rent, lease, mortgage or otherwise dispose of said property during his natural lifetime or attempt, to do so..

Plaintiff contends that “a deed, in order to’ convey,- must vest in the grantee a present irrevocable interest”; that “retention of power to sell, mortgage or otherwise dispose of property during lifetime,’by grantor, in deed purporting to convey-an estate to commence in the future prevents an immediate and irrevocable interest from being vested in grantee because the retention of such powers is equivalent to the power to revoke the deed”; that the reservation of the power to revoke shows grantor’s intention to’ be that no estate is to'pass to grantee until the death of the grantor; and that this reservation makes the deed testamentary in character. ‘ Plaintiff relies mainly on Goins v. Melton, 343 Mo. 413, 121 S. W. (2d) 821 and cases cited therein.

However, the reservation in the deed herein'involved says nothing about postponing the passing or vesting of title until-the death of the grantor, as is true in every. Missouri case we have found holding a deed to be testamentary. (See cases cited in article on Testamentary Character of Deeds in Missouri, Ottinan, 5 Mo. Law Rev. 350; see also Deed or Will, Eckhardt, 15 Mo. Law Rev. 383.) Instead, this deed unconditionally conveys the title immediately, stating “neither the said party of the first part, nor his heirs * * •* ■ -will hereafter claim or demand any right or title to the aforesaid premises.” "It makes a clear and proper reservation of a life estate and does also reserve the right to sell, mortgage or otherwise dispose of the property during the grantor’s lifetime, which plaintiff correctly says is. in effect a reservation of the power to revoke to-be exercised-in-a particular manner. (See 3 Tiffany Real Property 14, See. 681.) Of course, the right to rent or lease is not inconsistent with the life estate; and none of these provisions prevent the immediate vesting of title in the grantee of the remainder in fee.- While the-’grantee’s-estate might later be defeated by exercise of the power that would’.only-make *212 it a defeasible fee but nevertheless a vested estate. (See 31 C.J.S. 15, Sec. 5; 133 Am. Jur. 544, See. 88.) The deed'in the Goins case, in addition to the retention of the right to sell during the grantor’s lifetime, stated: “At Ms death the title to all, or whatever part thereof remains unsold, to pass to and vest m the grantee together with all his personal property and belongings.” Providing for personal property to thus vest in the grantee at the same time as the title to the land (at the grantor’s-death) was an added indication of the grantor’s intention to make a testamentary disposition not found in many of the cases. This intention, as therein stated, was to be ‘ ‘ gathered from the four corners of the instrument.” (For criticism of the Goins case see Work of Missouri Supreme Court — 1938, Property, Eckhardt, 4 Mo. Law Rev. 419.) There is nothing like the above quoted provision of the Goins' case deed in this case. Indeed the grantor had already made his testamentary disposition by his previously executed will.. (For a deed more like the Goins case deed see Wren v. Coffey, (Tex.Civ.App.) 26 S. W. 142, where the language was ‘ ‘ all our right, title and interest in and to our homestead * * * should we not sell or dispose of the same before death. ’ ’ While this did not prohibit the vesting of title'as specifically as did the Goins case deed, the Court held it testamentary, saying it was ‘ ‘ a declaration of intention that the conveyance should not have the effect to divest title out of the makers, and invest it in -the son, during the lifetime of such makers.”) In this case, there is- only the reservation of a life estate and a power to revoke during the grantor’s lifetime. There is no language indicating an intention to postpone the vesting of the remainder in fee; but instead this deed affirmatively provides for the immediate vesting of title.

For the reasons hereinafter stated, we are convinced that a grantor has the. right to reserve the power to revoke and that such a reservation alone does not make a deed testamentary. Insofar as Goins v. Melton indicates this reservation alone to be a reason for ■ declaring a deed testamentary, it should be no longer followed. In fact, it would be more logical to hold the reservation void as repugnant to the grant (see 6 Thompson on Real Property 698, Sec. 3471) and thus leave the conveyance absolute, than it would be to -hold that such a reservation malees the deed testamentary. That was the result reached by the Supreme Court of Kansas in Newell v. McMillan, 30 Pac. (2d) 126 where a deed, reserving a life estate to the grantors, provided “the right to mortgage, sell or * * * dispose of the within described real estate is hereby reserved by the grantors, until said grantee shall have attained the age of forty years.” The Court held this reservation was a nullity and did not defeat the conveyance of the fee to the grantee.

Apparently that was what the early common law did before the ■Statute of Uses (see Farwell on Powers, p: 2) for reasons stated by *213 the Supreme Court of California, in Tennant et al. v. John Tennant Memorial Home, 140 Pac. 242, l.c. 244, as follows: “Under the ancient common law, there was a rule to the effect that, where a transfer was made by feoffment and livery of seisin, any power of revocation reserved in the feoffment itself was void, on the ground that it was repugnant to the grant. The rule arose from the peculiar nature and purpose of the ceremony of livery of seisin, which was a necessary part of an alienation by feoffment. It consisted of a formal delivery of possession on the premises, symbolized by the manual delivery of a clod or piece of turf from the land, all of which was done in thé presence of witnesses from the vicinage. The publicity was required because in those times there were no public records of conveyances and it was necessary in some way to preserve evidence of the transfer. For this reason the ceremony was required and .the presence of witnesses was necessary. .4 Kent’s Comm. 480.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W.2d 483, 364 Mo. 207, 1953 Mo. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-county-national-bank-v-fielder-mo-1953.