On the basis of a finding that Viola Farnum enjoyed a lucid interval when she conveyed her house to Joseph Silvano, III, for approximately half its market value, a Probate Court judge decided that Farnum had capacity to execute the deed. A different test measures competence to enter into a contract and we, therefore, reverse the judgment.
We take the facts from the trial judge’s findings, which have support in the record and are not clearly erroneous. Mass.R.Civ.P. 52(a),
Farnum’s mental competence had begun to fail seriously in 1983, three years before she delivered a deed to the South Yarmouth real estate. That failure manifested itself in aberrant conduct. She would lament not hearing from sisters who were dead. She would wonder where the people upstairs in her house had gone, but there was no upstairs to her house. She offered to sell the house to a neighbor for $35,000. (He declined, recognizing the property was worth much more.) She became abnormally forgetful. Frequently she locked herself out of her house and broke into it, rather than calling on a neighbor with whom she had left a key (on one occasion, she broke and entered through a basement window). She hid her cat to protect it from “the cops . . . looking for my cat.” She would express a desire to return to Cape Cod although she was on Cape Cod. She easily became lost. Payment of her bills required the assistance of her sister and her nephew, who also balanced her check book.
There were several hospitalizations during the three-year period preceding the conveyance in 1986. On May 2, 1985, a brain scan examination disclosed organic brain disease. By January, 1987, some six months after the conveyance, Farnum was admitted to Cape Cod Hospital for treatment of dementia and seizure disorder. She was discharged to a nursing home.
In connection with drawing the deed and effecting the transfer of real estate, Farnum was represented by a lawyer selected and paid by Silvano. That lawyer, and a lawyer for the bank which was making a loan to Silvano, attended the closing at
It was not unusual, the judge concluded, for Farnum to be perfectly coherent and “two minutes later” be confused. When she signed the deed, “she was coherent or in a lucid interval. ”
Acting during a lucid interval can be a basis for executing a will. “[A] person of pathologically unsound mind may possess testamentary capacity at any given time and lack it at all other times.”
Daly
v.
Hussey,
Competence to enter into a contract presupposes something more than a transient surge of lucidity. It involves not merely comprehension of what is “going on,” but an ability to comprehend the nature and quality of the transaction, together with an understanding of its significance and consequences.
Sutcliffe
v.
Heatley,
In
Krasner
v.
Berk, supra
at 468, the court cited with approval the synthesis of those principles now appearing in the Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 15(1) (1981), which regards as voidable
Applied to the case at hand, Farnum could be aware that she was selling her house to Silvano for much less than it was worth, while failing to understand the unreasonableness of doing so at a time when she faced serious cash demands for rent, home care, or nursing home charges. That difference between awareness of the surface of a transaction, i.e., that it was happening, and failure to comprehend the unreasonableness and consequences of the transaction by a mentally impaired person was recognized and discussed in an opinion for the court by Judge Breitel, in
Ortelere
v.
Teachers’ Retirement Bd.,
On the basis of the trial judge’s findings, we think Farnum did not possess the requisite contextual understanding. She suffered mental disease which had manifested itself in erratic and irrational conduct and was confirmed by diagnostic test. Her physician did not think she was competent to live alone.
The decisive factor which we think makes Farnum’s delivery of her deed to Silvano voidable was his awareness of Farnum’s inability to act in a reasonable manner. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 15(1)(b). Silvano knew or had reason to know of Farnum’s impaired condition from her conduct, which at the times material caused concern to her relatives, her neighbors, and her physician. See
Ortelere
v.
Teachers’ Retirement Bd.,
In view of our conclusion that Farnum lacked the capacity to enter into contractual arrangements for the sale of her house, we need not and do not consider the arguments of fraud, undue influence, and constructive trust which Farnum has advanced.
Farnum is entitled to rescission of the conveyance. Silvano shall deliver a deed to the real estate in question to Farnum’s guardian in his capacity as such, in return for the consideration paid by Silvano. The object of rescission is to arrive so far as
So ordered.
Notes
The judge’s finding of a fair market value of $115,000 was based on an appraisal of the real estate received in evidence. Under the purchase and sale agreement, Silvano was to receive the furniture and furnishings as well for his purchase price.
