In January, 1875, a patent issued from the state land office in
Michigan for 160 acres of mineral land to McDonald and McKay, who
furnished the money for it. The application was made by Moore in
their behalf, and under an agreement which the court finds to be
established by the proof as made (but not as made in writing) that
he was to have one-third interest in it in consideration of his
services in prospecting. On the 18th of October, 1875, Moore, being
then unmarried, executed and delivered a deed of one sixth interest
in the tract to Monroe for a valuable consideration, informing him
that he (Moore) was to have a deed of one-third part from McDonald
and McKay, which was probably at that time made out. McDonald and
McKay executed their deed to Moore sometime in 1875, and deposited
it with a third party to be delivered when a debt due from Moore to
McDonald should be settled, which was done in 1877. Moore did not
know of the existence of this deed, and it was subsequently lost.
On the 16th of December, 1880, at Moore's request and for the
avowed purpose of defeating his deed to Monroe, McDonald and McKay
conveyed the promised one-third interest to the wife of Moore, he
having been in the meantime married, and the wife having knowledge
of the deed to Monroe, and of the object of the conveyance to her.
Moore then entered into possession, and managed the property as if
it were his own. Monroe died intestate in Colorado in 1878, and his
widow moved into Canada. In the summer of 1871, she first learned
that Moore disputed Monroe's title. She wrote him a letter
informing him of the claim of the widow and heirs of Monroe to
one-sixth
Page 130 U. S. 123
part of it, which he received in the fall of 1881, or in the
spring of 1882. February 8, 1882, the widow and heirs commenced
this suit to compel a conveyance of the one-sixth interest to
them.
Held:
(1) That the transaction must be regarded in equity as if
McDonald and McKay had conveyed to Moose, and Moore had conveyed to
his wife, she holding one-half of the interest conveyed to her,
being one-sixth of the whole, in trust for Monroe and his
heirs.
(2) That Moose was guilty of a fraud in preventing the
conveyance to himself which would have inured to the benefit of
Monroe, and that his wife, by accepting with knowledge, became a
party to it.
(3) That the fact that McDonald and McKay could not have been
compelled to convey to Moore because of the want of written
evidence of their agreement to do so does not entitle Mrs. Moore to
invoke the Statute of Frauds as a defense, they having kept their
faith with Moore by conveying under his directions.
(4) That treating Moore's deed as a covenant to convey to
Monroe, he would have been precluded from denying the title if the
deed of McDonald and McKay had been made directly to him, and that
this was not changed by the interposition of a third person, who
took without consideration and in order to enable the fraud to be
carried into effect.
(5) That the fraud was of such character as to enable a court of
equity to decree the relief as against the covenantor not only
under his own name, but under the name of his wife.
(6) That as the contract was binding at the time of Monroe's
death, his heirs had the right to compel specific performance.
(7) That there was no sufficient proof that the deed of Moore to
Monroe was set aside by consent, and the purchase abandoned by
Monroe.
(8) That the defense of laches, if available at all, was not
made out.
(9) That the allegations of the bill as amended were sufficient
to support the decree.
The case as stated by the Court in its opinion was as
follows:
Appellees, the widow and heirs of John Monroe, deceased, filed
their bill against Nathaniel D. Moore and Helen Moore to compel a
conveyance of the one undivided sixth part of one hundred and sixty
acres of mineral land in Ontonagon County, Michigan, which had been
located by Nathaniel D. Moore, under an agreement with James H.
McDonald and John McKay, that Moore should have a one-third
interest in consideration of his services in prospecting for land
having iron ore and selecting and locating that in question. It was
upon Moore's application that the patent was issued from the
state
Page 130 U. S. 124
land office at Lansing in January, 1875, to McDonald and McKay,
the purchase money being furnished by them and paid over by
him.
By the testimony of Moore and McKay it was established that
Moore was to have a one-third interest, while McDonald admitted
that he was to have an interest, but was uncertain whether it was
to be one-third or one-fourth.
One McIntyre testified that the agreement between Moore,
McDonald and McKay was in writing, and signed in his presence by
McDonald and McKay, but he was not sure whether Moore signed it or
not. The execution of such an agreement was denied, and the circuit
court considered McIntyre's testimony too indefinite as to its
terms to warrant proceeding upon it.
