An infant female was the owner of an unimproved lot in the City
of Washington upon which there were valid liens for unpaid purchase
money and taxes. In order that those liens might be discharged and
the property improved, she borrowed $8,000, and executed a deed of
trust upon the lot to secure the loan. Part of the money so
borrowed was used to pay of prior liens and taxes, and the balance
was applied by her, or under her directions, in improving the lot.
Upon arriving at majority, she disaffirmed her contract and deed of
trust, and refused to pay the money
Page 167 U. S. 689
borrowed by her. At the time the deed of trust was executed, no
inquiries were made as to her age, nor did she make any
representations in regard to it.
Held:
(1) An infant's deed is voidable only, unless it appears upon
its face to be to his prejudice, in which case it may be deemed
void, and the infant is not estopped by his acts or declarations,
or by his silence, during infancy, from asserting, on arriving at
full age or within a reasonable time thereafter, the invalidity of
such deed.
(2) If the money borrowed by the infant had been expended by her
otherwise than in the improvement of her lot, the lender would have
been without remedy, for it is not a condition of the disaffirmance
by an infant of a contract made during infancy that the
consideration received be returned if, prior to such disaffirmance
and during infancy, the specific thing received has been disposed
of, wasted or consumed and cannot be returned.
(3) Upon the disaffirmance by an infant of his contract, the
contract is annulled on both sides, and the parties revert to the
same situation as if the contract had not been made.
(4) In this case, the infant having disaffirmed her deed, she is
not entitled, as between herself and the lender, to be protected
except in the enjoyment of such rights in the property in question
as she had at the time the deed of trust was executed, and the
money borrowed by her having gone into the property which she holds
in its improved condition, it is to be deemed to be in her hands
within the meaning of the rule which entitles the other party to
recover such of the consideration as remains in the infant's hands
at the time of disaffirmance. She is not entitled to make profit
out of those whose money has been used at her request in protecting
and improving her estate, but as the disaffirmance of her deed
restores her rights in the property, a sale ought not to have the
effect of depriving her altogether of the interest she had at the
time the deed of trust was executed.
(6) The decree of sale in the present case was proper, but it
was error to give to the lender a preference in the distribution of
the proceeds for the entire debt secured by the deed of trust,
without reference to the amount for which the property in its
improved condition might sell. The decree should direct the
proceeds to be applied first in repaying to the lender, with
interest, the sums paid in discharge of the prior liens and taxes;
second, in paying to the infant an amount equal to the value of the
lot at the institution of the suit (less such prior liens and
taxes) without interest on that amount, and without taking into
consideration the value of the improvements placed on the lot; and,
third, in paying to the appellees such of the proceeds of sale as
may remain, not exceeding the balance due on the loan, with
interest. This last sum would represent, so far as may be, the
value of the improvements put upon the lot with the money borrowed.
Any other decree will
Page 167 U. S. 690
make the disaffirmance by the infant ineffectual, if the
property, upon being sold, does not bring more than the debt
attempted to be secured to the lender.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
By deed dated March 8, 1886, and duly recorded, an unimproved
lot or parcel of land, in the City of Washington, known as lot 49
in square 111, was conveyed by Henry C. Porter to Seymour
Cunningham and John S. Blair to secure the balance of the unpaid
purchase money therefor due to one William Brough, evidenced by
Porter's two promissory notes, each for twelve hundred and fifty
dollars, bearing even date with the above trust-deed, and payable
to the order of Brough.
On the 3d day of September, 1887, Porter conveyed the same
property to Robert E. Moore and his wife Carlotta M. Moore, to have
and to hold the same to the grantees, their heirs and assigns as
tenants by the entirety. As part of the consideration for this last
conveyance, the grantee, Carlotta M. Moore, agreed to assume and
pay the debt to Brough.
By deed bearing the same date as the one from Porter to Moore
and wife and executed contemporaneously therewith, Robert E. Moore
and Carlotta M. Moore conveyed the premises to Charles Early and
Joseph T. Dyer in trust to secure the sum of sixteen hundred
dollars, being the balance of the deferred purchase money due to
Porter, and evidenced by the promissory note of Moore and wife,
payable to the order of Porter.
