49 Ind. 428 | Ind. | 1875
This suit was brought by the appellee, Thomas Jagers, and Joseph Jagers, against the appellants, Hannah Jagers, William Hall, and Sarah Hall, his wife, and the following is the complaint in full:
“Thomas Jagers and Joseph Jagers complain of Hannah Jagers, William Hall, and Sarah Hall, and say that on the 10th day of February, 1870, Thomas Jagers, Sr., was the owner in fee simple, and had been for years, of the following described real estate in Switzerland county, in the State of Indiana, to wit(here is described the real property); “ that he was also the owner of a great amount of personal property, horses, wagons, and farming implements, and other property; that on the 10th day of February, 1870, he and the defendant Hannah Jagers conveyed the above described real estate and all the personal property they or either of them owned to <the defendant William Hall, by deed, a copy of which is filed.
“ Plaintiffs further allege, that said Thomas Jagers, Sr., ■departed this life on the-day of-, leaving as his heirs at law the plaintiffs, Thomas Jagers and Joseph Jagers, and the defendant Hannah Jagers; that the said Thomas and Joseph are entitled to one-half of said property each, subject to the interest of the said Hannah Jagers, which is a life interest in the one-third thereof; wherefore they ■ ask that said ■deeds of conveyance be set aside, and that said real estate be partitioned, and for all other proper relief.
“ Par. 2. For second paragraph, plaintiffs say that on the 10th day of February, 1870, Thomas Jagers, Sr., was the owner of the real estate and personal property described in the first paragraph of this complaint, and that on said day he conveyed the same to the defendant William Hall by deed, a copy of which is filed herewith and made a part of this paragraph, marked f Exhibit B;* and plaintiffs say that at the time of making said deed, the said Thomas Jagers, Sr., was ■of unsound mind and wholly incapable of making a valid, contract. And they say further, that on the 14th day of February, 1870, the defendants William Hall and Sarah. Hall, his wife, conveyed said real estate and personal property to the defendant Hannah Jagers; and they further allege, that the said Thomas Jagers, Sr., died on the-day of -, and that he left as his heirs at law the defendant Hannah Jagers, who is entitled to a life interest in the one-third of said real estate, and the plaintiffs, Thomas Jagers and Joseph Jagers, who are each entitled to the one-half thereof, subject to said life interest; wherefore they ask that said deeds be set aside and declared void, and that said real estate be partitioned, and for all proper relief.”
A separate demurrer, for want of sufficient facts, to each.
The deeds, which are filed with and said to be made a part of the complaint, were not legally a part of the complaint, because they were not the foundation of the action. The foundation of the action was the alleged fraud, misrepresentation, and undue influence of Hannah Jagers, in procuring the execution of the deed from Thomas Jagers, Sr., to Hall, and the unsoundness of mind of the grantor at the time of making the deed by Thomas Jagers, Sr.
On the trial of the cause, the jury expressly found, that at the time of the execution of the deed to Hall, Thomas Jagers, ■Sr., was of sound mind. This effectually disposes of the second paragraph of the complaint, which only charges unsoundness of mind at the time of executing the deed, and brings us to the consideration of the sufficiency of the first paragraph of the complaint. The material allegations of it are these:
“ That at the time of making said conveyance, the said Thomas Jagers was seventy years of age, greatly debilitated and enfeebled in body and mind, to such an extent that he was easily influenced by the said Hannah Jagers. And plaintiffs allege that the said deed was procured to be made by the fraud, misrepresentation, and undue influence of the said Hannah Jagers; that the said Hannah Jagers falsely and fraudulently represented to the deceased that one Charles H. Thiebaud intended bringing suit against him for slander, and that all of said property would be swept away and pass into the hands of sirangers; and further represented to said deceased, that his children had turned against him and were conspiring against him to deprive him of his property, and that she alone was true to him; and that the daughters of the plaintiff, Thomas Jagers, Jr., were of bad character, and not fit persons to be entrusted with his property.”
As we have held above that the deeds filed with the complaint formed no part of it, as the action was not based upon them, there is no allegation in the complaint that she held any relation whatever to him. It does not show that she was a first
He was of sound though feeble mind. Feebleness of mind has never been held sufficient to set aside a deed, where the grantor was of sound mind, though some of the authorities hold that it may be taken into consideration, in connection with other circumstances, for that purpose; but no other circumstances are stated in the complaint.
Some of the authorities, while they admit that undue influence is generally fraud, hold that there may be undue influence without fraud, as in the case of great fondness, friendship, flattery, and persuasion. If these pretences, however, are false, they constitute fraud.
In this case, there is no such pretence or allegation. All the charges of fraud, misrepresentation, and undue influence in the complaint must be held as intending to charge fraud. Were they such representations as a man of sound though feeble mind had a right to rely on ? and could he set aside his deed for or on account of them? We think not. She told him that Thiebaud intended to bring a slander suit against him, and that his property would be swept away; that his children had turned against him, and were conspiring against him to deprive him of his property, and that she alone was true to him; that his granddaughters (children of one of the plaintiffs) were of bad character, and not fit persons to be entrusted with his property. These are all the acts that she
“ While, on the one hand, the courts have aimed to repress the practice of fraud, on the other, they have required that before relieving a party from a contract on the ground of fraud, it should be made to appear that on entering into such contract he exercised a due degree of caution. Vigilantibus, non dormientibus, suceurrunt leges. A misrepresentation as to a fact, the truth or falsehood of which the other party has an opportunity of ascertaining, or the concealment of a matter which a persop of ordinary sense, vigilance, or skill might discover, does not in law constitute fraud. Misrepresentation as to the legal effect of an agreement does not avoid it as against a party whom such misrepresentation has induced to enter into it—every man being presumed to know the legal effect of an instrument which he signs or of an act which he performs.”
The case was dismissed as to Joseph Jagers, and was prosecuted by Thomas Jagers, and is, therefore, properly-here in his name only.
The first paragraph of the complaint was insufficient, and the demurrer should have been sustained to it.
The judgment is reversed, at the costs of the appellee, with instructions to sustain the demurrer to the first paragraph of the complaint, and for further proceedings.