On the 18th day of October, 1875, Moore, who was then unmarried,
executed and delivered to John Monroe a deed in fee simple, with
covenants of seisin, against encumbrances, and of general warranty,
for an undivided one-sixth interest in said lands, which was duly
recorded December 20, 1875. The consideration was two hundred and
fifty dollars, of which Monroe paid ten dollars in cash, and for
the residue gave his promissory note to Moore, payable one year
after its date. Moore informed Monroe at the time that he had
arranged with McDonald and McKay for a one-third interest, and that
the deed was then probably made out.
Pursuant to their agreement, McDonald and McKay, sometime in
1875, executed a deed to Moore for a one-third interest in the
land, which was deposited with one Viele to be delivered to Moore
when McDonald and McKay should direct. McDonald testified that
Moore was indebted to him, and he wished delivery delayed until the
debt was arranged and satisfied, which was finally effected in
1877. Moore does not seem to have known about the execution of this
deed, and it appears to have been subsequently lost. McDonald and
McKay never denied Moore's right to his interest, but always
admitted it, and McDonald testifies that it was understood that
Moore should have the interest any time he called for it. In
December, 1880, McDonald and McKay conveyed an undivided
Page 130 U. S. 125
one-third interest in the land to Helen Moore, wife of N. D.
Moore, who requested the conveyance to be made to his wife for the
express purpose, as he admitted, of defeating the deed he had
previously given to Monroe for one-sixth of the land. Monroe died
intestate in Colorado in August, 1878, and Moore, knowing that his
deed to Monroe had been recorded, expected Mrs. Monroe would make
trouble. No consideration passed when McDonald and McKay executed
and delivered this conveyance, and Mrs. Moore was not present when
it was executed, but she had been informed by her husband that it
was to be made to her, and had full notice of his deed to Monroe.
Since the conveyance to Helen Moore, N. D. Moore has substantially
managed the property as if it were his own.
Further reference to the pleadings and evidence is made in the
opinion.
Hearing having been had upon bill as amended, answer,
replication and proofs, the circuit court, Judge Sage presiding,
delivered its opinion, which is reported in 28 F. 824, and decree
was thereupon entered for conveyance to complainants as prayed, and
for rents and profits from the date of the filing of the bill, less
the amount due on the two hundred and forty dollar note, from which
decree this appeal was prosecuted. Mrs. Moore having died pending
the appeal, Nathaniel D. Moore, Jr., her sole heir at law, and John
McKay, administrator of her estate, were made co-appellants with
Nathaniel D. Moore.
Page 130 U. S. 128
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Had the conveyance of McDonald and McKay, lodged in Viele's
hands, been actually delivered to Moore, no question would have
arisen; but, that deed having been suppressed or lost, when Moore
subsequently induced McDonald and McKay to convey to his wife for
the avowed purpose of avoiding the deed he had given Monroe,
Moore's wife being fully advised of the purpose, and paying no
consideration for the conveyance, the transaction must be regarded
in equity as if McDonald and McKay had conveyed to Moore, and Moore
had conveyed to his wife, she holding in trust for Monroe and his
heirs one-half of the interest conveyed to her, namely, one-sixth
of the whole.
"Fraud, indeed, in the sense of a court of equity, properly
includes all acts, omissions, and concealments which involve a
breach of legal or equitable duty, trust, or confidence, justly
reposed, and are injurious to another, or by which an undue and
unconscientious advantage is taken of another. And courts of equity
will not only interfere in cases of fraud to set aside acts done,
but they will also, if acts have by fraud been prevented from being
done by the parties, interfere and treat the case exactly as if the
acts had been done."
1 Story Eq.Jur. § 187.
Whenever the legal title to property is obtained through means
or under circumstances
"which render it unconscientious for the holder of the legal
title to retain and enjoy the beneficial interest, equity impresses
a constructive trust on the property thus acquired in favor of the
one who is truly and equitably entitled to the same, although he
may never, perhaps, have had any legal estate therein, and a court
of equity has jurisdiction to reach the property, either in the
hands of the original wrongdoer, or in the hands of any subsequent
holder, until a purchaser of it in good faith and without notice
acquires a higher right, and takes the property relieved from the
trust."
Pomeroy Eq.Jur. § 1053.
