Town of Ansonia v. Cooper

33 A. 905, 66 Conn. 184, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 28, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 A. 905 (Town of Ansonia v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Ansonia v. Cooper, 33 A. 905, 66 Conn. 184, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 52 (Colo. 1895).

Opinion

Torrance, J.

This is a proceeding in the nature of a bill of interpleader between Henry G. Ailing and Elizabeth Downs, to determine which of them is entitled to a fund paid into court by the town of Ansonia, as the appraised value of land taken by said town for a school-house site.

The land was formerly owned by Charles Cooper, who died in 1876, leaving a will which gave the use of the land to his widow for life, and the remainder in fee equally to his four sons, Charles, Alfred, William and Henry. In July, 1880, the widow sold the land for twenty-five hundred dollars, and gave a warranty deed of it in the usual form, which purported and was intended to convey the fee. The widow died in March, 1884. In 1886 the land came, through mesne conveyances by warranty deed, to Henry G. Ailing, one of the claimants of the fund, who then paid to his grant- [188]*188or thirty-five hundred dollars for it. Alfred Cooper has never conveyed his interest in the land, and the fund in question is the appraised value of that interest.

The town began proceedings to take the land in September, 1891, and in November, 1891, Alfred Cooper assigned all his right, title and interest in and to the fund in question, to Elizabeth Downs, of which assignment the town had due notice.

In one phase of it this case has already been before this court. Ansonia v. Cooper, 64 Conn., 536. In that case Ailing set up certain facts showing, as he claimed, that Alfred Cooper had ratified the sale and conveyance made by his mother; Elizabetli Downs demurred to the facts so set up, the Superior Court sustained the demurrer, this court on appeal reversed that judgment, and the case stood again for trial in the Superior Court. Thereupon Elizabeth Downs denied the facts upon which the claim of ratification was founded.

The Superior Court found that Alfred Cooper had ratified said sale, and that Ailing was entitled to the fund; and from that judgment Elizabeth Downs brings the present appeal. The errors assigned are thirty in number, but it will be unnecessary to consider all of them separately and in detail.

The court below has found that Alfred Cooper ratified the sale; if that conclusion is warranted by the facts found, and no harmful error intervened in the process of reaching it, then the judgment appealed from must stand.

Upon the argument before this court, Ailing claimed that the conclusion reached upon the question of ratification was one of fact, which could not be reviewed upon appeal; but whatever doubts upon this question may be suggested by the record, we will, for the purposes of the case, consider that conclusion as one which can be reviewed on this appeal.

We will first consider whether the facts found warrant the conclusion that Alfred Cooper ratified the sale. These facts are set out in detail upon the record, and the following appear to be, in substance, the controlling ones:—

[189]*189The sale and conveyance was made with the approval and by the advice of her son Henry, but without the knowledge of the other three sons; the purchase price then paid was twenty-five hundred dollars; the court finds that the land was then worth thirty-five hundred dollars, but it does not appear that the parties at that time considered it worth any more than the price paid; the conveyance was made freely and without the use of any undue influence; her grantee took immediate possession under the deed, and in 1881 sold and conveyed the land by warranty deed to Charles D. Ailing; he, in 1886, sold it to Henry G.'Ailing for $3,500 and conveyed it by warranty deed; these deeds were duly recorded, and the grantees named therein took and held the possession of said land under said deeds in good faith as owners, from 1880 down to the time the land was taken by the town; all the four sons knew of this conveyance by the widow before her death; at her death she left in cash about $2,200, “ the same being in whole or greater part from the proceeds of said sale ”; shortíy after her death three of the sons, Charles, William and Henry, with full knowledge of all the facts, agreed to divide the balance of their mother’s estate, after paying her debts and funeral expenses, and appointed Henry to carry the agreement into effect; he paid the debts and funeral expenses and divided the remainder among the four sons; Alfred’s share was $394, and it was paid over to him in 1884 ; he knew when he received it that it was from moneys in the hands of his mother at her decease ; about a year after his mother’s death Alfred was fully informed by Charles and William of all the facts in the case, and of the agreement aforesaid of the three brothers, and of the share of each son and of the fact that the share paid over to him came in whole or in part from the proceeds of the sale made by his mother; lie then objected to the smallness of the balance divided among the sons, and thought the land ought to have brought more, and said if it had sold for $1,000 more, he would have been satisfied; he also then said that the land ought not to have been sold without the consent of the sons, that the purchaser had a shaky title, and that they [190]*190could, make him trouble if they wanted to ; but he neither at this nor at any subsequent time made any complaint “ in regard to the-agreement aforesaid of the three brothers, or to the manner in which it had been carried out ” ; neither he nor his brothers ever demanded possession of said land, nor did he or they ever repudiate the sale made by their mother, or make any demand upon Henry G. Ailing or his predecessors in title; except that in 1891, when Alfred Cooper was requested to quitclaim his interest in said land, “he did not repudiate said sale, but subsequently demanded of the purchaser, and desired, only such sum as represented his share of the difference between the purchase price and the real value as claimed by him at the time of the sale ” ; had Alfred received from Henrj' G. Ailing $250, he intended to give him a quitclaim deed as requested.

It clearly appears from the record that, probably in the fall of 1884, and certainly in 1885, Alfred Cooper had full knowledge of all the material facts pertaining to the sale of his land, and the disposition of the proceeds of that sale, and the settlement of his mother’s estate. He then knew that she had sold the fee for $2,500 and had received the money; that she and her grantees in good faith supposed the deed conveyed the fee and had ever thereafter dealt with the land on that supposition; that substantially the whole of that purchase money had remained at 1ns mother’s decease; that his three brothers had agreed to divide that money among her creditors and her four sons and settle her estate out of court; and he also knew that this had been done, and that he had received his share of this purchase money. With this full knowledge of all the material facts, and of his rights with respect to the land sold by bis mother, he does substantially what his three brothers had done; he assents to what they had done in the settlement of his mother’s estate, and the division of the purchase money, and he retains and proposes to retain his share of that money. It is true his assent to what had been done is a grumbling one, accompanied with expressions of dissatisfaction at the outcome and result; but his dissatisfaction is not really because his mother [191]*191had sold the fee, but rather because she did not get enough for it, and because the amount finally divided between the sons was so small.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 A. 905, 66 Conn. 184, 1895 Conn. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-ansonia-v-cooper-conn-1895.