1. The facts in this case disclose no trust attached to the
estate and property in the defendants' hands which a court of
equity should enforce; at the best, they show a promise -- without
consideration good or valuable -- of a
simple donation, to be subsequently made, with no relationship
of blood or marriage between the parties, and therefore, until
executed, valueless.
2. A deed of real estate in blank in which the name of the
grantee is not inserted by the party authorized to fill it before
the deed is delivered passes no interest.
3. Under the Statute of Frauds of Iowa in force when the
transactions in controversy took place, a trust could not be
created in relation to real estate, except by an instrument
executed in the same manner as a deed of conveyance, but a trust of
personalty could be created by parol, provided
Page 110 U. S. 120
the evidence of the trust was clear and convincing. Mere
declarations of a purpose to create a trust were of no value if not
carried out.
4. Real estate owned by a partnership purchased with partnership
funds is, for the purpose of settling the debts of the partnership
and of distributing its effects, treated in equity as partnership
property.
Bill in equity by heirs at law of Thusie M. Allen to enforce a
trust in relation to real and personal estate claimed to have been
made in her favor in her lifetime. Answer denying the trust, and
cross-bill by one defendant asking that plaintiffs might be
perpetually restrained from setting up their claim. Judgment below
for defendants in the original suit and sustaining the cross-bill.
Plaintiffs in original suit and defendants in cross-suit
appealed.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
In November, 1875, one John F. Tracey, now deceased, executed to
the defendant Thomas F. Withrow a deed of a large amount of
property, real and personal, of great value, situated in Iowa. It
is alleged that this deed, though absolute in form, was made in
trust for one Thusie M. Allen also now deceased, and the present
suit is brought by her heirs at law to charge Withrow, as trustee,
and compel him to account to them for the property. Withrow denies
the alleged trust, and claims that he owns, in his own right, an
undivided half interest in the property, and that the other
undivided half belongs to his codefendant, William L. Scott, as
assignee of Tracey. Scott has filed a cross-bill, setting up his
title and praying that it may be established. The court below
sustained the claims of both defendants, and dismissed the bill,
and the case is brought here on appeal from its decree.
The facts which led to the execution of the deed in question,
and upon which a trust is sought to be established, collected, so
far as practicable, from a mass of conflicting testimony, contained
in a record of over 850 closely printed pages, are substantially as
follows:
Page 110 U. S. 121
In the year 1868, when the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific
Railroad Company -- a corporation created by the State of Illinois
-- was about to extend its road from Des Moines to Council Bluffs,
in Iowa, a company was formed, consisting of B. F. Allen of Des
Moines, Ebenezer Cook and John P. Cook, of Davenport, in that
state, to purchase land necessary for the stations and use of the
railroad company between De Sota and Council Bluffs, and also other
lands adjoining or near the several stations located by the
engineer of the company. The agreement between the parties was at
the time a verbal one, but in April, 1870, a memorandum was signed
by them, giving its terms, and reciting also the purchases which in
the interval had been made. Among other things, it provided that
Allen should furnish the money to make the purchases, and provide
for the taxes and expenses; that the title to the property should
be taken in his name as trustee for the joint account of the
parties, and that the net proceeds should be divided between them,
as follows: one undivided half to Ebenezer Cook, one-fourth to
Allen and the remaining fourth to John P. Cook. The agreement also
provided that Allen should keep an account of the amounts paid out
by him, and of the sales, receipts, and expenses, so that from his
books a statement might at any time be made, showing the condition
of the property, the amount sold, and the prices received; that the
sales should be made by John P. Cook and Allen on the best terms
they could obtain, and by their joint action when practicable; that
from the proceeds of the sales Allen should retain the interest on
his advances, the taxes on the property, and the expenses incurred,
and then pay the advances made for the purchase of the property,
and that the money and property remaining in his possession,
including notes and contracts, after such payments, should be
regarded as net profits, and be divided in kind, or converted into
money and then distributed, and in either event according to the
respective interests of the parties as mentioned above.
During this time Tracey was President of the railroad company,
and, though he is not named in the agreement, it is conceded that
he was entitled to one-half of the interest represented by Ebenezer
Cook, and had a right to control and dispose of it.