On the 29th day of April, 1888, Robert E. Moore died, and the
premises in question became the absolute and separate property of
Carlotta M. Moore in fee simple, subject to the prior liens.
Page 167 U. S. 691
In 1889, Mrs. Moore borrowed from Sarah Utermehle the sum of
$8,000, for which she executed her note, dated October 22, 1889,
payable three years after date, with interest at six percent per
annum, payable quarterly. In order to secure the payment of that
note, she conveyed by deed on the same day the above premises and
appurtenances to William R. Woodward and Leroy M. Taylor and their
heirs as joint tenants, with the usual provisions for a release of
the lien in case of the payment of the note, and also in trust to
permit her, her heirs or assigns, to use and occupy the described
land and premises, and the rents, issues, and profits thereof, to
take, have, and apply to and for her and their sole use and
benefit, until default should be made in the payment of the debt
thereby secured or any installment of principal or interest, as the
same became due and payable, or any proper cost, charge,
commission, or expense in and about the same. That deed contained
the clause usually found in such instruments, authorizing the
trustees, upon any default in the payment of the debt or of any
installment of principal or interest, as the same should become due
and payable, or any proper cost, charge, commission, or expense in
and about the same, to sell the land and premises at public auction
upon such terms and conditions at such time and place, and after
such previous public advertisement as they or the survivor of them
should deem advantageous and proper, and to convey the same in fee
simple to and at the cost of the purchaser or purchasers thereof,
who were not required to see to the application of the purchase
money.
The last-named transaction was consummated pursuant to an
agreement between Mrs. Moore and Mrs. Utermehle, and under the
following circumstances: Mrs. Moore was in default in respect of
the payment of the sums secured by the above trust deeds of 1886
and 1887, and being threatened with a foreclosure and sale under
those deeds, and having no property except the premises in
question, and desiring also to improve the same by the erection of
a substantial building for the purposes of a home, applied to Mrs.
Utermehle for a loan of $8,000 for the period above named, to
be
Page 167 U. S. 692
secured by a deed of trust, in the usual form, on the land and
premises. She represented the title to the premises to be good and
unencumbered otherwise than by the above trust deeds. Her
application, the bill states, was accompanied by an assurance upon
her part that she would immediately commence the construction of a
substantial brick building upon the lot and premises, with suitable
provisions to secure the payment or application of all the proceeds
of the loan
"not required to take up the said overdue notes, representing
said unpaid purchase money, taxes then due, expense of examination
of title to said land and premises, conveyancing and other
incidental expenses incurred on account of the negotiation of said
loan, all of which were also to be taken up or paid therefrom
towards such construction."
Relying upon said premises, and the proposed security offered by
her, $8,000, was loaned by Mrs. Utermehle to Mrs. Moore. Out of
that sum, pursuant to the agreement or understanding between Mrs.
Moore and Mrs. Utermehle, the latter took up the notes representing
the unpaid purchase money secured by the above trust deeds and paid
the taxes then due on the property, together with the expense of
examining the title and other expenses, all amounting to $3,291.99,
which sum was paid directly by Mrs. Utermehle to the holders of the
notes and the parties to whom the expenses and taxes were payable.
Thereupon Mrs. Moore procured the services of J. W. Myers, a
builder, and entered upon the construction of a substantial brick
dwelling upon the lot and premises, as agreed upon, and as the
condition of the loan to her, and the balance of the $8,000 was
expended in the purchase of materials furnished for and used in its
construction, and to pay laborers, mechanics, and others for work
done thereon. The house was completed, and is known as "No. 1612
Nineteenth Street Northwest." Mrs. Moore moved into it about two
months after its completion.
Subsequent to the loan, Mrs. Moore married the appellant
Wilburne P. MacGreal, and the house and lot is occupied by them as
a home.