In
Huxley v. Rice, 40 Mich. 82, it is said:
"It is the
Page 130 U. S. 129
settled doctrine of the court that where the conveyance is
obtained for ends which it regards as fraudulent or under
circumstances it considers as fraudulent or oppressive by intent or
immediate consequence, the party deriving title under it will be
converted into a trustee in case that construction is needful for
the purpose of administering adequate relief, and the setting up
the statute of frauds by a party guilty of the fraud or mistake in
order to bar the court from effective interference with his
wrongdoing will not hinder it from forcing on his conscience this
character as a means to baffle his injustice or its effects."
The fraud of which Moore was guilty was in preventing the
conveyance to himself, which would have inured to Monroe, and in
obtaining it to his wife, so as to reap the benefit which belonged
to his grantee. Mrs. Moore stands in her husband's shoes, and, by
accepting with knowledge, is to be treated as a party to his fraud
and profiting by it, or, as a mere volunteer, assisting him to
perpetrate the fraud and to profit by it, and is hence to be held,
as he could have been, a trustee
ex maleficio. Nor do we
see that the statute of frauds can be invoked as a defense. The
fact that McDonald and McKay could not have been compelled to
convey to Moore because of the want of written evidence of their
agreement to do so does not entitle Mrs. Moore to object that they
were not legally bound to do what they were morally, they having
kept their faith with Moore by conveying under his directions. If
McDonald and McKay had violated their agreement with Moore, and in
furtherance of such violation had conveyed to a stranger, such
grantee might have defended even though cognizant of the verbal
agreement of McDonald and McKay to convey to Moore; but McDonald
and McKay never repudiated their obligation to Moore, and conveyed
as he directed, thereby, so far as he was concerned, carrying out
the trust upon which they held one-third of the land.
There is
"no rule of law which prevents a party from performing a promise
which could not be legally be enforced, or which will permit a
party morally, but not legally, bound to do a certain act or thing,
upon the act or thing being done, to
Page 130 U. S. 130
recall it to the prejudice of the promisee on the plea that the
promise, while still executory, could not, by reason of some
technical rule of law, have been enforced by action."
Newman v. Nellis, 97 N.Y. 285, 291;
Patton v.
Chamberlain, 44 Mich. 5;
Barber v. Milner, 43 Mich.
248.
Mrs. Moore did not take as a stranger would have taken, but took
in execution of the agreement with her husband. Clearly, then, she
cannot be permitted to set up a statutory defense personal to
McDonald and McKay, who could not, in fulfilling their agreement,
transfer an excuse for nonfulfillment.
It is undoubtedly the rule that the breach of a parol promise or
trust as to an interest in land does not constitute such fraud as
will take a case out of the statute.
Montacute v. Maxwell,
1 P.Wms. 620;
Rogers v. Simons, 55 Ill. 76;
Peckham v.
Balch, 49 Mich. 179, but here McDonald and McKay did not fail
to perform their promise, and, when they performed, their grantee
took one-half of the one-third, charged with a trust to hold it for
Monroe by reason of the deed of Moore to Monroe, under the
covenants of which Moore was equitably bound, when he acquired the
title, to hold it for Monroe's benefit. That deed contained a
general covenant of warranty.
In
Irvine v.
Irvine, 9 Wall. 617,
76 U. S. 625,
Mr. Justice Strong, speaking for the Court, said:
"It is a general rule that when one makes a deed of land,
covenanting therein that he is the owner, and subsequently acquires
an outstanding and adverse title, his new acquisition inures to the
benefit of his grantee on the principle of estoppel."
And in
Van Renesselaer v.
Kearney, 11 How. 297, it was pointed out that it is
not always necessary that a deed should contain covenants of
warranty to operate by way of estoppel upon the grantor from
setting up the after-acquired interest against his grantee, the
Court saying (p.
52 U. S.
325):
"that whatever may be the form or nature of the conveyance used
to pass real property, if the grantor sets forth on the face of the
instrument, by way of recital or averment, that he is seised or
possessed of a particular estate in the premises, and which estate
the deed purports to convey,
Page 130 U. S. 131
or, what is the same thing, if the seisin or possession of a
particular estate is affirmed in the deed, either in express terms
or by necessary implication, the grantor and all persons in privity
with him shall be estopped from ever afterwards denying that he was
so seised and possessed at the time he made the conveyance. The
estoppel works upon the estate and binds an after-acquired title as
between parties and privies."
The rule is thus stated in
Smith v. Williams, 44 Mich.
