L. S. Strange, as next friend for Mrs. W. 0.'Strange, James B. Strange, and Belle Strange, brought suit against A. W. Barlow, alleging in the petition that the three plaintiffs for whose benefit the suit was brought were the owners of a tract of land, and that each of them was mentally incapacitated to manage the land or to make any contract concerning the same; that Joiner, acting as the agent of the plaintiffs, leased the land'to the defendant for a period of twenty years, the lease to expire on December 31, 1917, for an annual rental of 2,500 pounds of lint-cotton; that Joiner was the father-in-law of the defendant, and had no other authority to act in behalf of the plaintiffs than such as was derived from them, never having been appointed as trustee or guardian for them by any order of court; that the rental value of the land was largely in excess of that stipulated in the lease; that while the lease was signed by the three plaintiffs, as well as by Joiner as their agent, it was really the contract of Joiner, the plaintiffs not realizing the character of the agreement which they executed; and that they signed the lease as the result of a fraud perpetrated upon them by Joiner and the defendant. The prayer of the petition was, that the lease be set aside and canceled and the premises restored to the three plaintiffs, and that all the rights, privileges, and immunities which the defendant obtained under the lease be set aside and revoked. The defendant filed an answer, in which he denied that the plaintiffs were of unsound mind, and distinctly alleged that they were of sound mind, and that the contract was valid and binding, and fair and reasonable in its terms. The trial resulted in a finding for the plaintiffs that the lease be set aside and annulled. The defendant excepts to a judgment refusing to grant him a new trial. ■
The foregoing disposes of all the assignments of error which require any elaborate discussion. There was no error in admitting in evidence the former lease between the same parties-. The fact of its existence and its terms were circumstances which might be considered by the jury on the questions both of mental capacity and fraud. There was no error in any of the rulings on evidence which were complained of.
Judgment reversed.