Before the present suit was instituted, Mrs. MacGreal,
Page 167 U. S. 693
under date of June 13, 1890, addressed to Mrs. Taylor a
communication, as follows:
"In response to your recent communication calling attention to
my nonpayment of interest upon the note held by you as the
representative of Mrs. Utermehle, I would say that I consider that
I have not been well treated in the entire transaction, and,
inasmuch as the property now owned by me is threatened with a suit
to enforce mechanics' liens now already filed, I have taken legal
advice upon the subject. As I was a minor at the time of these
transactions -- the execution of the deed of trust &c. -- I am
advised that the affirmance or disaffirmance of the contract rests
in my direction [discretion] when I become of age. I therefore will
not pay the interest demanded, and at the proper time will take
such action as I may be advised to protect my rights."
Subsequently, on the 23d of June, 1890, she executed and placed
of record an instrument in which she gave notice that she
disaffirmed the deed of trust of October 22, 1889, and the note
described in it. On the same day, she executed the following
paper:
"I hereby disaffirm a certain contract alleged to have been
entered into between one Joseph W. Myers and myself October 28,
1889, and I disclaim any and all liability thereunder for the
reason that, at the time of the making of said alleged contract, I
was a minor under the age of twenty-one years, and became of age
June 20, 1890, of all which take due notice."
And on June 27, 1890, she executed, and recorded July 14, 1890,
a deed disaffirming the deed of trust executed to Taylor and
Woodward upon the ground that said deed had been executed and
delivered when she was a minor.
The quarter-yearly installment of interest due the 22d day of
April, 1890, on the debt secured by the deed of October 22, 1889,
not having been paid, and after notice to Mrs. MacGreal of its
nonpayment, this action was instituted by Mrs. Utermehle on the 23d
of June, 1890, for the recovery of the amount due on the note given
to her, and for a decree for the foreclosure of the deed of trust
of October 22, 1889, and a sale of the property in satisfaction of
the amount due to her.
Page 167 U. S. 694
She asked for such other and further relief in the premises as
the nature of the case required.
Admitting the execution of the deed to Woodward and Taylor, and
the note therein described, Mrs. MacGreal resisted the relief asked
upon the ground that at the date of the execution of the deed and
note she was under the age of 21 years, and within a reasonable
time after reaching full age she made and placed upon record an
absolute disclaimer of the alleged contract, of which disclaimer,
and the reasons assigned therefor, it is claimed, Mrs. Utermehle,
the original plaintiff and testatrix of the appellees, had due
notice. Her husband disclaimed in his answer any personal knowledge
of the matter in dispute, and insisted that the bill did not state
facts entitling the plaintiff to the relief asked. Woodward and
Taylor, trustees, answered, admitting the allegations of the bill
and expressing their submission to any decree that might be just
and proper. Indeed, the arrangement between Mrs. Utermehle and Mrs.
MacGreal was made in good faith on each side.
It is not disputed that Mrs. MacGreal arrived at full age on the
20th day of June, 1890. And it may be stated as the result of the
testimony that when the deed of October 22, 1889, was executed, no
inquiry was made as to her age, nor did she make any representation
on that subject.
In the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, a decree was
rendered dismissing the bill. But in the Court of Appeals of the
District that decree was reversed, and a decree passed which
adjudged that there was due from Mrs. MacGreal to the executrices
of Mrs. Utermehle the sum of $8,000, with interest at the rate of
six percent per annum until paid, and the costs of suit, and
directing that, on default in the payment of principal, interest,
and costs aforesaid by a day named, the lot in question, with the
improvements thereon, be sold, and the proceeds applied in payment
of such sum. 1 App.D.C. 359.
The principal propositions made on behalf of the appellants
are:
That the mortgage sought to be foreclosed and the note
Page 167 U. S. 695
described therein having been executed by the maker during her
minority, and without any fraud on her part, and, nothing in the
way of ratification having occurred, it was competent for the
mortgagor, upon arriving at full age, to disaffirm the contract
altogether, and thus defeat the lien created by that mortgage upon
her property;
That while a minor may not, upon reaching his majority,
disaffirm his contract and retain such of the fruits of the
contract as are in his hands "in specie" at the time of
disaffirmance, if he has parted with the specific thing received by
him under the contract, or if its form has been so changed that its
return in specie is impossible, his right to disaffirm cannot be
questioned, and
That the exercise of the right of disaffirmance is not, in law,
a fraud, although it may work hardship upon the other party to the
contract, nor is a failure to disclose the fact of infancy at the
time of entering into the contract a fraud that will affect such
right.
