Court Opinion

ID: 7031965
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 06:41:45.935438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:10:59.930702
License: Public Domain

Perkins, J.
Robert Wilson and Nancy his wife, brought their bill in the Fayette Circuit Court, stating that in June, 1819, one Phineas McCray, being the owner of fifty acres of land in Fayette county, Indiana, deeded the same to his son, Aaron McCray and his heirs; that Aaron took possession and made improvements; that, afterwards, not having procured his deed to be recorded, he re-delivered it to his father, by whom it was destroyed; that this was done upon a promise from the father to enter, for him, Aaron, in lieu of said fifty acres, a quarter section on Flat Rock, in Rush coupty; that the quarter section was never entered; that Aaron is dead, and said Nancy Wilson is his sole heir, and, therefore, entitled to said fifty acres by inheritance. The bill prays that the devisees of said land may be decreed to execute to said Nancy a .quit-claim deed therefor. The devisees of Phineas McCray, he being also dead, are made parties.
Phineas Cassidy, one of said devisees, answered, not *563admitting, but requiring proof of, the allegations in the bill. Depositions were taken, the cause heal’d, and a decree rendered for the defendants below.
It was proved that Phineas McCray verbally gave to his son, Aaron, fifty acres of land in Fayette county, of which Aaron took possession, and on which he made a small improvement, without at the time having any deed for the land. The evidence as to a deed having been subsequently executed is as follows: Sarah McCray, Aaron's mother, states that she remembers having gone to Conner sville about spring, in 1819, with her husband, to acknowledge a deed for said fifty acres; the deed was acknowledged; dont know that it was ever delivered; dont recollect whether Aaron was present or not when the deed was acknowledged; saw him have it in his hand and look at it at his father’s, but he did not take it away with him. About the 1st of August, 1819, Aaron went to Rush county, taking with him his wife and daughter, Nancy, then an infant under one year of-age; and on the 23d of that month he died there. It had been agreed between him and his father, before he left, that the deed for the fifty acres should be destroyed; that he, Aaron, should select, in lieu thereof, 160 acres in Rush county, which should be entered for him by his father when it should come into market.
As to the destruction of the deed there is the following proof: John McCray, a brother of Aaron, testifies that “ on account of a slander suit having been brought against Aaron, in the Fayette Circuit Court, he ran away to avoid the service of process upon him; his father informed witness, in the conversation he has before detailed, that he had destroyed said deed, and that in compensation he was to give Aaron a quarter section of land in Rush county, on Flat Rock; the understanding of the witness was that this agreement was made to prevent the land [in Fayette county] being made liable, as Aaron's property, in the slander suit.”
In regard to the 160 acres in Rush county, it was proved that said Phineas McCray, in 1825, did convey by a deed *564in fee, purporting to be for the consideration of love and affection, to said Nancy Wilson, then Nancy McCray, and her heirs, 160 acres of land in Rush county. Nancy was the sole heir of said Aaron. It was attempted to do away with the effect of this latter proof by showing that Phineas entered said 160 acres with money obtained from the guardian of said Nancy's estate, and from the sale of said Aaron's personal property. But the answer to this is that whatever money was obtained from those sources by Phineas, he would be liable at law to account for to the administrator of Aaron's estate, and the guardian of Nancy's, and we would presume, in the absence of proof, that he did so account.
The first question that occurs in examining this case is, why was the suit brought in chancery? The bill seeks no discovery, and if Nancy Wilson is entitled to the land in question as heir of her father, no obstacle appears to her recovery of it at law, unless, indeed, the voluntary surrender by her father of his deed for destruction, and that, too, for a fraudulent purpose, estops him and his heir from proving the contents of that deed by parol, to give effect to it in a suit at law; but, if so, surely chancery should give no relief on that ground. See Greenl. Ev. vol. 1, p. 386, note 1. On this point, however, we make no decision, nor do we upon any other point in the case, save one, which is decisive. We think the evidence does not show that a deed was ever delivered for the land from Phineas McCray to Aaron; and if not, no title ever vested in Aaron, and he could transmit none to his heir. The deed was probably not delivered at the time it was acknowledged, for it was after that in the custody of Phineas at his own house. Soon after came the slander suit, and then Aaron did not wish it delivered lest the land should thereby become subject to a judgment against him. Soon after this it was destroyed by Phineas, he then, it would seem, having it still in his possession. Aaron (says a witness) once had the deed in his hands looking at it, but did not take it away. This does not show that it was ever in his possession, or under his control, with the *565consent of Phineas, for the purpose of vesting in him the title to the land; and this should be shown, or made inferable from circumstances, to establish a delivery.
J. Ryman, J. Rariden, and J. S. Reid, for the appellants.
J. S. Neuman and S. W. Parker, for the appellees.

Per Curiam.

The decree is affirmed with costs.