District of Columbia. A few days after the marriage of J.
Thompson with the daughter of George King in 1812, the latter
residing in Georgetown in the District of Columbia and having a
large, active capital and a large real estate there, proposed to
grant to J.T. a house and lot in Georgetown, then much out of
repair and untenantable, provided he would repair the same so as to
make it a comfortable residence, and saying that he intended the
property for his daughter. This proposition was accepted by J.T.,
who repaired the property, expending upwards of four thousand
dollars on the same, and he,
with his wife, resided on it about four years. Before his
removal from it, a correspondence on the subject of the conveyance
of the property to J.T. or to J.T. and his wife took place which
ended in propositions to convey the property, on certain terms
beneficial to J.T. and wife in pursuance of and intended to be in
execution of the original offer of G.K. to J.T., made immediately
after the marriage. No conveyance was made. J.T. and wife removed
from Georgetown, and G.K. collected and paid to J.T. the rents of
the property for some time after their removal. G.K. died in 1820,
insolvent; his debts amounted to thirty-six thousand dollars, and
his whole estate, both real and personal, when sold, did not pay
thirty-nine percent of his debts. The property claimed by J.T. and
wife in this case was sold for sixteen hundred dollars by a trustee
under a decree in chancery obtained by the creditors of G.K., but
the sale has not been ratified.
From the occupancy of the property and the amount of money
expended in improving it, it was certain that there was an
understanding between G.K. and J.T. that the property in some
manner should be possessed and enjoyed by J.T. and his wife. The
evidence, however, showed that G.K. did not intend to vest it
absolutely in J.T., but that the value of it, before the
improvements, should in some form be secured to the wife of J.T.
Whatever uncertainty may have existed as to the terms of the
contract, J.T. acted under it in taking possession of the property
and expending a large sum of money on it.
J.T. and wife filed a bill against the heirs of G.K. and the
trustee of the creditors of G.K. claiming a conveyance of the
property, and for general relief. By the court:
"In no point of view could such a contract as that in this case
be considered voluntary. There was not only a good consideration,
that of natural affection, but a valuable one. To constitute a
valuable consideration, it is not necessary that money should be
paid, but if, as in this case, it be expended on the faith of the
contract, it constitutes a valuable consideration."
In testing the validity of the transaction of 1812, the
subsequent fall of property in Georgetown or the failure of King
cannot be taken into view. The inquiry must be limited to his
circumstances at that time. It is not shown that the persons for
whom he was bound as endorser were then
Page 34 U. S. 205
unable to pay the respective sums for which he was responsible,
and it would be improper to consider those sums as debts due by
King. He was responsible for their payment on certain
contingencies, but the fact that his credit remained unimpaired for
several years after the contract shows that neither his credit nor
the credit of those for whom he was endorser was considered
doubtful. In this state of facts, King was in a condition to
dispose of the house and lot, not worth more than two thousand five
hundred dollars, on the terms stated.
The terms of the contract not being sufficiently established by
the evidence, the court decreed that the property should be sold
and the proceeds of the sale should be first applied to the payment
of the money expended by Thompson in making improvements on the
property, and the balance, if any, paid over for the benefit of the
creditors of George King, Thompson not to be charged with rent of
the premises while he occupied them with the rent collected and
paid to him after he, removed.
The appellees, Josiah Thompson and wife, 14 June, 1826, filed a
bill on the equity side of the circuit court alleging that George
King, in October, 1812, a few days after the marriage of Josiah
Thompson with Elizabeth, the daughter of the said George King,
proposed to grant to the said Thompson and wife a house and lot of
ground in Georgetown if Thompson would repair and make it
comfortable for a residence, at the same time informing Thompson he
intended the property for his daughter Betsey. The bill alleges
that this offer was accepted by Thompson, and that he made repairs
to a large amount, and that he occupied the property after it was
repaired until 1816, when he removed to the western country.