242:
"It is not disputed that a deed with covenants of seisin and
title would be effectual to give the grantee the benefit of an
after-acquired title, under the doctrine of estoppel; but these
covenants were absent from the deed in question, and the covenant
of quiet enjoyment, it is said, would not have a like effect. No
reason is given for any such distinction, and it is not recognized
by the authorities. When one assumes by his deed to convey a title,
and by any form of assurance obligates himself to protect the
grantee in the enjoyment of that which the deed purports to give
him, he will not be suffered afterwards to acquire or assert a
title, and turn his grantee over to a suit upon his covenants for
redress. The short and effectual method of redress is to deny him
the liberty of setting up his after-acquired title as against his
previous conveyance. This is merely refusing him the countenance
and assistance of the courts in breaking the assurance which his
covenants had given."
Conceding that a covenant of general warranty operates by way of
rebutter to preclude the grantor and his heirs from setting up an
after-acquired title, rather than to actually transfer the new
estate itself, the subsequent acquisition creates an equity for a
conveyance in order to make the prior deed effectual.
Noel v.
Bewley, 3 Sim. 103, 116;
Smith v. Baker, 1 Younge
& Col.Ch. 223.
In
McWilliams v. Nisly, 2 S. & R. 507, 515,
Tilghman, C.J., said that equity will enforce a covenant to convey
an estate whenever it shall be acquired by the covenantor, and that
the case is not the less strong where there is an absolute
conveyance, and this is cited by Strong, J., in
Bayler v.
Commonwealth,
Page 130 U. S. 132
40 Penn.St. 37, 43, wherein it is held that
"though a conveyance of an expectancy, as such, is impossible at
law, it may be enforced in equity as an executory agreement to
convey, if it be sustained by a sufficient consideration."
So, Gibson, J., in
Chew v. Barnet, 11 S. & R. 389,
392, says:
"In the case of a conveyance before the grantor has acquired
title, the legal estate is not transferred by the statute of uses,
but the conveyance operates, as I have said, as an agreement, which
the grantee is entitled to have executed in chancery, as was
decided in
Whitfield v. Fausset, 1 Ves.Sen. 391."
In
Way v. Arnold, 18 Ga. 181, 193, Pyncheon, having no
title, sold to Way with warranty, and, subsequently acquiring
title, sold to Arnold. It was held that
"if Pyncheon, upon consideration, conveyed this subsequently
acquired interest, and such was his intention, equity will decree a
title to the after-acquired estate, and the second grantee, Arnold,
provided he purchased with notice, would be affected by said
notice, and could not conscientiously hold the land in
dispute."
In
Goodson v. Beacham, 24 Ga. 150, Mims, by warranty
deed, conveyed to Beacham, Mims having no title at the time, but
subsequently acquiring it. Goodson claimed title under an execution
sale, and the court said, p. 153:
"Mims, when he made the deed to Beacham, had no title, but his
deed was an attempt to convey the fee, and it was a deed with a
warranty. This shows first that it was the intention that the land
-- the whole interest in the land -- should be conveyed to Beacham;
secondly, that Beacham had paid the purchase money. Such being the
intention, the consequence would be that if Mims should afterwards
acquire the title, he would be bound to convey it to Beacham, as
much so as if the contract were one standing in the form of a bond
for titles. Perhaps this would be the consequence even without the
warranty.
Taylor v. Dabar, 2 Cas. in Ch. 212, 1 Cas. in
Ch. 274;
Wright v. Wright, 1 Ves.Sen. 409;
Noel v.
Bewley, 3 Sim. 103;
Smith v. Baker, 1 Younge &
Col.Ch. 223;
Jones v. Kearney, 1 Dr. & Walsh 159,
cited in note, 2 Rawle, Cov. 438; Sug.Vend. c. 8, § 2, p. 33;
Rawle, Cov. 448."
Treating his deed as a covenant to convey, Moore would
Page 130 U. S. 133
have been precluded from denying the title if the deed of
McDonald and McKay had been made directly to him, and if, this
being so, he could not call in question his own grant, he could
not, by interposing a third person, taking without consideration
and to enable the fraud to be carried into effect, in that way
defeat it. It was the duty of Moore to take the conveyance for the
benefit of Monroe, and Monroe had the right to the enforcement of
that duty in equity in view of the fraudulent device by which Moore
attempted to avoid its discharge. The fraud was of such character
as enables a court of equity to decree the relief as against the
covenantor not only under his own name, but under the name of his
wife, and it will not do under such circumstances to say that
Monroe is remitted to an action for damages for breach of the
covenant of warranty, because Moore not only had no title at the
time, but never afterwards acquired title; for when the conveyance
was made to Mrs. Moore, it was, as we have held, as if the title
had been acquired by Moore himself. Nor is this a case wherein
specific performance of the covenant of warranty is sought upon
failure of title in the absence of fraud.