Page 110 U. S. 122
It appears that he had, previously to the formation of the land
company, suggested to different parties that in case a litigation
then pending, affecting the company, should terminate favorably, a
good opportunity would be afforded to make a successful venture in
the purchase and sale of land along the line of the road west of
Des Moines, and that upon this suggestion the land company was
formed. It appears also that in a conversation with Withrow, one of
his counsel in the litigation referred to, upon the subject f a
venture of this kind, Tracey had expressed a desire that his
friends should be benefited by the venture, and that he, Withrow,
should participate in it, advising him to bear this in mind in
making out his bill for legal services. After the land company was
formed, and the agreement made had been acted upon, Tracey was
reminded by Withrow of this conversation, and of the understanding
he had from it that he was to have an interest in the venture.
Tracey not only admitted a similar understanding on his part, but
declared that Withrow had an interest in it, and in March, 1871,
obtained from Ebenezer Cook a statement in writing to that effect.
This statement, after referring to the agreement of the land
company, and the provision that one-half of the profits arising
from the purchase and sale of real estate under it were to be his
property, and reciting that it was understood that Withrow and one
Johnson should have an interest in the profits of the venture, the
amounts of which had not been specified, but were to be thereafter
fixed by Tracey and himself, and that the remainder of said profits
(if any) should be equally divided between Tracey and himself,
declares that he, Cook, holds the interest specified in the
agreement, and all amounts to be received thereon, in trust for the
uses and purposes mentioned -- that is to say, to pay from such
receipts to Withrow and Johnson such amounts, respectively, as
should be agreed upon as aforesaid, and to hold the one-half of the
remainder in trust for Tracey, his heirs and assigns.
Subsequently, in October, 1872, Withrow, for the nominal
consideration of one dollar, executed to Tracey a transfer of his
interest in this contract and declaration of trust. In December
following, Johnson executed to Tracey a similar transfer upon a
like consideration.
Page 110 U. S. 123
Withrow testifies that this transfer was made by him, not for
the purpose of conveying the ownership of his interest to Tracey
absolutely, but to facilitate a settlement with Allen of the
affairs of the land company, which were embarrassed by improvident
expenditures, and with an understanding that if Tracey realized
anything out of the venture he should give Withrow his share. This
testimony is corroborated by the statement contained in the deed
subsequently executed by Tracey to Scott, that the transfer by
Withrow was made upon an agreement that his interest should be
protected for his benefit.
In November, 1875, Tracey executed to Withrow a deed of all the
interest which he then had, or which might thereafter accrue to
him, in the lands, notes, and bills receivable arising from the
contracts, declaration of trust, and assignments mentioned. This
deed recites the original agreement between Allen and the two
Cooks, the subsequent declaration by Ebenezer Cook of the interest
of Withrow, Johnson, and Tracey in the proceeds of the venture, and
the transfers executed in 1872 by Withrow and Johnson to Tracey,
and, in addition to conveying the property, authorizes the grantee,
in his own name, to enforce a proper partition of it, and to
collect for his own use any sums of money which might accrue to the
grantor under the contracts, declaration of trust, and assignments
mentioned.
Previously to the execution of this deed to Withrow, Allen had
become bankrupt, and in due course of proceedings his property had
been transferred to Hoyt Sherman, as assignee in bankruptcy.
Subsequently a suit was commenced in the circuit court of the
United States involving the title to the whole of the property of
Allen in the land company. In that suit the Charter Oak Life
Insurance Company and others were complainants, and Allen and
Sherman his assignee in bankruptcy, were defendants. Withrow
intervened and filed a cross-bill, claiming partition of the
interest of Tracey held by him under the deed of November, 1875. By
the decree of the court, entered in the fall term of 1877, which
appears to have been made upon a compromise settlement,
Withrow's
Page 110 U. S. 124
title to an interest of one-fourth in the property of the land
company was recognized, and set apart to him in severalty. The
value of this interest had been previously appraised by competent
parties, acting under the authority of the court at $80,000.