At the time of this gift, the bill alleges that George King was
in good credit and in prosperous circumstances, it being believed
he had a large capital and that he owned a valuable real estate
which, after the payment of his debts, not large in amount, would
enable him to provide handsomely for his children.
In 1816, before Josiah Thompson removed from Georgetown, a
correspondence took place between him and George King, which was
annexed to the bill and which is referred to as evidence of the
contract under which Josiah Thompson took possession of and
improved the property.
Page 34 U. S. 206
The first letter was from George King to the complainant, Josiah
Thompson, and was dated,
"Georgetown, 17 April, 1816"
"Mr. Josiah Thompson: "
"Sir, I am informed that you are in suspense in regard to the
property you now live on, and I think it a duty incumbent on me to
let you know the terms I mean to let my daughter Betsey have it. I
hold myself ready and hold myself bound to give a deed to a
trustee, who shall hold it in trust for her and yourself during
your lives, and then, after the death of you both, to revert to her
lawful heirs, her children, if any she has, if not, to my heirs,
but you may say I wrong you in this way by not letting you know
before now that I did not mean to deed to you, instead of keeping
it for her, and on that account you have put more improvements than
you would have done had you have been informed before. You may now
sell the property, and all you can get over three thousand dollars
for it you can do as you like with, but that sum must be kept
sacred for the use of your wife in the hands of trustees, for her
support in case she might ever need it, the use of which as the
income will be at your disposal during your own and her life, and
then to her heirs as before, and other terms than this it will be
useless for you to look for without you find two just fathers that
shall say I ought to do otherwise, and, after hearing their reasons
on the subject, perhaps I might alter my opinion."
"Yours, with due esteem,"
"GEORGE KING"
In reply to this letter, after remonstrating against making the
conveyance of the property in trust, the complainant, under date of
26 April, 1816, made three proposals to George King.
"1. Let the property be valued as to its worth at the time it
was put into my possession, and I will pay the amount over to you,
which you may then hold for my wife, or give it to whom you please,
for when I married her, I was not influenced by any pecuniary
motive, and as she has never given
Page 34 U. S. 207
me reason to regret my choice, I surely will not allow a
consideration like the present to create the smallest
uneasiness."
"2. Let the improvements be estimated; pay me the amount, and
then I will relinquish all claim, and you will be at liberty to
dispose of it as you may deem proper."
"3. Execute a deed to your daughter at once in fee simple, and I
will for her benefit and advantage cheerfully give in all that I
have expended; this will at once be making her the guardian of her
own property, and, if it should please God to call me first, will
be to her a support."
"Thus, my dear sir, you will find that I am not disposed to
dispute about the original value of the property, for though I
consider it as certainly the property of my wife from the delivery
of it into my possession, as any subsequent act could make it, and
from the manner I was allowed and encouraged to go on with the
improvements, yet I am willing at any moment to bind myself to
abide by either of the above proposals."
To these proposition, George King, on 29 April, 1816,
replied:
"I make no hesitation of complying with your first proposal, for
it is just what I proposed in my first to you, and I will do it
another way, giving you your choice,
viz., I will deed the
dwelling house and all above it to you, and about twenty feet below
it, and then all below that I will deed to Betsey, provided she
will never deed it nor otherwise dispose of it during her life,
only by will, which she shall always be at liberty to make when and
how she pleases."
"GEO. KING"
The bill proceeds to state that the complainant, Josiah
Thompson, was satisfied with the proposition contained in the
letter of 29 April, 1816, and that at the removal of the
complainant from Georgetown he rented the property, and constituted
George King, his agent to collect the rents of the same, which
duties he continued to perform, without advancing at any time a
claim to the same.
On the death of George King, the legal title to the property
descended to his heirs, no conveyance having been made of it
Page 34 U. S. 208
to the complainants, and the bill prays for a decree that the
heirs of George King convey the said legal title to the
complainants in fulfillment of the agreement of George King, and in
the event that the same for any reason cannot be done, that the
said property stand charged to the amount of the repairs and
improvements put on it by the complainants, and for other and
further relief, &c.