It is insisted that if the deed be regarded as a contract to
convey, while in such case the heir would ordinarily be entitled to
a conveyance from the vendor, yet if the vendor had no title, or if
the vendee was not bound by the contract at the time of his death,
the heir is not so entitled; but it appears from this record that
Moore could have obtained the title in Monroe's lifetime, and the
latter could have been compelled to perform on his part, so that
the contract was binding at the time of Monroe's death, and his
heirs had the right to compel specific performance. The vendor
therefore would not be liable in one action to the estate and in
another to the heirs.
Monroe died in August, 1878. Moore and McDonald had settled in
1877 the matters which McDonald had given as reasons for not
conveying, or for suspending the delivery of the deed placed in the
hands of Viele, and McDonald was then ready to convey to Moore,
which McKay had always been. Moore was able to perform before
Monroe's death, and the right to compel performance which Monroe
had his heirs can enforce.
Page 130 U. S. 134
It is strenuously urged that the deed of Moore to Monroe was set
aside by agreement, and the purchase abandoned by the latter.
We agree with the learned, judge of the circuit court in the
conclusion at which he arrived in disposing of this contention. The
evidence to make out such rescission practically consists of the
testimony of defendant N. D. Moore, given on his own behalf. It is
only when an oral agreement is clearly and satisfactorily proven by
testimony above suspicion and beyond reasonable doubt that it will
be enforced to establish rights in land at variance with the
muniments of title, and it is open to question
"whether, in any case, after the decease of the grantee, the
unaided testimony of the grantor alone, however intelligible and
credible he may be as a witness, should be held sufficient to set
aside and invalidate the title claimed under it."
Kent v. Lasley, 24 Wis. 654.
"Where a written instrument is sought to be reformed upon the
ground that by mistake it does not correctly set forth the
intention of the parties, or where the declaration of the mortgagor
at the time he executed the mortgage, that the equity of redemption
should pass to the mortgagee [is relied on], or where it is
insisted that a mortgagor, by a subsequent parol agreement,
surrendered his rights, . . . in each case the burden rests upon
the moving party of overcoming the strong presumption arising from
the terms of a written instrument. If the proofs are doubtful and
unsatisfactory -- if there is a failure to overcome this
presumption by testimony entirely plain and convincing beyond
reasonable controversy -- the writing will be held to express
correctly the intention of the parties. A judgment of the court, a
deliberate deed or writing, are of too much solemnity to be brushed
away by loose and inconclusive evidence."
Howland v. Blake, 97 U. S. 624,
97 U. S.
626.
Tested by this rule, the evidence is manifestly insufficient to
defeat the deed from Moore to Monroe. It must be conceded that the
party interposing such a defense should be able to set it up with
reasonable accuracy in his pleadings, and Moore's statement on the
stand varies so much from that given in his answer as to make it
impossible to indulge in any presumptions
Page 130 U. S. 135
in its favor. The circuit court justly comments on this conflict
between answer and testimony, 28 F. 831, but that ground need not
be minutely gone over again here.
The consideration for the one-sixth interest was two hundred and
fifty dollars -- ten dollars in cash and a note for two hundred and
forty dollars.
Immediately before the purchase of the land in controversy,
Monroe had let Moore have money to enter a particular forty acres
which he represented had such indications of mineral as showed it
would be valuable. Moore did not make the entry because, he says,
the land had been previously entered, but he did not return the
money to Monroe.
The forty acres was school land, and the minimum price of school
lands was fixed by statute at four dollars per acre, 1 Comp.Laws
Mich. 1872, p. 1251, or, for forty acres, one hundred sixty
dollars, and the presumption, in the absence of evidence to the
contrary, would be that this was the sum Monroe let Moore have, the
purpose to make the particular entry being conceded.
