A bill in equity by a widow to obtain her right of dower,
alleging that she conveyed it to one of the defendants upon an
express trust for her, and he conveyed to the other defendants with
notice of the trust, may be allowed to be amended by alleging that
she was induced to make her conveyance by his fraudulent
misrepresentations as to the nature of the instrument.
Upon a bill in equity by a widow against one who has obtained
from her by fraud a conveyance of her right of dower, and another
who, with notice of the fraud, has taken a mortgage from him and
has foreclosed the mortgage by sale of all the land, part to the
mortgagee and part to a purchaser in good faith, and praying for an
account, a redemption of the mortgage, and a reconveyance of the
land still held by the mortgagee,
Page 130 U. S. 685
and for general relief, dower may be decreed and damages if
necessary to give full indemnity.
In a suit in equity to obtain a right of dower from persons who
have taken conveyances thereof by, or with notice of, fraud upon
the plaintiff, the statute of limitations begins to run only from
her discovery of the fraud.
This was a bill in equity, filed May 18, 1883, by Sarah M.
Jones, a citizen of Pennsylvania, against Matilda A. Van Doren, a
citizen of Indiana, and Samuel J. Jones and Samuel J. Glover,
citizens of Illinois.
The original bill alleged that Robert H. Jones died intestate in
April, 1863, leaving the plaintiff, his widow, and the defendant
Jones, his son and only heir at law, and seised in fee of
one-fourth undivided part of certain land described, in Minnesota;
that the plaintiff became entitled to a dower interest therein,
which by the laws of Minnesota was a life estate in one-third part,
and the son became vested with the title in fee, subject to her
dower interest; that she, being informed that the estate was
involved in litigation, and having little or no knowledge of
business, and at his request, for no consideration, and merely for
the purpose of facilitating the conduct of the litigation, made a
quitclaim deed of her interest to him, and that he accepted the
deed upon the express understanding and agreement to receive it for
that purpose only.
The bill further set forth, as the result of the litigation,
that certain described parcels of the land were set off to him in
severalty, and alleged that he, conspiring and confederating with
the defendant Matilda A. Van Doren (who was fully advised of all
the facts above alleged) to defraud the plaintiff of her dower
estate, made a mortgage by a conveyance in trust to the defendant
Glover, on July 25, 1871, of all the land so set off, including the
plaintiff's interest therein, to secure a sum of $10,000 lent to
him by Mrs. Van Doren; that, as part of the conspiracy, a suit for
foreclosure was begun in the name of Glover on August 26, 1876, and
a decree obtained therein under which all the land was sold, and
(except a small portion purchased by one Galusha) bought by Mrs.
Van Doren for the sum of $8,745.14, and a final decree, vesting
title in the purchasers,
Page 130 U. S. 686
was entered on May 22, 1880; that the plaintiff was ignorant of
the mortgage and of the foreclosure suit until long after the final
decree therein; that on December 16, 1876, in order to protect her
dower right, she paid $1,808.48 in discharge of taxes on the land,
of which payment the defendants availed themselves, and that Mrs.
Van Doren, in 1881, sold a portion of the land to one Marshall, a
bona fide purchaser, for the sum of $10,000, which she
received and applied to her own use, and still held the rest of the
land.
The plaintiff further alleged that before filing her bill, she
demanded an account of Mrs. Van Doren, and offered to pay her all
moneys paid or expended by her on or about the land, with interest,
in redemption of the mortgage, and demanded a reconveyance, but she
refused, and that the plaintiff was ready and willing to pay to her
all sums of money, and to do all other acts that might be adjudged
by the court necessary to redeem the land from the mortgage and
foreclosure.
The bill prayed for an account, and that the plaintiff, on
paying to Mrs. Van Doren such sums as the court might direct to
enable her to redeem the mortgage, should be adjudged to be
entitled to redemption, and Mrs. Van Doren might be ordered to
reconvey the land still held by her, and for such other or
different relief as the nature of the case might require and as
might be agreeable to equity.
