98 F.2d 923 | 10th Cir. | 1938
Reference will be made to the parties as they appeared in the court below. The action is by a woman more than seventy years of age against a man forty-two years old to recover certain bonds in the amount of $140,600 — or the value thereof in the event disposition had been made of any of them —and $19,200 in money alleged to have been wrongfully obtained through fraudulent means. The case was tried to a jury;' a verdict was returned for plaintiff; judgment was entered; and defendant appealed.
It is argued at length that the action is one in replevin; that the petition falls short of stating a cause of action on the ground of fraud; that the reply may tender such issue limited to the single question whether defendant misrepresented the contents of a written instrument called a deed of gift; that there was no evidence tending to show that he misrepresented the contents of such instrument; that the pleadings do not tender the issues of fiduciary relationship, mental incapacity, or undue influence; and that the court erred in submitting them to the jury. It is alleged in the petition that soon after the parties became acquainted, defendant represented himself to be an experienced bookkeeper and businessman; that he volunteered and assumed to give plaintiff much advice concerning her business affairs ; that he volunteered his services and' attempted to act as a private and confidential secretary; that .she employed him’as a chauffeur to drive her pleasure automobile; that he learned she had certain government bonds and other bonds deposited with a trust company in Topeka, Kansas; that he told her on many occasions it would be better and safer for her to segregate some of them and “not put them all in one basket”; that he suggested, requested, and urged her to deliver some of them to him in order that he could place them in his safety deposit box in the Topeka State Bank; that at such times she was sick with a serious illness, was confined to her bed most of the time, and was under the continuous care of a physician; that the illness impaired her physical and mental faculties and made her very easily susceptible to suggestions from other persons, particularly from defendant; that believing his statements to be true, relying upon his advice, and believing that he, was acting in good faith and for her best interests, and that he would return the bonds upon request, she delivered them to him for safekeeping; that at the time of such delivery she signed a written instrument of some kind which had been prepared by him or some other person at his request, the exact nature of which she did not know either at the time of its execution or at the institution of the suit; that his statement that he had' a safety deposit box in a bank in which he would deposit such bonds for
The action of the court in submitting such issues to the jury is challenged' for want of substantial evidence tending to establish them. The testimony presented sharp conflicts, but there was substantial evidence which tended to establish these facts. The husband of plaintiff died about four years prior to the time of the transaction which gives rise to this controversy. She and her husband had lived at the Jay-hawk Hotel in Topeka several years immediately preceding his death, and she continued to live there afterwards. She owned a planing mill and a number of residential properties in Topeka; she had bonds in the aggregate of $450,000 and $15,000 in currency in a deposit box in the Central National Bank of that city; and she had money on deposit in a checking account in the bank. Defendant was employed as desk clerk at the hotel from March 2 to December 1, 1935. Plaintiff and defendant became acquainted at the desk soon after he began as clerk, and they developed a friendship to the extent that they frequently dined together and on one occasion he joined others in playing bridge in her room. He told her that he did not like his work at the hotel and wished to get away from it; that he expected to lose his job any time; and that he would like for her to let him drive her automobile. She employed him as her chauffeur at an agreed salary of $100 per month beginning December 2, 1935. Soon thereafter they made a trip to California in her car, remained there a few days, and returned to Topeka in order that she could give attention to some business. She again made her residence at the Jayhawk Hotel and he stopped there also. In February they again motored to California, went from there to Honolulu, and returned to Topeka about the middle of March. She resumed her residence at the hotel and he again stopped there. She paid his expenses at the hotels in Topeka, California, and Honolulu, in addition to his salary. He told her that he had been informed before they met how rich she was; he frequently suggested that she tell him about her business; and upon her declination, he stated repeatedly that she did not trust him and for that reason would not tell him. She was stricken with apoplexy at the .hotel sometime in April and was confined to her bed for about two weeks, during which period she was under the care of a physician. Her left arm and left leg were partially paralyzed, her mouth drooped on one side, and her left eye was drawn. It was the opinion of the physician that she suffered a hemorrhage of the brain of a type which dulls the mentality and lessens the resistance of the patient, which is very slow in correcting itself and usually requires from two weeks to six months for recovery. In talking with the physician she was unable at times to answer his questions and sometimes she would not express herself understandably. On one occasion she failed to recognize the person who had been manager of the planing mill for twenty years, and in talking with him on different occasions she would repeat a question which had been asked and answered just" a few minutes previously. It was the opinion óf the physician that at one time during her illness she did not know who her relatives were; and' based upon his long acquaintance with her, it was the opinion of the manager of the mill that the stroke weakened her
Plaintiff had a will which had been in effect several years. Defendant suggested that she make a new one and stated that if she should die without a will her prop
Defendant took the so-called gift bonds to Salina, Kansas, and kept them there for some time in safe boxes rented under the names of third persons. He left the home of plaintiff in August; she first learned that he was going about three hours before his de- • parture; and he was married to his second wife three days later. He went to Denver and remained about two weeks; thence to Los Angeles and remained a week; thence to San Antonio and remained about a week; thence to Dallas and remained three or four days; thence to Galveston and remained probably a week; thence to Miami and remained ten days or two weeks; thence to Kansas City, arriving in September and remaining until December; thence again to Miami and remained about a month and a half, and while there he made a trip to Cuba; and thence back to his home in Missouri. He has made disposition of some of the bonds but still has some; he lent a sister about $12,000 with which to buy a farm in Missouri; he delivered about $25,-000 to a brother-in-law- in Missouriv with which to buy a farm, but it was not purchased and at the time of the trial the money was still in the custody of the relative; he made two unsecured loans aggregating $28,-000 to a merchant in Salina, delivering that amount in currency; he paid $9,000 to his attorney; and he spent about $33,000 within approximately a year.