Now Moore's story as to the rescission is that Monroe came to
him and "wanted me to pay him the money that he had given me to
enter that land," and that in the conversation that ensued,
reference was made to the fact that Moore had not yet received a
deed to the McDonald and McKay land, and it was finally agreed that
Moore should give Monroe his note for one hundred and sixty dollars
and surrender Monroe's note for two hundred and forty dollars, and
that Monroe should give up his deed, and Moore claims that the
money which Monroe had given him to enter the forty acres of school
land was one hundred and fifty dollars, and that the one hundred
and sixty dollar note was made up of that one hundred and fifty
dollars and the ten dollars which had been paid on the purchase.
When confronted with the fact that he had sworn that Monroe gave
him the money to enter forty acres of school land, the minimum
price of which was one hundred and sixty dollars, his explanation
is that, as Monroe had to pay a discount to get the money, "I told
him that I would throw off the ten dollars on that account," though
why
Page 130 U. S. 136
Monroe could not borrow one hundred and sixty dollars as well as
one hundred and fifty dollars, if he borrowed at all, or why Moore
should "throw off" ten dollars to the party who advanced the whole
capital, or whether Moore had ten dollars to make up the deficiency
(and he admits that he was then quite impecunious), does not
appear.
Whether the money Monroe had let Moore have was one hundred and
fifty dollars or one hundred and sixty dollars, and whether the
note included the ten dollars paid on the one-sixth interest,
depends on the testimony of Moore. Mrs. Monroe found the note among
her husband's papers after his death, and knew nothing about it
except that he told her that it was for money he had loaned Moore.
The note itself was not produced. Payments had been made upon it in
Monroe's lifetime, but none afterwards until 1881, when sixty
dollars was paid to Mrs. Monroe, who cannot remember what the
amount of the note was, and this payment was after McDonald and
McKay had conveyed to Mrs. Moore at the request of Moore, for the
purpose of cutting out the deed to Monroe, and after the land had
commenced to increase in value, to Moore's knowledge, but not to
that of Mrs. Monroe. When it was made, not a word was said to Mrs.
Monroe about the outstanding deed to Monroe, either as to having it
sent back or having a quitclaim given, and it is quite clear that
she was wholly unaware of any connection between that note and the
land in controversy, if any such connection in fact existed, as it
would seem there did not, if the amount Monroe let Moore have to
make the entry was one hundred and sixty dollars. Some small
payments had been made on this note to a justice of the peace, in
whose hands it had been lodged for collection. He was not sworn as
a witness, but Moore is "inclined to think that he is dead." Under
the circumstances, it is remarkable that the note, when taken up by
Moore, was not preserved by him and is not put in evidence. The
money was not in fact loaned to Moore by Monroe, but given to him
for a particular purpose, and, when that purpose could not be
effectuated, should have been returned at once. Monroe is dead. Is
it not dangerous to take Moore's testimony, in face of these
facts,
Page 130 U. S. 137
as establishing that the one hundred and sixty dollars covered
the ten dollars forming part of the consideration of the purchase
under consideration? We think it is, and particularly as in his
answer Moore does not set up that the money was given him for the
entry of a specified tract of forty acres, nor state any reason why
it was one hundred and fifty dollars instead of one hundred and
sixty dollars, but says the money was furnished by Monroe to enter
land, "if he should know of any that was desirable."