A demurrer to that bill was sustained and the bill dismissed on
the ground that the plaintiff, having conveyed her interest by a
deed absolute on its face, the statute of frauds would not permit
her to set up an oral trust, and as no fraud, accident, or mistake
in making that deed was alleged, no trust arose by implication of
law. 18 F. 619.
The bill was then amended by substituting, for the allegations
concerning the plaintiff's conveyance to the defendant Jones,
allegations that he, with intent to defraud her, prepared an
instrument which he represented to be a power of attorney to enable
him to act for the plaintiff in regard to certain anticipated
litigation and other business, and thereby induced her to sign it;
that the instrument was in fact, as he knew, a quitclaim deed of
all her right of dower; that she did
Page 130 U. S. 687
not read the instrument or know its true character or effect,
but relied on his representations, and, had she read it, was then
so ignorant of business that she would not have understood its
legal purport, and that she always, until within six months before
the filing of this bill, believed that the instrument was a mere
power of attorney.
The defendant Van Doren demurred to the amended bill, and
afterwards moved to have it stricken from the files for the reason
that it stated a new and different cause of action, the original
bill being based upon an express trust and the amended bill upon a
resulting trust arising by implication of law. The court overruled
the motion, but sustained the demurrer on the ground that the
plaintiff was not entitled to the specific relief prayed for, as
shown by its opinion sent up with the record and printed in the
margin.
* A final decree
was
Page 130 U. S. 688
entered, dismissing the bill, and the plaintiff appealed to this
Court.
Page 130 U. S. 690
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The only difference between the original and amended bills is
that the first alleges that the defendant Jones took the conveyance
of the plaintiff's right of dower upon an express trust for her,
whereas the second alleges that he procured the conveyance from her
by fraudulent misrepresentations as to the nature of the
instrument, creating a trust by operation of law in
Page 130 U. S. 691
her favor. The other facts alleged in the two bills are
substantially identical. Each bill proceeds upon the ground that
the defendant Jones was a trustee for the plaintiff, and that the
defendant Van Doren, taking the land from him with notice of all
the facts, was affected by the trust, and the object of both bills
is the same -- to obtain the right of dower of which the plaintiff
has been deprived by the acts of the defendants, and to which she
was entitled under the laws of Minnesota in force at the time of
her husband's death. Pub.Stat. 1849-58, c. 36, § 1.
The amendment was therefore one which the court in the exercise
of its discretion might properly allow, and the motion to strike
the amended bill from the files was rightly denied.
Hardin v.
Boyd, 113 U. S. 756.
But we are of opinion that the court erred in sustaining the
demurrer to the amended bill.
One who by fraudulent misrepresentations obtains a conveyance
from the owner of any interest in property, real or personal, is in
equity a trustee
ex maleficio for the person defrauded,
and anyone taking the property from such trustee with notice of the
fraud and of the consequent trust is affected by the trust.
Tyler v.
Black, 13 How. 230;
National Bank v. Insurance
Co., 104 U. S. 54;
Moore v. Crawford, 130 U. S. 122.
When a trustee, dealing with the trust property, together with
property of his own, as one mass, conveys part of the whole to a
purchaser who takes it for value, in good faith, without notice of
the fraud or of the trust, and who therefore acquires a good title,
the question how far the rest of the property shall be charged with
the trust so as fully to indemnify the person defrauded can only be
determined in a court of equity.
In the present case, upon the facts alleged in the amended bill
and admitted by the demurrer, the defendant Jones obtained a
conveyance of the plaintiff's dower interest by fraud, and held
that interest in trust for her. The defendant Van Doren, taking the
property with full notice, was equally affected by the fraud, and
bound by the trust. Parts of the property, having been conveyed to
bona fide purchasers, were
Page 130 U. S. 692
beyond the reach of the plaintiff. Full, adequate, and complete
relief, either by awarding to the plaintiff her dower in the whole
out of the part not so conveyed or by awarding her dower in that
part only, with damages for having been fraudulently deprived of
her interest in the rest, could not be had in an action at law. The
case made in the bill therefore by reason of the fraud, the trust,
and the peculiar relief which the conduct of the defendants has
made necessary to be given in order fully to indemnify the
plaintiff, is clearly within the jurisdiction of a court of equity.