After the decease of George King in 1830, largely in debt to the
amount of $36,000 and insolvent, his whole real and personal estate
not being sufficient to pay his debts, in fact not more than
thirty-nine percent of his just debts; his whole real estate was
sold by Raphael Semmes, appointed trustee by the court of chancery
for that purpose at the instance of George King's creditors, and
among the rest the property now in controversy was sold for $1,660
to John W. Baker.
John W. Baker deposited $1.190.18, part of this purchase money
in the Mechanics Bank of Georgetown in 1826 and 1827, to remain
until the termination of this suit; the first deposit was made on
26 July, 1826, after the filing of this bill.
In the suit instituted by the creditors of George King to compel
a sale of his real estate for the payment of his debts, all the
heirs of George King were made parties, and among the rest, the
said Thompson and wife. The sale to Baker never was ratified in
consequence of this suit instituted by Thompson and wife. The heirs
of George King (his estate being insolvent) feeling no interest in
the suit, filed their answers to the bill of Thompson and wife,
neither admitting nor denying the facts alleged, submitting
themselves to the judgment of the court.
Raphael Semmes, the trustee for George King's creditors, on
petition and by leave of the court, was made a defendant, and
allowed to contest the claim set up by Thompson and wife, as was
also Charles King one of the principal creditors. They denied the
pretended contract and gift set up in the bill; denied the
improvements charged to have been made on the property; averred the
indebtedness of George King at the time of the pretended gift, to a
large amount, and the continuance of such indebtedness to the same
creditors up to the time of his death, and the unlawfulness and
fraud in law of such gift, if any
Page 34 U. S. 209
could be proved, and the insufficiency of George King's whole
estate, real and personal, to pay his just debts, and claimed the
proceeds of said house and lot for said creditors of King.
Charles King, as a creditor, also filed a bill against Josiah
Thompson and wife charging in substance the same facts, to which
bill Thompson and wife responded, reasserting in substance the
matters alleged in the original bill. They admit in this answer
that they were married on 6 October, 1812, and that the alleged
gift of the house and lot was made after the marriage.
Evidence was taken by the complainants and the respondents which
is fully stated in the opinion of this Court, and on 5 April, 1832,
the circuit court, all the parties having been heard together,
pronounced a decree directing a conveyance in fee of the property,
claimed in the bill, to Josiah Thompson, from which decree this
appeal was taken.
Page 34 U. S. 215
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants here, who were the complainants in the circuit
court, filed their bill stating that in the year 1812, they were
married and that the wife of the complainant is the daughter of
George King, who at that time lived in Georgetown and was
extensively engaged in a profitable mercantile business. That his
credit was high, and complainants believe he was possessed of a
large active capital, and in addition had a large real estate,
consisting of houses and lots in Georgetown. That it was
universally believed he would have a large surplus property after
paying his debts which would enable him to provide handsomely for
his children.
That a few days after the marriage, George King proposed to
grant to the complainant, Thompson, a house and lot on Cecil Alley,
in Georgetown, which was very much out of repair and almost
untenantable, provided he would repair the same so as to make it a
comfortable residence, and that the said King at the same time
stated he intended the property for the wife of the
complainant.
The complainant accepted the property, and expended upwards of
$4,000 in making repairs of the house and other
Page 34 U. S. 216
improvements on the lot. That he occupied it as a residence
about four years, and then removed to the western country. Before
his removal, a correspondence took place between him and the said
King in relation to the title, and the complainant made King his
agent to collect the rents, &c.
The complainant further states that the said King died
intestate, leaving, in addition to the wife of the complainant,
certain children who are made defendants, and a decree for a legal
title is prayed, or if that cannot be decreed, that the property
may stand charged to the amount of the repairs and
improvements.
George King died in the year 1820, insolvent. His debts amounted
to $36,000, and his whole estate, both real and personal, when
sold, did not pay more than thirty-nine percent of his just debts.