These propositions, it is said, are sustained by
Tucker v.
Moreland, 10 Pet. 58,
35 U. S. 70-71,
35 U. S. 73-74,
35 U. S. 77, and
Sims v. Everhardt, 102 U. S. 300,
102 U. S. 301,
102 U. S.
312.
Tucker v. Moreland was an action of ejectment in which
plaintiff's right of recovery depended upon his having the benefit
of a deed of trust executed by an infant, but which he disaffirmed
after reaching full age. This Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Story,
said:
"It is apparent, then, upon the English authorities, that
however true it may be that an infant may so far bind himself by
deed in certain cases as that, in consequence of the solemnity of
the instrument, it is voidable only, and not void, yet that the
instrument, however solemn, is held to be void if, upon its face,
it is apparent that it is to the prejudice of the infant. This
distinction, if admitted, would go far to reconcile all the cases,
for it would decide that a deed, by virtue of its solemnity, should
be voidable only, unless it appeared on its fact to be to his
prejudice, in which case it would be void. . . . To give effect to
such disaffirmance, it was not necessary that the infant should
first place the other party
in statu quo. . . . The result
of the American decisions, "
Page 167 U. S. 696
the court continued,
"has been correctly stated by Mr. Chancellor Kent in his learned
Commentaries, 2 Com.Lect. 31, to be that they are in favor of
construing the acts and contracts of infants generally to be
voidable only, and not void, and subject to their election, when
they become of age, either to affirm or disallow them, and that the
doctrine of
Zouch v. Parsons, 3 Burrow 1794, has been
recognized and adopted as law. It may be added that they seem
generally to hold that the deed of an infant conveying lands is
voidable only, and not void, unless perhaps the deed should
manifestly appear on the face of it to be to the prejudice of the
infant, and this upon the nature and solemnity, as well as the
operation, of the instrument."
Again:
"In many cases, the disaffirmance of a deed made during infancy
is a fraud upon the other party. But this has never been held
sufficient to avoid the disaffirmance, for it would otherwise take
away the very protection which the law intends to throw around him
to guard him from the effects of his folly, rashness, and
misconduct. In
Saunderson v. Marr, 1 H.Bl. 75, it was held
that a warrant of attorney, given by an infant, although there
appeared circumstances of fraud on his part, was utterly void, even
though the application was made to the equity side of the court to
set aside a judgment founded on it. So in
Conroe v.
Birdsall, 1 John.Cas. 127, a bond made by an infant, who
declared at the time that he was of age, was held void
notwithstanding his fraudulent declaration, for the court said that
a different decision would endanger all the rights of infants. A
similar doctrine was held by the court in
Austin v.
Patton, 11 Serg. & Rawle 309, 310. Indeed, the same
doctrine is to be found affirmed more than a century and a half
ago, in
Johnson v. Pie, 1 Lev. 169,
s.c., 1 Sid.
258, 1 Kebb. 905, 913."