Equally unsatisfactory is the evidence as to Monroe's note for
two hundred and forth dollars. Moore alleges in his answer that it
was part of the agreement to rescind that he should cause this note
to be surrendered to Monroe, and that one John McKay, in whose
possession it was, "as he had been previously requested by said
Nathaniel D. Moore," delivered the note to Mrs. Monroe, and it was
cancelled; but it is not to be questioned, upon the evidence, that
the note was handed to Mrs. Monroe not at the request of Moore at
all, who knew nothing about it until a year, or perhaps nearly six
years, afterwards, but at her solicitation, and it was not only not
cancelled, but carefully preserved, and produced upon the trial --
a fact inconsistent with a rescission to be accomplished by its
destruction, but entirely in accordance with Mrs. Monroe's
testimony that her getting the note was accidental, and that, as
came out on her cross-examination, when she showed it to her
husband, he told her "to put it by." Such a direction on his part
is irreconcilable with the theory that he had sent her to the
McKays for the note because the bargain had been declared off,
while it sustains the view that he had no intention to throw up the
purchase. This note had been given to William McKay, according to
Moore, to raise money on, failing in which, William had left it
with his brother John, or his wife, who testifies he gave it to her
"to keep, or to give back to Mrs. Crawford, (then Mrs. Monroe),
or to collect." Mrs. McKay was Mrs. Monroe's sister, and
gave her the note, cautioning her that she must take care of it so
as to produce it in case it was asked for by William McKay. This
was in July, 1876, but Moore fixes the date of the conversation
with Monroe as in
Page 130 U. S. 138
August or September, or, as he finally believes, early in
October, 1876, which, if true, would show that Mrs. Monroe's
possession of the note had nothing whatever to do with an agreement
that it should be surrendered. Indeed, Moore does not contend that
it had, but testifies that Monroe said he could get the note from
the McKays, whom, however, Moore does not pretend he directed to
deliver it. There is a direct conflict between Mrs. Crawford and
the McKays as to her statements at the time she took the note; but
we are not inclined therefore to reject her account of the
transaction so far as bearing upon whether she had authority to act
for her husband on that occasion or not. Granting that Mrs. Monroe
was desirous of getting the note because she feared Monroe would
never obtain title and considered Moore's deed worthless, this did
not bind Monroe, and her statements could not be used for that
purpose. It should further be observed that while Moore avers in
his answer, which he subscribed, that Monroe was to quitclaim to
him, he states in his testimony that Monroe said he had not
recorded the deed, and would send it back, although the evidence
discloses it was recorded December 20, 1875, and also that, though
Moore and Monroe lived at the time within three miles of each
other, yet Moore never asked Monroe either to quitclaim or return
the deed, now giving as an excuse that he did not wish "to stir it
up more than was necessary," and did not wish to urge him while the
other note remained unpaid. If he was not entitled to demand a
release until he had paid the one hundred and sixty dollars note,
it would hardly be just to allow him to cease paying, and not
resume until years after, when the land had increased in value and
Monroe was in his grave, and then treat such payment to Mrs.
Monroe, though he kept her in ignorance of any connection between
it and the land, as performance of the alleged agreement of five
years before.
Upon a careful examination of the evidence, it amounts to no
more than this: Monroe expected and desired to obtain the land. He
found that McDonald and McKay had not made a deed to Moore, and
doubt was expressed whether they ever would. He wished to collect
the money which Moore had
Page 130 U. S. 139
wrongfully kept, and which had no relation to the other
transaction. He retained possession of the two hundred and forty
dollar note so that Moore could not make use of it, not intending
to cancel it, but to hold it for payment when Moore obtained the
title. In accepting payments on the one hundred and sixty dollars
note, he was only receiving what Moore originally owed him,
assuming that the ten dollars was not included. If there ever was
such an arrangement as contended for, it was evidently not to be
carried out on the part of one unless or until carried out by the
other, and was not carried out by either, and the payment of the
$60 to Mrs. Monroe, ignorant as she was of the facts, cannot be
regarded as acceptance of performance. In any point of view in
which this evidence can be considered, we do not feel justified in
denying complainants relief upon the ground of an abandonment of
the deed of Moore to Monroe.
In our judgment, the defense of laches is not made out, even if
the minority of the heirs did not preclude it. The deed of McDonald
and McKay to Helen Moore is dated December 16, 1880, and was
recorded March 16, 1881. During all this time, Mrs. Monroe and her
children were living in Canada. Mrs. Monroe, when on a visit to
Houghton County in the summer of 1881, first learned that Moore
disputed their title, and in the fall of that year she was advised
by Mr. McKay to "hire a lawyer or attorney." She did so, and he
wrote a letter to Moore informing him of complainants' claim. Moore
testifies as to its receipt that "it must have been in the fall of
1881, or in the spring of 1882. I am not sure of it."
February 8, 1882, this suit was commenced in the Circuit Court
for Ontonagon County, Michigan. This cannot be held to be
unreasonable delay. The answer of defendants averred:
"It is only since said [mineral] discoveries, made at the
expense of these defendants and said McDonald and McKay, that these
complainants have claimed to have any interest therein,"
but all that was done in developing the land was by the Cambria
Iron and Steel Company, and no actual discoveries of ore had been
made before the bill was filed. Moore is asked by his counsel, and
answers as follows:
Page 130 U. S. 140
"Q. When was it first ascertained that the property had value
beyond what you knew of at the time you first went over it for iron
ore?"
"A. The spring of '82 was the first developments that was made
on that property by the Cambria Iron and Steel Company. They worked
considerably on it in '81, but hadn't shown up anything until the
spring of '82."
