Zeust v. Staffan

14 App. D.C. 200, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3555
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 1899
DocketNos. 825 and 827
StatusPublished

This text of 14 App. D.C. 200 (Zeust v. Staffan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeust v. Staffan, 14 App. D.C. 200, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3555 (D.C. Cir. 1899).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alvey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The original bill in this case was filed by George Staffan, praying that the will of his late wife Mary A. Staffan, deceased, so far as the same purports to affect and devise title to Lot No. 15 of Square 583, in the City of Washington, or any part of said lot, might be, by the decree of the court, declared to be inoperative and without effect; and that a certain deed purporting to have been made in pursuance of the authority and direction contained in said will, might be vacated and annulled, and that the title to said Lot 15 be quieted as against Anna Zeust, the defendant in the original bill, and that she be enjoined from asserting title to the real estate described, or any part thereof.

The defendant, Anna Zeust, answered the original bill, denying the existence of any rightful claim of title in the complainant, and setting up and claiming title in herself to the real estate described as derived to her under the will of Mrs. Staffan; and she also filed a cross-bill, praying that the will of Mary A. Staffan be proved and established as the last will and testament of the deceased; that the title to said real estate be decreed to be in her, the said Anna Zeust, and that certain deeds from certain of the heirs at law of said Mary A. Staffan to George Staffan, the complainant in the original bill, be decreed to be void and without effect; that the said George Staffan be enjoined from setting up title^o the said real estate, or any part thereof, and that he be required to deliver up possession thereof, and to account for the rents and profits received from the same, etc.

There were many' exhibits filed and there was some proof taken to show the circumstances under which certain deeds were made for the property to Mary A. Staffan. There is [208]*208not much controversy, however, in regard to the facts of the case. The principal questions involved relate to the nature and character of the estate and title vested in Mary A. Staffan by the deeds of the property made to her by tbe authority and direction of her husband, and whether his marital rights in the property were excluded by operation of said deeds to tbe wife. These questions are largely dependent upon the terms of the deeds themselves, without reference to extrinsic facts.

It appears that on April 1, 1867, George Staffan, the original complainant, was seized'in fee of Lot No. 15, in Square No. 583, in the city of Washington, said lot having a frontage of fifty feet. That on that date he sold and conveyed to one. Elizabeth Tajdor, in fee, for the sum of $1,000, the middle one-third of said lot, the said one-third having a frontage of 16$ feet by the depth of the lot. In this deed to Elizabeth Taylor, Staffan’s wife joined. Of the purchase money .only $100 was paid in cash, and the balance was secured by a deed of trust on the property so conveyed. Subsequently, Elizabeth Taylor having made default in the payment of the balance of the purchase money, Staffan, to whom the money was due, directed the trustees in tbe deed of trust to make sale of the property, and the sale was accordingly made. It is not shown, except by the recitals in the deed made by the trustees to the wife, Mary A. Staffan, who bid off tbe property; but the deed recites that the property was put up at public auction, and that it was sold to Mary A. Staffan, the wife, at and for $600, she being the highest and best bidder therefor, and had complied with the terms of sale. It is alleged, however, and proved by Staffan, the complainant, that he bid in the property and paid the price bid therefor with the debt due him from Elizabeth Taylor, and that his wife had no means of her own whatever; but that he directed the trustees to make the deed to his wife, Mary A. Staffan, instead of making it to himself; and the deed was so made, July 1, 1871, and [209]*209was by him accepted as payment and cancelation of the debt due him from Elizabeth Taylor.

After the sale and deed to Elizabeth Taylor of the one-third of the lot — that is to say, on April 10, 1869 — Staffan, his wife joining in the deed, conveyed the remaining two-thirds of the lot to one W. EL Ward, in trust for his said wife, Mary A. Staffan, for life, free from the control and ownership of her said husband, and upon the further trust, to sell and convey the same, either absolutely or by way of mortgage, to such person and for such uses and purposes as the said Staffan and wife should in writing direct. Subsequently, on July 29, 1870, Ward, the trustee, by a deed in which Staffan and his wife united, conveyed these two-thirds of the Lot No. 15, together with other real estate, to one William J. Miller, in trust to secui'e certain large indebtedness of Staffan, with direction to Miller, as trustee, after all the indebtedness so secured had been paid and satisfied, to convey said real estate, or the residue not sold under the trust, to the wife, Mary A. Staffan, in fee simple absolute, for her sole use and benefit, free from the control and ownership of her husband. The indebtedness was all paid, and on October 30, 1871, Miller, as trustee, conveyed to the said wife, Mary A. Staffan, the said real estate, as directed by the deed of trust, and by said deed to the wife, the title was declared to be in fee absolute, for her sole use and benefit, free from the control and ownership of her husband.

It further appears that in August, 1882, Mary A. Staffan, the wife, died, having duly made and executed her last will and testament, bearing date the 19th of July, 1882, without the consent of her husband, as it is alleged; and which will was executed in form to pass real estate; and by this will she devised all of her real estate to L. P. Shoemaker and Albert F. Fox, in trust for Anna L. Staffan, now known as Anna Zeust, the defendant in the original bill, and complainant in the cross-bill. In accordance with the terms of [210]*210the will the trustees, on February 14, 1894, conveyed the entire Lot No. 15 to Anna Zeust in fee simple.

■ Staffan, the complainant, contends that his wife had no power to devise this real estate, and, acting upon that theory, has, since the death of his wife, secured deeds froth certain of' the heirs at law of his deceased wife, conveying to him an undivided twenty-nine sixtieths (II) of said real estate. . When the will was offered for probate in the orphans’ court it was resisted by caveat, and upon issues and trial the will was found to be the valid last will and testament of the testatrix,.and it was.accordingly admitted to probate on March 7, 1890; but such probate,did not establish the will as to the real estate devised. Since, that time Staffan has brought several successive ejectment suits for the property, but has, for one reason or another, failed in their prosecution.

It is an undisputed fact in the case, that of the marriage of Staffan and his wife, Mary A., two children were born alive, but both of whom died in infancy.

The court below, by its decree, declared the will of the wife, Mary A. Staffan, to be ineffective to pass any title to the middle one-third of Lot No. 15, hereinbefore described, but that the title thereto descended to the heirs at law of Mary A. Staffan, subject to an estate by the curtesy in the surviving husband, George Staffan; and that all the title of the heirs of Mary A. Staffan, who had previously conveyed to George Staffan, had been properly vested in him. And as to the remaining two-thirds of said Lot No. 15, the court decreed the title thereto to be in Anna Zeust in fee simple, by virtue of the will of Mary A.

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Bluebook (online)
14 App. D.C. 200, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeust-v-staffan-cadc-1899.