Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In 1906, Martha J. M. Wims, by an inquest held in the Trigg county court, was found to be mentally incompetent to care for her estate, and A. J. Hendricks was
The question of the mental incompetency of the vendor at the time of the conveyance by her to A. J. Collins, is one wholly of fact, and it has always been our rule, where the evidence was practically equiponderant, to refuse to set aside the chancellor’s finding of the facts. A careful reading of this record, however, convinces us that the chancellor did not err in reaching the conclusion that Martha J. M. Lawson was of unsound mind and wholly incompetent to care for her estate at the time she made the conveyance vacated by the judgment, and we think that, as she had long lived with the appellants as a servant, they knew of her 'mental incompetency. To start with, it is conceded that she was wholly illiterate, and a large number of the witnesses describe her as a person of weak mind, or of a low order of intellect, and say that in their opinion she did not have mind sufficient to take a rational survey of her property and to know its value, or to make valid contracts in reference thereto. On the other hand, the witnesses for appellants depose that she was of sufficient mind to make a valid contract. The chancellor was on the ground, and,, presumptively, knew the witnesses, their standing for integrity and intelligence in the community where they reside, and his opinion as to the facts- is entitled to great weight at our hands. •
We do not give much weight to the fact that Martha J. M. Wims was permitted to consummate a contract of marriage with J. M. Lawson. If her weakness of mind was such that she could be overreached and defrauded out of her land, we see no reason why she should not also be inveigled into a contract of matrimony. The county judge who performed the marriage ceremony made no investigation as to the condition of the mind of the woman, and there was nothing in her conduct to indicate to him that she was of unsound mind. The fact that he did not discover her mental weakness while performing the marriage ceremony is no evidence of the fact that she had sufficient mind to make a valid contract by which she conveyed her land to A. J. Collins.
The statute of limitations cannot avail the appellants. Sections 2506 and 2525 of, the Kentucky Statutes pro
. W. T. Collins was incompetent to testify in this case in favor of his wife and against a person of unsound mind (subsections 1 and 2, section 606, Civil Code), and the court correctly sustained exceptions to his deposition.
None of the parties to the conveyances by which the title to the land of the imbecile was vested in the appellant, Susan M. Collins, were innocent purchasers for value. A. J. Collins is dead, but his widow testified that the vendor was of imbecile mind and negatives the idea that any consideration whatever passed to the vendor.
Judgment affirmed.