62 So. 505 | Ala. | 1913
It is conclusively shoAvn by the evidence, Avithout serious conflict, that at the time he executed the two deeds here sought to be annulled Dr.
It is argued in the brief for complainants that the grantor did not intend to make an absolute deed to his sons, and that he executed the deed to them without knowing or understanding its contents or its effect. This contention is not supported by the evidence, and the conclusion cannot be escaped that a man of the grantor’s education and intelligence, in the full exercise of his faculties, who directed the scrivener in the framing of the deed, and who took it in his hands, and apparently read it over, and declared it was ‘“just- what he wanted,” understood,' approved, and adopted the deed as executed.
The only plausible theory upon which complainants’ case can be rested is that fiduciary relations existed between the grantor and the grantees, or some of them, that the grantees dominated in the transaction, and that the grantor did not have the benefit of competent independent advice. The relation of parent and child is
“Where evidence is introduced showing that the .parent has reached the state of senility and is dominated by the child, it would then be incumbent upon the child to show the fairness of the transaction, and that the parent acted upon free and independent advice.” — Dolberry v. Dolberry, supra.
And “where a deed is made by a parent to a child, whether natural or adopted, the burden rests upon the party assailing it to prove incapacity or ’undue influence.” — Stanfill v. Johnson, supra.
Mr. Pomeroy, writing on this particular subject, says : “Where the positions of the two parties are reversed, where the parent is aged, infirm, or otherwise in a condition of dependence upon his own child, and the child occupies a corresponding relation of authority, conveyances conferring benefits upon the child may be set aside. Cases of this kind plainly turn upon the exercise of actual undue influence, and not upon any pre- ' sumption of invalidity; a gift from parent to child is
Appellants’ contention is that in tbe present case they bave overcome tbe normal presumption of freedom from undue influence, and that tbe dominance of tbe grantees in this transaction is established by evidence of tbe age, weakness, sickness, debility, and distress of tbe grantor, coupled with tbe fact that tbe grantees were both bis nurses and bis confidential agents; and they point in this connection to tbe inexplicable folly of tbe grantor denuding himself of bis entire estate, and to bis unnatural preference of some of bis children at tbe expense of others. We are satisfied, however, from tbe evidence before us, that neither age nor physical weakness bad materially impaired tbe mental vigor and tbe moral independence of Dr. Jenkins when be made these deeds. Nor was be physically helpless and dependent, however much be may bave suffered with intermittent paroxysms of heart trouble. Mrs. Hawthorne, one of tbe complainants, on cross-examination says of bis mentality : “He was a man of unusual strength of mind; be was a man that studied over anything a long time before be made up bis mind to it, and when be did make up bis mind be was almost always right. He seldom made a mistake about anything.” Of bis family relation she says: “My father ruled and dominated bis household, but in a proper way. He ruled at all times, and saw that all things were done and carried out as be wanted, just as far as be could.” With respect to tbe grantor’s two sons, Percy and Jim, she expresses
Undoubtedly, as all the evidence shows, Dr. Jenkins was a man of imperious will and strong and self-reliant mentality. There is not even a suggestion in the record that he ever relied upon the counsel of his sons, or ever deferred to their judgment in business or other matters. Everything tends to show that he was not in the least degree subject to their influence, and that they never attempted to influence him. Complainants have wholly failed to show that age, physical infirmity, sickness, or mental distress had robbed him of his moral dominion over his family, or rendered him subservient to their sway, and these factors alone raise no presumption of so radical a metamorphosis, in the absence of satisfactory proof of mental infirmity also. — 17 Ann. Cas. note 991. And neither do the facts of a common residence and the exclusion of other children from the grantor’s bounty or favor.— (Id.)
In Highberger v. Stiffler, 21 Md. 338, 353, (83 Am. Dec. 593), one of the cases cited for appellants, the conditions which evidenced such a change are thus vividly portrayed: “The natural relation of the parties was reversed in this instance by the influence of time. The parent had become a child, and the child was guardian to the parent. The same dependence, overweening confidence, and implicit acquiescence which rendered one an automaton in the hands of the other existed, ‘et ubi eadem ratio, ibi idem jus.’ The wish of the agent had become the will of the principal. Whatever the former suggested, the latter executed. There was no consent of two minds, but a merger of the principal’s mind into the agent’s.”
The farm deed was by no means a deed of gift. Taking a fair average of the values placed upon it by a number of witnesses, the farm was probably worth at that time about $8,000. On the other hand, Dr. Jenkins owed debts aggregating about $5,500. The margin was so small that he had been unable to secure a loan large enough to discharge his several obligations. He was anxious to save his business reputation, and averse to a sale of his farm under the hammer; but it does not appear that he was unduly distressed — certainly not to the point of moral duress. He was advised by two reputable practitioners, one of whom knew his circumstances, to turn the place over to his sons and let them save it if they could. In carrying out this plan, Dr. Jenkins could not in reason have expected the sons
Nor can we discover in the circumstances of Dr. Jenkins the tragic case of a modern Lear, as graphically pictured by the learned counsel. He was a skilled physician, and must have known on November 25, 1901— what any intelligent layman could have told him — that his days on earth would be very few. Hence very naturally he Avas not concerned about himself, but had chiefly in contemplation the future of his good name and the fate of 'his cherished farm.
We have considered all the evidence, but it is neither practicable nor profitable to further discuss it here. We are satisfied that the deeds in question Avere not procured by undue influence, actual' or constructive, and that they ought to be sustained as the free and intelligent acts of the grantor. — Stroup v. Austin, 180 Ala. 240, 60 South. 879.
If the deed to Emma Jenkins is void by reason of an incurably defective description, the only consequence is that the lands therein attempted to be conveyed passed under the other deed to the other respondents; and, in any case, equity would not take jurisdiction merely to declare the deed void for uncertainty.
The decree of the chancery court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.