291 N.W. 90 | Neb. | 1940
This is a suit brought by Effie M. Lund to obtain a partition of a quarter-section of Wayne county land of which she claims to be the owner in fee simple of a one-fifth interest. The appeal is prosecuted from a decree ordering a partition of the land.
The record shows that in 1890 Frank O. Hildur married Mary E. Evans, a widow with five children, one of which is the plaintiff in this case. At the time of her marriage to Hildur, Mary E. Hildur was the owner of the land involved in this suit. In 1893 she conveyed the east half of the quarter to her husband, Frank O. Hildur. On July 18, 1935, she conveyed the west half to her husband and her children or their representatives, as the case may be, reserving to herself a life estate in the property. On December 17,
During the course of the probate of the estate of Mary E. Hildur, claims were filed against the estate in excess of $2,000. There are no assets in the estate except the interest Mary E. Hildur may have had in the real estate involved here. The will of Mary E. Hildur left her estate, except for some small legacies, to Wilburn W. Evans, her son. The decision of the case therefore rests upon the validity of the deed of Mary E. Hildur to Frank O. Hildur dated July 18, 1935, and the deed of Frank O. Hildur to Mary E. Hildur and her heirs dated December 17, 1937.
It is contended that Mary E. Hildur was incompetent on July 18, 1935, the date she executed a deed to the west half of the quarter-section to her husband and children, subject to a life estate in herself. The evidence shows that Mary E. Hildur was 95 years of age when the deed was executed. It also shows that a guardian was appointed for her on or after July 20, 1935. Defendants called lay witnesses who testified in substance to Mary E. Hildur’s physical handicaps and to a general decline of her mental faculties, especially as to a tendency toward forgetfulness. From this evidence several lay witnesses gave as their opinions that Mary E. Hildur was incompetent on the date the deed was given. Her attending physician was the only medical expert who testified and he did not state that he thought she was incompetent. Other lay witnesses were called by the plaintiff, who testified to long associations with Mary E. Hildur
There is no presumption that a person of advanced years is incapable of transacting business. The burden is upon the plaintiff to establish that fact. While great age is an important and pertinent circumstance to be considered in connection with the other evidence going to the question of mental competence, it cannot be treated as controlling. The law recognizes the right of the aged to control and dispose of their own property and their right to choose the persons who shall be the recipients of their bounty. It has long been recognized, and the world is full of proof, that the ability to think and reason clearly may alone survive the passing of youth and middle age. The evidence of defendants, in our opinion, even if undisputed, was not sufficient to deprive Mary E. Hildur of that right by a finding that she was incompetent on July 18, 1935, when the deed was executed and delivered. See Leonard v. Shane, 182 Ia. 1134, 166 N. W. 373. The record is barren of proof of duress or fraud being practiced upon Mary E. Hildur. The allegations of the answer in that respect were not therefore established.
It is next contended that the deed given by Frank O. Hildur to Mary E. Hildur on December 17, 1937, was procured by fraud, duress and mistake. The evidence shows that Frank O. Hildur had held the title to the east half of the quarter-section involved here since 1893. He also acquired title to one-fourth of the west half subject to the life estate of Mary E. Hildur, by the deed of July 18, 1935, heretofore discussed in this opinion. It is apparent that
The decree of the trial court ordering a partition of the lands involved was in all respects correct and is
Affirmed.