McDonald testifies:
"We let an option to the Cambria Iron and Steel Company of
Johnstown, Pennsylvania, to mine ore if they could find it; gave
them a privilege of exploring for iron. If they found iron, they
was to pay us so much for the iron. . . . That must have been in
'81. . . ."
"Q. About what time was it that they first developed mineral
value there -- that is, to show that there was mineral value
there?"
"A. Well, in the spring. I couldn't say what time that was, but
it must have been in the following spring, . . . the following
spring after we gave the option."
While this shows that Mrs. Monroe had no reason to suppose the
land had increased in value when she began her suit, Moore, from
his knowledge of the property and his being on the ground, must
have been aware, when he paid Mrs. Monroe, and probably as early as
when the deed was given to his wife, that the property was likely
to improve in value. He says the option to the Cambria Iron and
Steel Company was in 1880 or 1881, and if it was after his wife got
her deed, it was shortly after. The inevitable inference from his
conduct is that he did not ask McDonald and McKay to convey, and
did not propose to pay up the note until roused into activity by
the prospect of gain.
The bill and amendments state the deed from Moore to Monroe of
one-sixth of the land; that McDonald and McKay held
"an undivided one-third thereof in trust for the said Nat. D.
Moore by an arrangement between the said McDonald and McKay on the
one side, and the said Moore on the other, entered into before or
at the time the said McDonald and McKay acquired said title;"
that the conveyances by McDonald and McKay to Helen Moore
"were made at the instigation of said Nat. D. Moore, with the
intent and purpose of defrauding these complainants out of the
estate in fee conveyed
Page 130 U. S. 141
and assured, and intended to be conveyed and assured, to the
said John Monroe by the said Nat. D. Moore as aforesaid, by lodging
the apparent legal title in his wife's name, but for his own
benefit and use; . . . that the said Helen Moore paid no
consideration for said conveyance, and that said interest vested in
her as trustee for her husband, Nat. D. Moore, and for the said
John Monroe, his heirs and assigns;"
that the deed to Helen was procured by said Nat. D. and said
Helen to be made "for the purpose of cutting out complainants'
title to the undivided one-sixth of the said land and of depriving
them thereof;" that the transaction
"is and ought to be held to be of the same effect as if the said
McDonald and McKay and their wives had conveyed said interest
directly to the said Nat. D. Moore, instead of to his wife, and
that the said Moores, husband and wife, ought to be and are
estopped by the terms of Moore's said conveyance to Monroe from
claiming or asserting that, as to the one-sixth interest in said
land conveyed by the said Nat. D. Moore to the said John Monroe,
the said Helen Moore has any title or interest therein as against
said complainants, and they further charge that as to said
one-sixth interest the title is in them by virtue of the premises;
that at the time of said conveyance by Nat. D. Moore to John
Monroe, said Moore was unmarried, and that said Helen Moore gave
nothing for either or any of said conveyances nor for said interest
in said land, and that she took the same with full notice and
knowledge of complainants' rights, obtained as aforesaid, by deed
from said Nat. D. Moore to said John Monroe."
The original bill charged also that a conveyance was made by
McDonald and McKay to Moore, and fraudulently suppressed before the
conveyance to said Helen.
We think the allegations of the bill as amended are sufficient
to support the decree.
McDonald and McKay held in trust for Moore -- that is, upon the
trust created by their obligation to convey to him on request. They
not only did not deny the trust, but conveyed on Moore's request to
his nominee, and fraud is charged against Moore and his wife in
procuring the conveyance to the latter.
Page 130 U. S. 142
The prayer of the bill was
"that the said Helen Moore be compelled by the proper decree of
this Court to execute and deliver a good and sufficient warranty
deed or deeds of the undivided one-sixth part of said premises to
these complainants, in the proportions to which they are
respectively entitled, as sole heirs of said Monroe,"
and as there is enough in the bill as amended to warrant relief,
and as the defendants could not have been taken by surprise, we do
not think the decree should be reversed on the ground that the
allegata and the probata do not sufficiently agree to justify it.
It is true, there is no offer to pay the balance of the purchase
money, but the case shows that a tender would have been but an
empty show, and as the court had it in its power to require payment
of the two hundred and forty dollar note, thus completing
performance by Monroe, and as it did this by its decree, the
allegation would have been merely formal and became immaterial.
The decree of the circuit court is
Affirmed.