The property claimed by the complainant was sold for $1,660, by a
trustee, under a decree of chancery, obtained by the creditors of
George King, but the sale has not been ratified.
Raphael Semmes, the trustee of George King's creditors, and
Charles King, one of the principal creditors, filed their answers
to the bill of the complainant, in which they deny that the
improvements were made on the property as set forth in the bill,
and insist that George King, at the time of the intended gift, was
embarrassed and unable to pay his debts, and they insist that the
right set up by the complainants is fraudulent and void as against
creditors.
There are some irregularities in the record which it is not
material to notice, as these statements show the points to which
the evidence applies.
The first inquiry is whether a contract was made between the
complainant and George King for the property in question.
It is insisted by the complainant's counsel that the
correspondence between the parties which is contained in the
record, establishes the contract.
The first is a letter from George King to the complainant, dated
17 April, 1816. In this letter King says,
"That in order to remove any suspense in regard to the property
on which the complainant then lived, that he held himself bound to
give a deed to a trustee, who shall hold it in trust for the
complainant and his wife during their lives,"
&c.
Page 34 U. S. 217
This letter is answered by the complainant 26 April, 1816, in
which he declines the terms proposed, and suggests the
following.
1. Let the property be valued at the time it was put into his
possession, and that he would pay the amount over to King,
&c.
2. That the improvements should be estimated, and King, on
paying the amount, should receive a relinquishment of all the right
of the complainant.
3. That a deed should be executed for the property to the wife
of the complainant.
On 29 April, 1816, King replies,
"I make no hesitation in complying with your first proposal, for
it is just what I proposed in my first to you, and I will do it
another way, giving you your choice,
viz., I will deed the
dwelling house and all above it to you, and about twenty feet below
it, and then all below that I will deed to Betsey,"
the wife of the complainant, "provided she will never deed it,
or dispose of it, except by will, which she shall always be at
liberty to make when and how she pleases."
On 14 August, 1819, King writes to the complainant,
"Mr. Kennedy has left your house since the first of July last,
and I have not been able to get a tenant since. Houses are very
dull here now; rents have fallen very much,"
&c.
And on 23 March, 1831, George King, son it is presumed of George
King deceased, writes to complainant, "I am sorry to inform you
that Mr. Jacob Payne has laid an attachment on your property in
Georgetown . . . ," referring to the property in controversy.
This is all the evidence to show a contract except what might be
presumed from the occupancy and improvement of the house and
lot.
Specific propositions were made by each party in regard to the
title of the property, but it does not satisfactorily appear that
either was finally accepted. The complainant in the first place
objects to the conveyance of the property to a trustee for the
benefit of his wife, and he proposes to pay to King the value of
the property at the time it was put into his possession, which sum,
at the pleasure of the donor, might be vested for the benefit of
complainant's wife. To this King replies that he
Page 34 U. S. 218
has no hesitation in accepting the proposal, but he accompanies
this acceptance with a proposition to deed the dwelling house, with
a certain part of the lot, to the complainant, and the residue of
the lot to his wife.
Whether this last proposition or the one made by the complainant
and assented to by King formed the contract is uncertain, or indeed
whether any definite agreement was finally made.
From the occupancy of the property and the amount of money
expended in improving it, there can be no doubt that there was an
understanding between the parties that the property, in some
manner, should be possessed and owned by the complainant. The
evidence, however, shows that King did not intend to vest the
property absolutely in the complainant, but that the value of it,
before the improvements, should in some form be secured to the
complainant's wife.
This Court is now called on to decree a specific execution of
this contract and what are its terms. Shall the title be vested in
fee in the complainant, without condition; or shall a part of the
property be vested in trust for the benefit of his wife? Or shall
the title be vested in the complainant on his paying into the hands
of trustees, for the benefit of his wife, the value of the property
when he first received it?