Tracey died in February, 1878. In December previously he
addressed a communication to the defendant, William L. Scott, in
which, after reciting that there had been reserved to him and
parties interested with him a one-fourth interest in the land
company, which he had deeded to Withrow, he says as follows:
"I hereby acknowledge that of the interest so belonging to me,
you (William L. Scott) were the original owner of one-eight of the
entire company, or one-half owner of the interest standing in my
name, and I hereby authorize T. F. Withrow to transfer and deed to
you one-half of the interest conveyed by me to him, you paying Mr.
Withrow one-half of all expenses and charges the interest held by
me may be liable for."
Soon afterwards, Tracey made a formal deed to Scott conveying to
him an undivided half of the lands, notes, contracts, and mortgages
awarded and set apart to Withrow by the decree of the circuit court
of the United States under the deed of Tracey to him of November
16, 1875, and instructing Withrow to transfer that interest to
Scott. This deed recites, among other things, that Withrow had
transferred his interest to Tracy under an agreement between them
that the same should be protected by Tracey for his (Withrow's)
benefit; that one-half of Tracey's interest in the lands and assets
conveyed by his deed to Withrow was for the use of Withrow in his
own right; that the other half was in trust for Tracey, his heirs
and assigns, and that Withrow was
"entitled, in his own right, to one-half, in value, of all
lands, contracts, notes, and mortgages which have been awarded and
set apart to him, and holds the other one-half thereof in trust for
the said John F. Tracey, his heirs, executors, and assigns."
Upon these deeds of Tracey -- the one to him of November 16,
1875, and the deed to Scott of December 12, 1877 -- the
Page 110 U. S. 125
defendant Withrow relies to defeat the suit of the complainants.
Their ground for charging him as trustee is the alleged purpose of
Tracey to give to Mrs. Allen the beneficial interest in the
property held by him in the land company, and its execution by his
deed to Withrow. Their story of this purpose and its supposed
execution is this: that sometime in June, 1875, Allen and his
eldest daughter accompanied him, by his invitation, on an excursion
to St. Paul, Minnesota, given by the directors of the Northwestern
Railway Company; that during the excursion Tracey had several
conversations respecting Allen's circumstances since his
bankruptcy, and especially as to its effect upon the property and
affairs of the land company, and that they resulted in Tracey's
promising to give his interest in the property of that company to
Mrs. Allen with whom he was well acquainted, and of whom he had
pleasant recollections; that after the return of Allen to Chicago
he went to the office of Withrow and engaged him to prepare the
deed for Tracy to sign; that Withrow accordingly drew a deed of
transfer of Tracey's interest, specifying it to be one undivided
fourth of the net profits arising from the joint account under the
contracts and declaration of trust; that the name of the grantee
was left in blank; that Allen went to New York, taking this deed
with him, and that Tracey there, on the 11th day of October, 1875,
signed and acknowledged it, and delivered it to Allen; that Allen
returned to Des Moines and delivered the deed to his wife, and that
the reason why the name of the grantee was left in blank was
because he feared the importunities of his creditors to obtain the
property, and that Tracey authorized him to insert her name in the
blank, or the name of any other person that might be deemed
best.
The story further is that afterwards Allen consulted Charles T.
Ransom, an attorney at law at the time in Des Moines, respecting
the insertion of the name of a grantee, and while in consultation
another lawyer by the name of Edmunds came into his room, and the
whole matter of Tracey's rights in the property of the land company
being discussed, it was the opinion of both Edmunds and Ransom that
his interest was one-half, and for that reason it was resolved to
procure a new deed
Page 110 U. S. 126
specifying such to be his interest instead of one-fourth; that
the question of a proper person to whom such new conveyance should
be made was discussed, and the name of Withrow was finally settled
upon as trustee; that Withrow was advised of this fact and assented
to it; that thereupon another deed, substantially like the first,
except that its recital showed Tracey's interest to be one-half,
was prepared by Ransom and taken by him to New York, and was there
executed by Tracey, to whom the reason for changing the form of the
deed was explained; that Ransom brought this second deed to Iowa
and handed it to Allen who delivered it to his wife, and it was
kept by them until February 24, 1876, when it was sent to Ransom
for his use in preparing a petition of intervention and other
pleadings in the case of the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company and
others against Allen and Sherman, his assignee, then pending in the
circuit court; that it was not delivered to Withrow until about the
time the decree was rendered, in 1877; that after that decree Allen
called upon Withrow to turn the property over to the heirs of his
deceased wife, and that Withrow then, for the first time, claimed
to own one-eighth of the property, or one-half of what had been
recovered, in his own right, and refused to convey the other half
except upon the written order of Tracey, and that he has ever since
maintained this position.
