149 Mich. 693 | Mich. | 1907
Leonidas Dickérson died after noon and before one o’clock on Monday, July-17, 1905, from injuries received late in the afternoon of the previous Saturday. A horse had kicked a pitchfork, driving the fork handle against his side, producing, probably, a rupture of the liver and other internal injuries. Between nine and ten o’clock, on Monday, he executed a deed of land, running to defendant, an infant. Complainants are decedent’s heirs at law. The single question raised by the pleadings is whether this deed was intelligently executed and delivered. The case is not free from difficulty, and if all that decedent did concerning the disposition of his property was to be referred to the point of time when he executed the conveyance a different conclusion might be required. Apart from the effects of the injury he had suffered, the integrity of the mental processes of decedent