The evidence does not afford a satisfactory answer to any one of
these inquiries. It is impossible, therefore, for the Court to
decree a title as prayed for in the bill, as the evidence fails to
establish the specific terms of the contract.
But it is insisted that this arrangement or contract, if proved,
was void as against the heirs of King, and especially as against
his creditors, on account of the indebtment of King at the time and
his subsequent insolvency.
Although a contract is not proved with sufficient certainty as
to its conditions to authorize a specific execution of it, yet
there can be no doubt there was an agreement between the parties
which induced the complainant to enter into the possession of the
property and to expend large sums of money upon it, as if it were
his own, and when he left it and removed to the western country, it
was rented as his property, and George King acted as the agent of
the complainant. And
Page 34 U. S. 219
the property seems to have been considered as belonging to the
complainant by the heirs of George King.
Whatever uncertainty may exist as to the terms of the contract,
there can be no question that the complainant acted under it in
taking possession of the property and expending a large sum of
money in its improvement.
In no point of view could such a contract be considered
voluntary. There was not only a good consideration, that of natural
affection, but a valuable one. To constitute a valuable
consideration, it is not necessary that money should be paid, but,
if, as in this case, it be expended on the property on he faith of
the contract, it constitutes a valuable consideration.
The debts of George King for the years 1812, 1813, and 1814
amounted to about $13,000 or $14,000, of which $11,000 were due to
the Bank of Columbia. And the average amount of his debts from 1812
until his death was about the sum of $13,000.
In 1812 and for some years afterwards, George King was supposed
to be rich. For his house on High Street he refused $12,800. The
whole amount of his property was estimated at $60,000 or more. He
was endorser on accommodation notes for about $20,000 at the above
period.
At this time, the property claimed by the complainant was not
worth more than $2,000 or $2,500. Its value was increased three or
four times this sum by the improvements.
In 1827, it appears by an exhibit of the debts due by the estate
of George King, including interest, that they amounted to the sum
of $36,418.10. But many of these debts seem to have been contracted
subsequent to the time that the property in question was placed in
the possession of the complainant. It appears also the property of
which King died possessed did not pay forty percent of the debts
due by the estate. And that he retained the greater part, if not
the whole of his real estate, except the lot claimed by the
complainant, until his decease. But it seems from the prices fixed
upon this property in 1813 and those for which it was sold that
there must have been a great deterioration in the value of it.
Under the above circumstances, it is insisted by the appellants
that the contract with the complainant by George King for the above
property was fraudulent.
Page 34 U. S. 220
It has already been observed that the money expended in the
improvement of this property constituted a valuable consideration.
The contract therefore, if proved so as to entitle the complainant
to a decree for a specific execution, could not be avoided on the
ground that there was no consideration.
At the time this property was received by the complainant, King
was supposed to be rich. His property was estimated at $60,000; his
debts did not exceed $13,000-$14,000, and his endorsements were
about $20,000. That his credit stood high is shown by his
endorsements, and the standing accommodation given to him in the
banks. So high did he stand as a man of property and business that
it was deemed a valuable object to obtain his services as director
in one of the Georgetown banks. There seems to have been no
diminution of his credit or means for several years after the
transaction with the complainant.
In testing the validity of that transaction, the subsequent fall
of property or failure of King cannot be taken into view. The
inquiry must be limited to his circumstances at the time. Was King,
when this property was received by the complainant, in a failing or
embarrassed condition?
It is not shown that at this time the persons for whom he was
bound as endorser were unable to pay the respective sums for which
he was responsible, and it would be improper to consider these sums
as debts due by King. He was responsible for their payment on
certain contingencies, but the fact that his credit remained
unimpaired for several years after the contract with the
complainant shows that neither his credit nor the credit of those
for whom he was endorser was considered doubtful.
In this state of facts, he surely was in a condition to dispose
of a house and lot not worth more than $2,500 on the terms stated
in the bill.