The statement that the deed with a blank for the name of the
grantee was drawn to transfer an interest to Mrs. Allen or to
create a trust in her favor, is contradicted by the testimony of
Withrow, who says that it was a substitute for one drawn to
Schuyler R. Ingham, recommended by him as a proper person to take
charge and dispose of the interest of Tracey in the property of the
land company; that the execution of the deed to Ingham having been
delayed for a long time, Allen suggested that a new deed, with the
name of the grantee in blank, should be sent to Tracey, so that
some other person, if Ingham was not acceptable to him, might be
inserted, stating that Tracey had promised to convey his interest
to Withrow, and that if, in winding up the affairs of the company,
there was anything left of it, he would give it to Mrs. Allen. The
deed itself shows, by its use of the masculine pronoun in all
places
Page 110 U. S. 127
where reference to the grantee is made, that the draughtsman
never contemplated its execution to a woman.
Subsequently, according to the testimony of Withrow, the deed
was shown to Ransom, who advised that the interest of Tracey in the
property of the land company was one-half instead of one-fourth,
and who at the request of Allen drew another deed for Tracey to
sign similar to the one in blank, except that it represented
Tracey's interest to be one-half of the property and made Withrow
the grantee.
The statement that Withrow consented to act as trustee of Mrs.
Allen or that the deed of Tracey to him was executed upon any trust
for her, is also denied by Withrow, and it is inconsistent with the
declarations and conduct of both himself and Tracey. Immediately
upon the request of Allen for the property, and under date of
December 8, 1877, he wrote to Tracey, informing him of the decree
of the circuit court, and the request of Allen and the refusal to
comply with it in the absence of instructions from him. "You will
remember," he writes,
"that one-eighth interest of the entire speculation was awarded
to me. The other eighth of the property recovered by me I hold
subject to your order. I have understood from Mr. Ransom, and have
inferred from your conversation with me, that before the
commencement of this suit you intended to be liberal to Mrs. Allen
in disposing of your share, and Mr. Allen relying upon this, has
requested me to convey the one-eighth interest which I hold for you
to him. In view of the fact that I have never received definite
instructions from you to make any disposition of it, and the
further fact that Mrs. Allen is now dead, I have not felt at
liberty to make any conveyance without instructions from you in
writing."
No answer was made to this letter, nor was any instruction given
by Tracey as to his wishes or intentions on the subject, except
such as are found in the paper addressed to William L. Scott, under
date of December 12, 1877, and in the deed executed to him soon
afterwards, and these, as already seen, negative the idea that
Withrow was to hold the property for the benefit of Mrs. Allen.
Page 110 U. S. 128
In this communication, it is seen, Withrow asserts a right to
one-eighth interest in the entire property of the land company, as
having been awarded to him. If this claim of an interest in the
property had been a false and fraudulent one, set up to defraud
others, we should expect some denial of it from Tracey; but instead
of that, we find its correctness affirmed by him. It is difficult
to believe that a claim for property, estimated at the time to be
worth $40,000, would have received recognition from one who, if the
claim was fraudulent, knew it to be so. On the contrary, we should
expect that it would meet with instant and indignant
repudiation.
But if we admit the statement of the complainants as to the
alleged promise of Tracey to give his interest in the property of
the land company to Mrs. Allen and as to the execution of the two
deeds -- the one in blank and the one to Withrow -- there is no
case shown for the relief prayed by the bill.
The promise alleged to have been made in conversation with Allen
and his daughter on the trip to St. Paul was without consideration,
good or valuable; there was no relationship, by blood or marriage,
between Mrs. Allen and Tracey. It was the promise of a pure
donation to be subsequently made; and, until executed, it was, in a
legal view, valueless.
