Johnson v. Poff

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE HOBSON

Reversing.

W. D. Green was killed in the year 1863. He left surviving him four children and his widow, Nancy, who afterward intermarried with George Johnson. The oldest child was eight years old and the youngest about one. Nancy Green, the widow, was the daughter of Rice W. Johnson, who acted as administrator of the estate of W. D. Green, and soon after his death filed a suit to settle the estate in the Hiarlan Circuit Court. In that suit it appeared that the estate was insolvent, and an order was entered for a sale of all the land of the decedent, subject to the widow’s dower, which had in the meantime been allotted to her.

The land was sold under this judgment by the master commissioner, and Rice W. Johnson, the plaintiff in the action, purchased it. The sale was confirmed, and the proceeds of the land were applied to the pa,yment of the debts; but the land and personalty together paid only fifty per cent, of the debts. Soon after he bought this land, Rice W. Johnson settled James Johnson, one of his sons, on one tract of it, John W. Johnson, another son, on another tract, *398and the widow, Nancy Green, on a third tract, which was the same land allotted to her for.dower. No deed was made to Rice W. Johnson for some reason until October 29, 1878.

On June 9, 1879, Rice W. Johnson conveyed to John W. Johnson 'his tract of land in consideration, as recited in the deed, of the sum of $500 and love and affection. On January 13,1885, he conveyed to James Johnson, in consideration of love and affection, and, as recited in the deed, “I having given to my other children the same proportion,” the tract on'which James'Johnson lived; and on the same date he conveyed to Nancy Johnson the tract she lived on for a like consideration.

On April 13, 1885, John W. Johnson and wife conveyed his tract of land to James Johnson in consideration, as recited in the deed, of $900, to him in hand paid. On De-' cember 10, 1890, Nancy Johnson, then a widow, and her son Gillis Johnson, by her second husband, in consideration, as recited in the deed, of $325, cash in hand paid, conveyed their interest in her tract of land to James Johnson; and on November 2, 1891, she and Rice W. Green, her son by her first husband, in consideration of $275, united in a deed to James Johnson for the same land. After this Nancy Johnson died in the year 1892; James Johnson died the following year, 1893; and Rice Johnson, their father, diedl a year after,- in 1894.

In 1895, appellees, the four children of Nancy Green, afterwards Nancy Johnson, by her first husband, W. D. Green, including Rice Green, who had joined with her in the deed above referred to, filed this suit against the children and grandchildren of James Johnson to recover the land. They alleged that, Rice W. Johnson being the administrator of their father’s estate, and the plaintiff in the *399action in whicli the land was sold, his purchase of the land inured to their benefit; and they also alleged that he in fact bought and held the land in trust for the widow and children of W. D. Green. The allegations of the petition were denied, and on final hearing the court below adjudged the land to the appellees, subject to a lien for the amount he had paid, and directed an account to be taken of rents, profits and improvements.

The proof wholly fails to sustain the allegation that Rice W. Johnson bought the land in trust for appellees, or held it in trust for them. The estate of their’father was admittedly insolvent; for, after everything was sold, it only paid fifty cents to the dollar on the debts. There is not only no proof that Rice .W. Johnson held the land in trust for a¡ pellees, but every fact in the record shows that he held h adversely. He not only settled two of his sons upon it, and conveyed to them two tracts out of it, but conveyed to the widow the tract she held; and all of them evidently used the land as their own.

While it is true that a trustee purchasing at his own sale may, at the election of the cestui que trust, be treated as holding the property so purchased in trust for him, this election he must make seasonably, and, if he fails to do so, equity will not disturb the purchaser.

The youngest child of W. D. Green became of age about the year 1882; the others some time before that. They had all been raised on this land, or near it; and it was incumbent on them in a reasonable time after arriving at age to set up their right to the land'. This they failed to do, and they can not, after the death of their mother, their grandfather, and their uncle, James Johnson, be allowed to set up the claim after so great a lapse of time, when James Johnson has evidently purchased part of it in good faith, *400and has for so many years held all of it as his own. The rule established by the preponderance of American decisions is thus stated in Schouler, Ex’rs, section 358: “They (the decisions) hold that, at all events, a purchase by the representative is not absolutely void, but voidable only by persons interested in the estate, at their option; nor even by these if they have directly sanctioned or acquiesced in the transaction, or if, from their laches and delay, acquiescence on their part may legally be fairly inferred to the quieting of title.”

Further on in the same section he says that relief will be granted “upon the timely application of any party interested in the estate.” In Scott v. Freeland, 45 Am. Dec., 310, the rule is thus stated on facts not so strong as in this case:' “It is not necessary that there should be an express assent to the purchase. It is often implied from circumstances, one of the strongest of which is a failure to take immediate steps, on coming of age, to have the sale set aside, provided the party knew of it. The cestui que trust may elect to treat the sale as valid, if he will, and such election will be implied from any unreasonable delay in taking steps to set it aside. If he should desire to have it set aside, the law requires that at least a reasonable degree of vigilance should be adopted. To lay down any precise rule on this subject is impossible, in the nature of things. Each case must be governed by its- own peculiar circumstances. Supposing these complainants to have been adults at the time of sale, the lapse of time between that and the filing of the bill would undoubtedly be regarded as a confirmation. In regard to the contract of an infant, which is voidable, Chancellor Kent says a confirmation may be justly inferred against him after he has been of age for a reasonable time, either from his positive acts in *401favor of the contract, or from his tacit assent under circumstances not to excuse his silence. 2 Kent. Comm., 2B8. With regard to the oldest of the complainants the delay ■has been so great as to imply an affirmance. It was his duty to have manifested his dissent at an earlier day, and so with the next oldest. It is not like the case of a positive bar from a statute of limitations, which would only commence to run when the youngest became of age. It was competent for the elder heirs to have filed their bill before the youngest became of age, and their neglect to do so must operate against their pretensions. But even as to the youngest there was a want of vigilance, which under the circumstances, must operate to his prejudice.”

It is very clear in this case that the application of appel-lees to have the purchase made by Rice W. Johnson some thirty years before adjudged a constructive trust in their favor is not timely, or made with reasonable diligence, and that their petition should have been dismissed.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a judgment and further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.