Herbert v.
Wren, 7 Cranch 370.
The learned judge of the circuit court, in his opinion
sustaining the demurrer to the amended bill, recognized that "the
fraud alleged, which creates an impediment to a recovery at law,
can be removed by a suit in equity, and her dower obtained," and
that "equity furnishes the most adequate and complete remedy, and
dower is highly favored in that forum." The ground on which he
declined to support the amended bill was that the plaintiff was not
entitled to the specific relief prayed for.
It is true that the prayer of the bill, being apparently drawn
upon the supposition that the plaintiff might be held bound by the
mortgage, is chiefly directed toward securing a right to redeem. In
that aspect of the case, she properly offered to redeem the whole
property by paying off the whole mortgage, because she could not,
unless at the election of the mortgagee, redeem by paying less.
Collins v.
Riggs, 14 Wall. 491;
McCabe v. Bellows, 7
Gray 148. But the general object of the bill is to secure to the
plaintiff the dower interest of which she has been defrauded, and
the bill contains a prayer for general relief. This is sufficient
to enable a court of equity to decree such relief as the facts
stated in the bill justify.
English v.
Foxall, 2 Pet. 595;
Tayloe v.
Merchants' Ins. Co., 9 How. 390;
Texas v.
Hardenberg, 10 Wall. 68.
What has been said furnishes an answer also to the argument that
the plaintiff's right, if any, is barred by the statute of
limitations. The plaintiff is not suing for her dower as such, the
right to which accrued in 1863, but for property
Page 130 U. S. 693
of which she has been defrauded, and in such a case the statute
of limitations begins to run only from the discovery of the fraud.
Moore v.
Greene, 19 How. 69;
Meader v.
Norton, 11 Wall. 442;
Cock v. Van Etten,
12 Minn. 522; Minnesota Gen.Stat. 1878, c. 66, § 6, cl. 6.
Decree reversed, and case remanded with directions to
overrule the demurrer to the amended bill and to take such further
proceedings as may be consistent with this opinion.
*
"NELSON, J. The demurrer is sustained, for the reasons:"
"1st. If the allegations of the bill of complaint are true, the
right of the complainant to bring her action to recover dower
exists unless the statute of limitations of the State of Minnesota
has barred such recovery. Of course, if she has lost all right of
action by laches, the bill must fail, for the relief claimed is
based upon an interest in the property as dowress."
"2d. If not barred by the statute of her action to recover
dower, the fraud alleged, which creates an impediment to a recovery
at law, can be removed by a suit in equity and her dower obtained.
Equity furnishes the most adequate and complete remedy, and dower
is highly favored in that forum."
"3d. The complainant is not entitled by the fraud alleged, if
true, to anything more than dower. She is not entitled to the whole
property. If, by a fraud perpetrated upon her, which the defendants
were cognizant of and participated in, as alleged, she has been
prevented from asserting her right to dower by a suit at law, she
is not thereby deprived of all remedy to recover it. The relief
prayed for in this bill, as amended, does not necessarily follow
from the facts alleged therein and admitted by the demurrer. The
demurrer goes to the relief prayed, and, not being entitled to the
relief, the bill must fail."
"In the original bill, the relief claimed was based upon the
admitted allegation that the quitclaim deed was voluntarily given,
and accompanying it was a parol trust for the benefit of the
grantor, known to the defendants at the time the property was
mortgaged. This bill was held bad on demurrer for the reason that
such a trust as alleged could not be created and recognized, it
being in violation of the laws governing uses and trusts, which
were specially defined by the statutes of Minnesota. The amendments
have changed the features of the bill, and it is doubtful whether
they are proper; but I have overruled a motion to strike them from
the files, and decided the demurrer upon the bill as amended."
"
Demurrer sustained"