In
Sims v. Everhardt, it appeared that Mrs. Sims, a
minor -- her husband uniting with her -- sold and conveyed her land
to Mrs. Everhardt, who paid the purchase money. Some doubt being
expressed as to the age of the grantor, she stated in writing on
the deed that she was then over twenty-one years of age. The
purchaser went into possession, paid off a
Page 167 U. S. 697
mortgage and taxes on the property, continued in possession, and
made improvements up to her death. Subsequently Mrs. Sims was
divorced from her husband, for his fault, and shortly afterwards
she gave notice to the devisees of Mrs. Everhardt that she
disaffirmed the deed in question, and demanded possession of the
land. That demand not having been complied with, she brought suit
against the devisees of her grantee to set aside the deed and for
an account of the rents and profits of the land, "as well as of the
amount she was in duty bound to pay to the defendants on account of
the purchase money by the grantee and the mortgage aforesaid." The
court below, upon final hearing, dismissed the bill. This Court
reversed the decree, holding that under the peculiar circumstances
of the case, including the fact that Mrs. Sims labored under the
disability of coverture when she made the deed, her disaffirmance
of it was within a reasonable time, and that she was entitled to
the decree asked. Mr. Justice Strong, delivering the opinion of the
Court, said:
"The remaining question is whether she is estopped by anything
which she has done from asserting her rights to the land in
controversy. In regard to this, very little need be said. It is not
insisted that she did anything since she attained her majority
which can work an estoppel. All that is claimed is that when she
made her deed, she asserted she was of age and competent to convey.
We are not, therefore, required to consider how far a married woman
can be estopped by her acts when she has the single disability of
coverture. The question is whether acts and declarations of an
infant during infancy can estop him from asserting the invalidity
of his deed after he has attained his majority. In regard to this,
there can be no doubt founded either upon reason or authority.
Without spending time to look at the reason, the authorities are
all one way. An estoppel
in pais is not applicable to
infants, and a fraudulent representation of capacity cannot be an
equivalent for actual capacity.
Brown v. McClune, 5
Sandf.Super.Ct. 224;
Keen v. Coleman, 39 Pa.St. 299. A
conveyance by an infant is an assertion of his right to convey. A
contemporaneous declaration of his right or of his age adds nothing
to what is
Page 167 U. S. 698
implied in his deed. An assertion of an estoppel against him is
but a claim that he has assented or contracted. But he can no more
do that effectively than he can make the contract alleged to be
confirmed."
It may be observed that the Court did not decide in that case
that Mrs. Sims was entitled to the land without accounting to the
estate of Mrs. Everhardt for the purchase money and for the amount
paid in order to discharge the mortgage debt upon it.
These case do not determine the vital questions arising in the
one before us. They undoubtedly do hold that an infant's deed is
voidable only, unless it appears upon its face to be to his
prejudice, in which case it may be deemed void; also that he is not
estopped by his acts or declarations, however fraudulent, or by his
silence, during infancy, from asserting, upon arriving at full age
or within a reasonable time thereafter, the invalidity of such
deed.
In the present case, it is beyond question that Mrs. MacGreal's
deed, made while she was a widow and an infant, was voidable, and
that she disaffirmed it within a reasonable time after reaching her
majority.
But does it follow that the plaintiffs are not entitled to
relief on account of the money advanced by their testatrix, and
which was lent to be applied, and was applied, in making valuable
improvements upon the lot owned by the infant? If the money
obtained from Mrs. Utermehle, the repayment of which was attempted
to be secured by the deed of trust of October 22, 1889, had been
paid directly to the infant, and, prior to the institution of this
suit, had been all expended otherwise than in the improvement of
her lot, the case would not be so difficult of solution, for it is
well settled that it is not a condition of the disaffirmance by an
infant of a contract made during infancy that he shall return the
consideration received by him if, prior to such disaffirmance and
during infancy, the specific thing received has been disposed of,
wasted, or consumed, and cannot be returned. In
Boyden v.
Boyden, 9 Met. 519, 521, Chief Justice Shaw, after observing
that a contract with an infant is binding upon the other party
until it is disaffirmed by the infant, said that if the infant
"elects to disaffirm
Page 167 U. S. 699
it, he annuls it on both sides, and the parties revert to the
same situation as if the contract had not been made. If the minor
refuses to pay the price, as he may, the contract of sale is
annulled, and the goods revest in the vendor."
In
Green v. Green, 69 N.Y. 553, Chief Justice Church,
delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"The right to repudiate is based upon the incapacity of the
infant to contract, and that incapacity applies as well to the
avails as to the property itself, and, when the avails of the
property are improvidently spent or lost by speculation or
otherwise during minority, the infant should not be held
responsible for an inability to restore them. To do so would
operate as a serious restriction upon the right of an infant to
avoid his contract, and in many cases would destroy the right
altogether."
