48 Ind. App. 469 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
John D. Mottier on July 31, 1907, executed a deed, by which he conveyed certain real estate to his daughter Lilly Humphrey. He was afterward adjudged to be a person of unsound mind, and his guardian, Hosier J. Harris, brought suit against Lilly Humphrey and her husband, James Humphrey, to set aside the deed to said real
The complaint was in three paragraphs. The first paragraph, after making the necessary averments to authorize a suit by the guardian in his representative capacity, alleges that at the time of the execution of the deed, and for some time prior thereto, John D. Mottier was a person of unsound mind; that appellants knew his condition of mind, and procured from him the execution of the deed in question. It is further averred that the guardian disaffirmed the acts of said Mottier in the. conveyance of said real estate, and demanded a reconveyance. The prayer of this paragraph is that the deed be set aside and the title quieted in said Mottier. The second paragraph proceeds upon the theory that said John D. Mottier was old and feeble in body and mind, and was susceptible to influence; that appellants exercised an undue and improper influence over him, and procured the conveyance of said real estate by such improper influence. As the finding and judgment of the court below were expressly based on the first and third paragraphs of complaint, no error can be predicated on the second, and it will not be necessary further to refer to it.
Appellants filed a demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, on the ground that neither paragraph stated facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The action of the trial court, in overruling these demurrers, is one of the grounds assigned for a reversal.
Appellants take the position that the averment contained in the first paragraph of complaint, “that said Mottier was, for a long time prior to said proceeding, of unsound mind, has so remained ever since, and is now of unsound mind,” is a conclusion, and is not a sufficient averment that his mental unsoundness was of such a character as to render him incapable of understanding the character of the transaction in which he was engaged at the time he made said
any interest, descendible to their heirs, which they may have in any lands, tenements, and hereditaments, or in any personal property, to any person or corporation capable of holding the same.” The Supreme Court of this State has frequently held that the phrase “of unsound mind,” as used in said statute, means such a degree of unsoundness of mind as, measured according to the standard fixed by the adjudicated cases, incapacitates a person from making a will. Blough v. Parry (1896), 144 Ind. 463; Runkle v. Gates (1858), 11 Ind. 95; Rush v. Megee (1871), 36 Ind. 69; Turner v. Cook (1871), 36 Ind. 129; Herbert v. Berrier (1881), 81 Ind. 1; Burkhart v. Gladish (1890), 123 Ind. 337; Bower v. Bower (1895), 142 Ind. 194; Wallis v. Luhring (1893), 134 Ind. 447. In the ease first cited the court said on page 489: “The meaning thus assigned to the phrase ‘of unsound mind’ by this court in construing the statute of wills was fully justified and founded in good reason. Because, according to Winslow, the phrase of unsound mind was first used by Lord Eldon to designate a state of mind not exactly idiotic, and not lunatic with delusions, but a condition of intellect between the two extremes, and unfitting the person for the government of himself and affairs. Taylor, Medical Jurisp. [11th Am. ed.] 678. To the same effect is Den v. Johnson [1819], 5 N. J. L. *455, 8 Am. Dec. 610. Thus we find that the phrase ‘of unsound mind’ had attained an appropriate and technical meaning in the law, conveying the idea of testamentary capacity according to the legal standards for such capacity. Another statute
In the case of Riggs v. American Tract Soc. (1881), 84 N. Y. 330, the court said: “It is, however, seriously argued that some further allegation is necessary, ‘that a person who is merely of unsound mind is not necessarily or even presumptively incapable of making such a dis
The case of Batman v. Snoddy (1892), 132 Ind. 480, is sometimes cited as authority for the proposition that a pleading that proceeds upon the theory that a person is of unsound mind, without stating the facts indicating unsoundness, is insufficient on demurrer. 31 Cyc. 59. The opinion in that case does not set out the complaint, or recite its substantial averments. The language used by the court in holding the complaint insufficient is susceptible of the meaning placed upon jt by the text before referred to, but an examination of the complaint discloses the fact that
Finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.