There appears to have been no fraudulent intent in the case; no
disposition to defeat the claims of present creditors or to cover
the property from future demands. It seems to have been a
bona
fide transaction, and one which neither a court of law nor of
equity could refuse to sanction. And if the terms of the contract
were established, so that this Court could decree a specific
execution of it, it would pronounce such a decree.
Page 34 U. S. 221
But as a specific performance cannot be decreed, the inquiry
remains, whether the complainant has a lien on the property for the
money he expended in improving it.
The counsel for the appellant do not controvert the right of the
complainant to a just remuneration for the valuable improvements he
made, but they insist that he must exhibit his claim as a general
creditor of the estate of George King, and that from such claim
there should be deducted a reasonable rent for the time the
property was in his possession.
This claim for improvements by the complainant is founded upon
the most equitable considerations. At the instance of George King,
his father-in-law, the complainant entered into the possession of
this property, and under a full belief that it would be secured to
him as his own, he was induced to expend a large sum of money in
making permanent and valuable improvements. These improvements,
some of the witnesses say, have increased the value of this
property to three times the amount which it was worth before they
were made. From this it appears the money was not injudiciously
expended, and the question arises whether this expenditure, under
the circumstances of this case, does not create a lien upon the
property.
If King were living, he could not object to this lien. Can his
creditors object to it? By enforcing it can their interests be
injuriously affected?
It may be said that the deterioration of property in Georgetown
has been such as to reduce the value of this property to a less sum
than was expended in making the improvements. This cannot change
the principle that must govern the case. If the money has been
judiciously expended, under such circumstances as to entitle the
complainant to a lien, the court must give effect to it. It is an
equitable mortgage, and in a court of chancery is as binding on the
parties as if a mortgage in form had been duly executed.
Suppose George King, for the purpose of improving this property,
had borrowed from the complainant $4,000 and had executed a
mortgage on the same property to secure the payment of the money.
Could the creditors of King complain of the lien of the mortgage?
It is clear they could not. And is it not equally clear that they
have no ground to complain
Page 34 U. S. 222
of the equitable mortgage? If there be any difference in the
force of the liens thus created, it must be in favor of the
equitable lien.
In the first case supposed, the money was loaned at a fixed rate
of interest and the property was looked to as securing the payment.
But in the second case, the money was expended under a belief that
the property belonged to the individual and that the amount
expended increased so much the value of his estate, and, in many
cases a failure to obtain the property under such circumstances
would cause an injury which a return of the money expended would
not repair.
It would be most unjust to leave the complainant, as a creditor,
to receive a dividend on the distribution of the estate of
King.
Ought the complainant to be held accountable for rents while he
occupied the premises or which he may have subsequently received
from his tenants?
The rents received by the complainant after his removal to the
west, independent of other facts in the case, go to show that he
was not considered as the tenant of King. Indeed, there can be no
doubt that the complainant considered the property as his own, and
it was so treated by George King, for he collected the rents as the
agent of the complainant and accounted to him for them. It would
therefore be unjust now to compel him to pay rents which, with the
concurrence of all parties, were paid to him at the time they
accrued, as his own.
And in addition to this, the interest on the money expended
would perhaps be equal to the whole amount of the rents.
As the circuit court decreed a conveyance of this property to
the complainant, that decree must be
Reversed and the cause remanded to that court with
instructions to cause the property to be sold, after due notice, on
such terms as they shall deem most advantageous to the estate of
George King, and the proceeds of the sale first to be applied to
the payment of the money expended by the complainant in making
improvements on the property, and the balance, if any, to be paid
over for the benefit of the creditors of the estate of
King.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the
record
Page 34 U. S. 223
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Columbia holden in and for the County of Washington and was argued
by counsel, on consideration whereof it is ordered and decreed by
this Court that the decree of the said circuit court in this cause
be and the same is hereby reversed, and that this cause be and the
same is hereby remanded to the said circuit court for further
proceedings to be had therein according to law and justice and in
conformity to the opinion of this Court.