Plaintiff testified in detail respecting her mental and physical condition. She said that after the stroke she did not have any strength dr courage left and could not remember many things which others stated had occurred. She said that she did not make a gift of the bonds; that they were delivered to defendant for safekeeping and with the understanding that he would return them; that she did not direct defendant or the bank to have any papers prepared ; that she did not read the instruments at the time they were signed; that she thought they were in furtherance of their understanding; that she did not know what a trust agreement or bill of sale was; and that she never gave the currency (hereinafter referred to) to defendant and first’learned from his testimony that he had taken it. Defendant testified in detail that he acted throughout under the direction of plaintiff ; that she expressly gave him the bonds and the currency; and that she directed him to have the new will prepared and to write the word “void” and the date on the old.
The jury was well warranted in finding from the evidence and the sustainable inferences to be drawn from it that a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties ; that while she was in a weakened mental and physical condition and without power of resistance, he overreached her, and through the designed exercise of undue influence brought about the execution of the instrument of gift and fraudulently obtained the bonds and cash. Cases abound in which recovery was awarded upon less evidence of fraud than is present here. The evidence required submission of the issues and supports the verdict.
Error is assigned upon the action of the court in allowing plaintiff to file her supplemental petition during the trial in which she sought recovery for the two sums of currency aggregating $19,200; and in denying defendant a • continuance after the pleading had been filed. Defendant testified that there was a package in the deposit box which contained $15,000 in currency; that he placed it in the sack with the securities and took it to the residence and thence upstairs; that plaintiff directed him to take everything out of the sack except the securities and to bring them downstairs to her; that he did so, leaving the currency upstairs; that she later inquired how much it was; that he told her, and she expressly made a gift of it to him; that on a different
It is also contended that the court fell into error in permitting plaintiff to reopen her case for the purpose of introducing additional evidence concerning the disposition which defendant had made of some of the bonds and the money. Likewise, the matter of permitting a party to reopen his case for the purpose of introducing additional evidence is within the discretion of the court; and it cannot be said that there was an abuse of such discretion in this instance.
Many complaints are directed to the instructions given and to the refusal to give requested instructions. The most serious contention relatés to an instruction to the effect that the burden rested upon plaintiff to prove that a fiduciary relationship existed ; that she was in a weakened mental and physical condition; that she was easily susceptible to suggestions from defendant; and that she relied upon him for advice, believed his statements, and believed that he was acting in good faith and for her best interests; but that if these facts had been established, the burden rested upon defendant to show the fitness and honesty of the transaction and that the conveyance was made for an adequate consideration. It is said that a consideration is not essential to the validity of a gift and that the instruction was erroneous for the reason that it cast the burden upon defendant to show that there was an adequate consideration for the transfer. Standing alone and apart from other parts of the instructions, it may be said that the particular instruction improperly cast the burden upon defendant to show an adequate consideration for the transfer. But in other parts of the instructions the court defined a gift to be a voluntary transfer of property without any consideration or compensation ; that it cannot be set aside merely because the donor subsequently changes his mind and regrets the transaction, or because the act was improvident, unjust, or undeserved; that plaintiff had the right to make disposition of her property by gift or otherwise; and that if they found that she executed the instrument of transfer with the intention of conveying title to defendant, they should find in his favor. The jury were further told specifically and plainly that before plaintiff would be entitled to recover they must find that defendant falsely and fraudulently represented that he had a safe deposit box, and that if plaintiff would deliver the bonds to him he would keep them safely and return them to her; and further that at the time plaintiff executed the conveyance she believed it was merely for the purpose of enabling him to obtain possession of the bonds for that purpose. No reference was made in these instructions and others to the necessity for any consideration for the transfer. The instructions must be considered as a whole. Parts cannot be separated and treated apart from others. Wisconsin & Arkansas Lumber Co. v. Ward, 8 Cir., 32 F.2d 974; S. S. Kresge Co. v. McCallion, 8 Cir., 58 F.2d 931; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Armstrong, 4 Cir., 85 F.2d 187; Moran v. City of Beckley, 8 Cir., 67 F.2d 161. Construed as a whole they made it clear to the jury that plaintiff could not prevail if she- made a gift of the property, even though no consideration whatever passed; and that she could recover only in the event the transfer was made as the result of fraud on the part of defendant. The issue was made so plain that it could not have been misunderstood. It is inconceivable that the jury returned the verdict in the belief that the donee of a bona fide gift must establish an adequate consideration.
Other parts of the instructions are drawn in question. We have examined them with care and have concluded that the
Some of the requested instructions were given. Virtually all of the questions treated in those which were refused had been correctly covered in the instructions of the court. It is not error to refuse a requested instruction even though it is an accurate statement where the subject has been appropriately covered in the instructions given. A court is not required to repeat or reiterate in different form that which has already been given. Bowater v. Worley, 10 Cir., 57 F.2d 970; Detroit Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Oklahoma Terminal Elevator Co., 10 Cir., 64 F.2d 671.
We are mindful that the cancellation of an instrument of conveyance for fraud is exclusively within the jurisdiction of equity. But plaintiff pleaded facts which entitled her to recover. Defendant joined issue upon the question of fraud, Voluntarily went to trial before a jury, adduced evidence touching the issue, and tendered instructions upon it — all without any suggestion that her proper remedy was to proceed in equity to set aside the instrument. He thus waived the question and acquiesced in the trial of the equitable issue in this action. Cook v. Foley, 8 Cir., 152 F. 41.
The judgment is affirmed.