Trumbo v. Fulk

48 S.E. 525, 103 Va. 73, 1904 Va. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 29, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 525 (Trumbo v. Fulk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trumbo v. Fulk, 48 S.E. 525, 103 Va. 73, 1904 Va. LEXIS 12 (Va. 1904).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill in this case was filed by Charles G. Trumbo and Hattie L. May, who aver that in October, 1875, John Paul, assignee in bankruptcy of George W. Fulk, a bankrupt, pursuant to an order of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, entered at its place of session at Harrisonburg, Virginia, sold to the bankrupt, George W. Fulk, certain real estate, which constituted a part of his assets; and, thereafter, the purchase money having been fully paid to the assignee, the bankrupt court ordered that a deed be executed and delivered by the assignee, conveying to George W. Fulk the real estate purchased and paid for by him; that some time thereafter Fulk filed with the assignee his written request that the deed, so ordered to be executed, be made to Eve Fulk, his wife, and on the 8th of December, 1881, the United States District Court, by its further order, reciting the fact of its former order for the execution of a deed to George W. Fulk, and of his written request aforesaid, directed that the assignee make a deed, in accordance with said request, to Eve Fulk; and the assignee having prepared a deed to Eve Fulk, the same [75]*75was approved and confirmed. Copies of the assignee’s report of sale, with its confirmation thereon endorsed, and of the last mentioned order of the United States District Court, duly attested, are filed with the hill as exhibits, and made part thereof. The bill further avers that there appears of record in the clerk’s office of the County Court of Docking-ham county, a deed of conveyance, bearing date on the 14th day of November, 1881, and admitted to record on the 12th day of December, 1881, a copy of which, marked Exhibit 3, is filed with the bill, wherein John Paul, assignee in bankruptcy of George AY. Eulk, is named as grantor, and Eve Eulk as grantee, and in which deed are recited the facts hereinbefore set out of the sale of said real estate by the assignee, the purchase thereof by Eulk, the complete payment of the purchase money to the assignee, the order of the United States District Court for the execution of a deed of conveyance to Fulk, and the written request of Fulk filed with the assignee that the deed be made to Eve Fulk, his wife, by which deed, after the recital of the facts mentioned, the assignee proceeds to convey the said real estate to Eve Fulk for the period of her natural life, with remainder to her children by George AY. Fulk; that on the ........ day of.........., 1883, Eve Fulk departed this life intestate, leaving surviving her her husband and three children — two by George AY. Fulk, namely, Daniel Eulk and Philip Eulk, and one, Catherine V. Eawley, born to her prior to her marriage with the said George AV. Fulk — and that of these children the two first named still survive, while Catherine Fawley died on the.......day of..........., 1888, leaving-surviving her the complainants, who are her children and only heirs at law.

These being the facts averred, the plaintiffs claim that under a proper construction of the deed to Eve Fulk, she took a fee simple estate, and that if such be not the true construction of [76]*76the deed as actually made,.- it should be held that, in attempting to limit the estate thereby conveyed to Eve Eulk to a life estate only, the assignee transcended his powers under the orders of the United States District Court, and that so much of the deed as does so restrict the interest of Eve Eulk to a life estate, and confers an estate in remainder therein upon her children by George W. Eulk, is wholly void and inoperative; and that, in any event, it will be held that by reason of the assignee’s failure to comply with the orders of the United States District Court, and the written request of George W. Eulk, the deed is wholly inoperative for every purpose, and that Eve Eulk was, in her lifetime, and her heirs at law are, since her death, entitled to an equitable estate in said real estate in fee simple. They claim further that while the original purchase at the sale by the assignee was made by and in the name of George W. Eulk, yet the whole of the purchase money was furnished by Eve Eulk, out of her separate estate, and that regardless of any question as to the construction of the deed, it will be held in equity, that the land so purchased by George W. Eulk in his own name was impressed in his hands with a trust for the benefit of Eve Eulk, and that he held it as a mere trustee for her; and that if it be held that by the terms of the deed of conveyance any interest in the land passed to Philip and Daniel Eulk, yet they having, as complainants allege, paid no consideration for such interest, and being, therefore, not. purchasers for value, but mere volunteers, the land will be held charged with a like trust for the benefit of said Eve Eulk and her heirs at law. Complainants then show that they desire to have the real estate partitioned between themselves and Daniel and Philip Eulk, and that they are advised that they have a right to resort to a court of equity for that purpose.

To this bill a demurrer was filed, which the court sustained, and from that decree an appeal was allowed.

[77]*77A demurrer admits as true all facts which are properly pleaded, but does not.admit the conclusions of law from those facts, which the pleader may have seen fit to introduce. It must, therefore, be taken as true that Eve Eulk, out of her separate estate, furnished the consideration which paid for the land in controversy; and that George W. Eulk, in writing, requested that a deed in fee simple be made to her. The exhibits filed with the bill, to-wit, the report of the assignee in bankruptcy to the United States District Court, the order of the Judge of the District Court upon that report, and the deed, speak for themselves.

We cannot concur in appellants’ interpretation of the deed. In language too plain to admit of construction, the conveyance is made to Eve Eulk, for her lifetime, and at her death to go to the children of the marriage of Eve Eulk and George W. Eulk. W e know of no case which holds, and of no rule of interpretation which justifies us in holding, that this language clothed Eve Eulk with a fee simple title. So to decide would be in the teeth both of the spirit and the letter of the instrument.

Eor can we concur in the contention of appellants, that because Eve Eulk, out of her separate estate, paid the purchase money for this land, and George W. Eulk requested that a deed be made to her in fee simple for the same, under the circumstances disclosed in this record, it created a resulting trust in her, by virtue of which, she being dead, the real estate so purchased passes to her heirs general, instead of'to the issue of her marriage with George W. Eulk, as declared in the deed.

It is true that, as a rule, where property is purchased and the conveyance of legal title is taken in the name of one person, while the purchase price is paid by another, a trust at once results in favor of' the party who paid the price, and the holder of the legal title becomes a trustee for him. Pomeroy’s Eq. (2 Ed.), sec. 1037. Bui the same author says that in every species [78]*78of resulting trust, intention is an essential element. Id. sec. 1031. The general proposition is true that a trust results where the deed is made to A and the price is paid by E, but it is subject to exceptions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 525, 103 Va. 73, 1904 Va. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trumbo-v-fulk-va-1904.