Turner v. Turner

305 A.2d 592, 131 Vt. 253, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 3, 1973
Docket105-72
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 305 A.2d 592 (Turner v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. Turner, 305 A.2d 592, 131 Vt. 253, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 303 (Vt. 1973).

Opinion

Daley, J.

Evelyn L. Turner, in her capacity as executrix of the estate of Allen J. Turner and sole devisee and legatee under his will, brought a civil action in the Windham County *255 Court against the defendant praying that the court, in the exercise of its equity powers, decree to her certain lands in Vernon, Vermont, now standing in the name of the defendant as surviving tenant by the entirety. The plaintiff’s action was dated July 12, 1971.

Acting in accordance with equity powers under the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure, the presiding judge of the court heard the cause, filed findings of fact, and dismissed the action upon the ground of laches.

The issues before us are twofold:

(1) Is the court’s judgment order dismissing plaintiff’s claim as being barred by the doctrine of laches supported by the law and the evidence?

(2) Did the court commit prejudicial error in its application of V.R.C.P. 52?

The plaintiff’s claim to the Vernon woodland property is based upon certain written articles of partnership entered into on July 1, 1947, between her late husband and the late husband of the defendant, who were brothers. This instrument provided in paragraph 9:

“Upon the death of either partner all property owned by the partnership shall- become the property of the survivor. Neither the estate nor the heirs of the deceased partner shall have any claim against the survivor for any part of the value of the deceased partner’s interest in the partnership assets. The survivor shall be solely and fully responsible for all partnership debts.”

This same instrument also provided that title to any parcel of land acquired may be placed in the name of either partner •or both partners as they shall agree. Taxes were to be borne equally by the partners. Each partner covenanted that he would not purchase any timberland on his own account rather than in behalf of the partnership. Frederick J. Turner was given authority to select all parcels of land to be acquired by the partnership and to negotiate for the purchase of the same. Before committing the partnership to the transaction, he was required to secure the written consent of his brother, Allen.

*256 Pursuant to paragraph 11 of the articles of partnership, agreement upon any proposed purchase or sale of property was to be manifested by a statement setting forth a brief description of the property, and the terms of the transaction. This statement was to be appended to each copy of the partnership articles, dated and signed by both partners. Such statement was to be deemed a part of the articles of partnership for all purposes. The purpose of the partnership was to acquire, hold, and dispose real estate used to grow and sell forest products.

Frederick Turner resided in Vermont and his brother in Connecticut. The land at issue was purchased on March 22, 1948. It contained one hundred acres more or less, and title to the land was taken in the name of Frederick J. Turner. There is no evidence in the record of compliance with the provisions of paragraph 11 of the agreement dated July 1, 1947.

The partners had previously, in 1947, purchased land in the Town of Dover, title to which had been taken in the name of Frederick J. Turner. This property was treated as being partnership property and no dispute as to it is involved here. At the time of her marriage, the defendant knew that the Dover lands were owned by her husband and his brother. She also knew that the Vernon property was owned by her husband, but did not know that Allen had any interest in it.

Record title to the Vernon property remained in the name of Frederick J. Turner until April 13,1961, when it was transferred to Frederick J. Turner and Katherine Turner as tenants by the entirety; and the deed of transfer is recorded in the Vernon land records. Frederick Turner deceased on December 14, 1964, and the defendant holds record title as the surviving tenant by the entirety. Allen J. Turner, who married the plaintiff in the year 1948, some ten years previous to the defendant’s marriage to his brother, deceased in 1971.

Allen J. Turner took no legal action to assert any claim to the Vernon property during the lifetime of his brother or subsequent to his decease. The defendant paid the taxes *257 upon the property after her husband’s death, but the record fails to support the finding that she otherwise maintained the property. The lower court, in arriving at its conclusion of laches, found:

“Plaintiff’s husband and plaintiff have patently failed to seek remedy within a reasonable period of time and with reasonable diligence.
The delay in taking action by plaintiff and her deceased husband has created a prejudice to the defendant . . . . The passage of time and the death of Allen J. Turner and Frederick J. Turner in the intervening years so obscures the facts, if they be inconsistent with record title, as to place defendant and the Court in an impossible position to ascertain the truth.
The delay in plaintiff seeking remedy was without fault on the part of the defendant.”

The omission to assert a right for an unreasonable and unexplained lapse of time when the delay has been prejudicial to the adverse party, ..rendering it inequitable to enforce the right, will always bar relief in equity. What constitutes unreasonable and inexcusable delay depends largely upon the circumstances of the particular case and is ordinarily a question of fact upon which the party asserting it has the burden of proof. Comings v. Powell, 97 Vt. 286, 293, 122 A. 591 (1923). Laches does not arise from delay alone, but from delay that works disadvantage to another. Stone v. Blake, 118 Vt. 424, 428, 110 A.2d 702 (1955); Holt v. Ruleau, 92 Vt. 74, 77, 102 A. 934 (1918).

The plaintiff seeks to recover possession of lands. Her claim to entitlement is based upon that part of the articles of partnership which provides: “Upon the death of either partner all property owned by the partnership shall become the property of the survivor ....”

We are here faced with the situation where the plaintiff claims entitlement to lands not in her own right as a party to an agreement but as executrix of the estate of Allen J. Turner, the last surviving partner. She now seeks to recover lands to which the legal record title since the date of acquisition in 1948 has stood in the name of Frederick Turner and then *258 Frederick Turner and Evelyn Turner, his wife, as tenants by the entirety. She admits that the defendant holds legal record title to the land as surviving tenant by the entirety.

Neither party to this action was a party to the partnership articles. The plaintiff testified, and the court found, that she had known of the existence of such articles since at least 1948.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
305 A.2d 592, 131 Vt. 253, 1973 Vt. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-turner-vt-1973.