In
Monumental Building Association &c. v. Herman,
33 Md. 128, 133, it was said:
"If the infant disaffirm an executed contract, and the specific
consideration can be restored in whole or in part, the infant is
treated as a trustee of the other party, and must give it up; but
where the articles received by him are consumed or the money spent,
the party advancing them is without a remedy."
So in
Chandler v. Simmons, 97 Mass. 508, 514, the court
said:
"Another ground relied on by the defendant is that the deed [by
the infant] cannot be avoided without a return of the
consideration. We do not understand that such a condition is ever
attached to the right of a minor to avoid his deed. If it were so,
the privilege would fail to protect him when most needed. It is to
guard him against the improvidence which is incident to his
immaturity that this right is maintained.
Gibson v. Soper,
6 Gray 279-282;
Boodey v. McKenney, 23 Me. 517. If the
minor, when avoiding his contract, have in his hands any of its
fruits specifically, the act of avoiding the contract by which he
acquired such property will divest him of all right to retain the
same, and the other party may reclaim it. He cannot avoid in part
only, but must make the contract wholly void if at all, so that it
will no longer protect him in the retention of the consideration.
Badger v. Phinney, 15 Mass. 359;
Bigelow v.
Kinney, 3 Vt. 353. Or, if he
Page 167 U. S. 700
retains the use or dispose of such property after becoming of
age, it may be held as an affirmance of the contract by which he
acquired it, and thus deprive him of the right of avoid.
Boyden
v. Boyden, 9 Met. 519;
Robbins v. Eaton, 10 N.H. 561.
But if the consideration has passed from his hands, either wasted
or expended during his minority, he is not thereby to be deprived
of his right or capacity to avoid his deed, any more than he is to
avoid his executory contracts. And the adult who deals with him
must seek the return of the consideration paid or delivered to the
minor in the same modes and with the same chances of loss in the
one case as in the other.
Dana v. Stearns, 3 Cush.
372-376. It is not necessary, in order to give effect to the
disaffirmance of the deed or contract of a minor, that the other
party should be placed
in statu quo. Tucker v.
Moreland, 10 Pet. 65,
35 U. S.
74;
Shaw v. Boyd, 5 S. & R. 309."
See also 1 Am.Lead.Cas. (5th ed.) *224, *232, *249,
*259;
Mustard v. Wohlford's Heirs, 15 Grat. 329, 340;
Cresinger v. Welch's Lessee, 15 Ohio St. 156;
Eureka
Co. v. Edwards, 71 Ala. 248, 256;
Corey v. Burton, 32
Mich. 30;
Price v. Furman, 27 Vt. 268, 271;
Bobinson
v. Weeks, 56 Me. 102, 107;
Carpenter v. Carpenter, 45
Ind. 142, 146;
Harvey v. Briggs, 68 Miss. 60, 68;
St.
Louis &c. Railway v. Higgins, 44 Ark. 293, 297;
Reynolds v. McCurry, 100 Ill. 356, 359; Tyler's Infancy
& Coverture § 37, and authorities cited.
Does the present case come within the rule upon which Mrs.
MacGreal relies? Under the terms of the loan, the money obtained
from Mrs. Utermehle was used in lifting existing valid mortgages
from her lot and in placing substantial improvements upon it, and
she is in actual possession of the lot so improved and freed from
the liens created by the deeds of March 8, 1886, and September 3,
1887, and subject to which she acquired the property. A court of
equity will look at the real transaction, and will do justice to
the adult if it can be done without disregarding or impairing the
principle that allows an infant, upon arriving at majority, to
disaffirm his contracts made during infancy. Mrs. MacGreal having
disaffirmed her deed of October 22, 1889, she is not entitled, as
between
Page 167 U. S. 701
herself and the estate of Mrs. Utermehle, to be protected except
in the enjoyment of such rights in the property in question as she
had at the time it was encumbered by her disaffirmed deed of trust.
She is not entitled to make profit out of those whose money has
been used at her request in protecting and improving her estate.
