35 A.D. 515 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
William D. Haines, the plaintiff’s intestate, entered into a contract with the defendant whereby Haines agreed to purchase from the defendant a tract of land .in Pike county, Pennsylvania, with certain personal property, for the sum of $34,500, of which $7,500 was to be in cash ; $1,000 of this $7,500 was to be paid by the transfer of a $1,000 note upon the execution of the contract, and $6,500 was to be paid within thirty days from the date of the contract. The balance was to be paid by assuming a mortgage upon the premises, and by the execution of a second mortgage by Haines to the . defendant. The contract was executed on February 15,1893, and was
Upon this evidence a verdict that at the time of the making of this contract Haines was in such a mental condition that he was not responsible for his acts, would have been entirely unsupported. The rule as to the responsibility of insane persons for their contracts is well settled. In Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Hunt (79 N. Y. 541) it was held that where a contract was executed upon a verbal consideration of which the lunatic had the benefit, made by the plaintiff in good faith, without fraud or interference, without knowledge of the insanity and without notice or information calling for inquiry, it was enforcible against the lunatic. The court, quoting with approval the remarks of the chancellor in Elliot v. Ince (7 De G., M. & G. [56 Eng. Ch.] 487) said : “ The principle of that case was very sound, viz., that an executed contract, when parties have been dealing fairly, and in ignorance of the lunacy, shall- not afterwards be set aside ; that was a decision of necessity, and a contrary doctrine would render all ordinary dealings between man and man unsafe.” In Loomis v. Spencer (2 Paige, 158) the chancellor said “ although a contract of purchase made by either (a lunatic or infant), except for necessaries, could not be enforced, yet a court of equity ought not to interfere where the infant or lunatic has actually had the benefit of the property, if the contract was made in good faith without knowledge of the incapacity and where no advantage
We think, however, that in this case there was no evidence to show that Haines was insane at the time he made this contract so that he had not the power to contract; that the defendant had knowledge of any mental disturbance, or that there were any facts to put him upon inquiry.
There are several exceptions to rulings upon questions of evidence which are insisted upon by the plaintiff, but they are without merit. None of them relate to testimony as to Haines’ mental condition at the time the contract was executed, or as to any knowledge of the defendant that would make inquiry on his part proper. The price that the defendant paid for the property when he purchased it was quite immaterial. There was no allegation that any unfair advantage was taken of Haines, or that the property was not worth the price that Haines agreed to pay for it. The remarks of the court when the witness Barker was called, were not a ruling to which an exception was taken. What was said evidently related to the insanity of Haines after he returned from the south, and not at the time when the contract was made. If the plaintiff had wished to examine the witness as to Haines’ condition at the time the contract was made, an intimation of that fact to the court would undoubtedly have led the court to allow the testimony, but, at any rate, there was no ruling upon evidence that was excepted to, and the witness
The judgment is, therefore, affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.