The deed in blank passed no interest, for it had no grantee. The
blank intended for the name of the grantee was never filled, and
until filled, the deed had no operation as a conveyance. It may be
and probably is the law in Iowa, as it is in several states, that
the grantor in a deed conveying real property, signed and
acknowledged, with a blank for the name of the grantee, may
authorize another party, by parol, to fill up the blank.
Swartz
v. Ballou, 47 Ia. 188;
Van Etta v. Evenson, 28 Wis.
33;
Field v. Stagg, 52 Mo. 534. As said by this Court in
Drury v.
Foster, 2 Wall. 24 at p.
69 U. S. 33:
"Although it was at one time doubted whether a parol authority
was adequate to authorize an alteration or addition to a sealed
instrument, the better opinion at this day is that the power is
sufficient."
But there are two conditions essential to make a deed thus
Page 110 U. S. 129
executed in blank operate as a conveyance of the property
described in it; the blank must be filled by the party authorized
to fill it, and this must be done before or at the time of the
delivery of the deed to the grantee named. Allen to whom it is
stated the deed was handed, with authority to fill the blank and
then deliver the deed, gave it to his wife without filling the
blank, and she died with the blank unfilled.
The deed of Tracey to Withrow embraced real as well as personal
property. It was for the purchase and sale of real property that
the land company was formed, and by the terms of the contract of
association all the property of the company remaining after payment
of taxes, expenses, and advances was to be deemed profits, and
divided in kind or converted into money and then distributed.
Though the declaration of trust by Ebenezer Cook speaks of the
interest of Tracey in the land company as an interest in its
"profits," that term is used with reference to its meaning as
declared in the contract of association, to which that declaration
of trust refers, and to which it is annexed.
In the partition by the decree of the circuit court of the
United States of the interest conveyed to Withrow, "lands, lots,
notes, contracts, and mortgages" are specified as awarded and set
apart to him. So far as the real property is concerned, no trust in
relation to it could be established under the statute of frauds of
Iowa in force when the deed of Tracey was signed, except by an
instrument in writing executed in the same manner as a deed of
conveyance. The language of the statute is:
"Declarations, or creations of trust, or powers in relation to
real estate, must be executed in the same manner as deeds of
conveyance; but this provision does not apply to trusts resulting
from the operation or construction of law."
The statute also enumerates, among the contracts in reference to
which no evidence is competent unless it be in writing, and signed
by the party or his lawfully authorized agents, "those for the
creation or transfer of any interest in lands, except leases for a
time not exceeding one year." So far as the personal property
conveyed to Withrow is concerned, it must be admitted that a trust
may be established by
Page 110 U. S. 130
parol evidence; but such evidence must be clear and convincing,
not doubtful, uncertain, and contradictory, as in this case. The
evidence must consist of something more than loose conversations
with third parties. The declarations of the grantor relied upon
must be made at the time of his conveyance, or while he retains an
interest in the property, and be so connected with the conveyance
as to justify the conclusion that it was made or is held in
execution of the purposes declared. Declarations of a purpose to
create a trust not carried out are of no value, nor are direct
promises to that effect unaccompanied with considerations turning
them into contracts.
The deed of November 16th was handed to Ransom to be delivered
to Withrow without any declaration from Tracey as to the purpose
for which it was made or the considerations by which it was
supported. Nothing was said at that time which could change the
absolute character of the instrument, nor is there any evidence of
any declarations subsequently made, by parol or in writing, by the
grantor with respect to that deed, except such as are found in the
communication to Scott and the deed to him.
It does not affect the conclusion therefore whether we treat the
whole property conveyed to Withrow as real or personal property, or
as consisting of both. Real property owned by a partnership and
purchased with partnership funds is, for the purpose of settling
the debts of the partnership and distributing its effects, treated
in equity as personal property. It matters not whether it be so
treated here. In any view, no legal trust was created with respect
to the property in favor of Mrs. Allen which she could have
enforced had she been living, or which can now be enforced by her
heirs at law.
Decree affirmed.