Her lot was subject to prior liens on account of the debts due to
Brough and Porter, as well as for taxes. Those debts have been
discharged, and her property is no longer in any danger from them.
The liability of her property for those debts when the deed of 1889
was executed cannot be questioned. These debts having been paid by
Mrs. Utermehle, the appellees are entitled, in equity, to be
subrogated to the rights of the persons who held them, and who were
about to foreclose the liens therefor when the application was made
to Mrs. Utermehle for the loan of $8,000 to be used in meeting
those debts and in improving the lot in question. 1 Jones on
Mortgages §§ 874, 877, and authorities cited. And within
the meaning of the rule that, upon the infant's disaffirmance of
his contract, the other party is entitled to recover the
consideration paid by him which remains in the infant's hands or
under his control, it may well be held -- and gross injustice will
be done in this case if it be not so held -- that the money
borrowed from Mrs. Utermehle is in every just sense in the hands of
Mrs. MacGreal. To say that the consideration paid to Mrs. MacGreal
for the deed of trust of 1889 is not in her hands, when the money
has been put into her property in conformity with the disaffirmed
contract, and notwithstanding such property is still held and
enjoyed by her, is to sacrifice substance to form, and to make the
privilege of infancy a sword to be used to the injury of others,
although the law intends it simply as a shield to protect the
infant from injustice and wrong.
But we are of opinion that the court below erred in adjudging,
as in effect it did adjudge, that the appellees are entitled to
have their entire debt first paid, even if all the proceeds of sale
be required for that purpose. The decree should have been so framed
as to place Mrs. MacGreal, so far as it could be done, in the
position occupied by her at the time the deed
Page 167 U. S. 702
of trust was given, for only by such a decree can the privilege
of infancy, resulting from incapacity to contract, be effectively
protected. A decree giving the appellees a preference in the
distribution of the proceeds of sale for their entire claim
necessarily must rest upon the ground that one who obtains from an
infant a deed of trust conveying his real estate to secure the
repayment of money loaned to him, and to be applied, and which is
applied, in improving such estate may thereby make the
disaffirmance of the infant ineffectual in every case where the
property, upon being sold, does not bring more than the debt
attempted to be secured. But no such result can properly happen if
the court enforces the established rule that, upon the
disaffirmance of a deed made during infancy, the infant is entitled
to recover the property conveyed by him, and the adult to recover
such of the consideration paid by him as may remain in the hands of
the infant at the time of disaffirmance. As Mrs. MacGreal ought not
to hold the property in its improved state without accounting, as
far as possible, for the money used in protecting it from sale for
existing liens and in improving it, there must be a sale in order
that justice may be done. But as the disaffirmance of her deed
restores her rights in the property, a sale ought not to have the
effect of depriving her of the interest she had at the time the
deed of trust was executed. The decree for a sale was proper, but,
upon the showing made by this record, it should direct the proceeds
to be applied first in repaying to the appellees, with interest,
the sums paid by Mrs. Utermehle in discharge of the prior liens
created by the deeds of 1886 and 1887 and by the taxes then upon
the property; second, in paying Mrs. MacGreal an amount equal to
the value of the lot at the institution of this suit (less such
prior liens and taxes) without interest on that amount, and without
taking into consideration the value of the improvements placed on
the lot; and, third, in paying to the appellees such of the
proceeds of sale as may remain, not exceeding the balance due on
the loan, with interest. This last sum would represent, so far as
may be, the value of the improvements put upon the lot with Mrs.
Utermehle's money.
Lynde v.
Page 167 U. S. 703
McGregor, 13 Allen 182, 185. Any other decree will make
the disaffirmance by the infant ineffectual if the property, upon
being sold, does not bring more than the debt attempted to be
secured. If the property, in its improved condition, does not bring
enough to pay the whole debt due the appellees, they will be
without remedy for the deficiency. If any balance should remain
after satisfying the above claims in the order mentioned, it will
belong to Mrs. MacGreal.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE BROWN are of opinion that the
judgment should be affirmed.