4 Neb. 115 | Neb. | 1875
The plaintiff instituted suit in equity against the defendants to foreclose a mortgage, and his petition is
Lord Coke defines non compos mentis “ to be a person who was of good and sound memory, and by the visitation of God had lost it,” or “he that by sickness, grief, or other accident, wholly loseth his understanding.” Beverly's Case, 4 Coke, 123. Coke Litt., 247a. And Lord Hardwicke says that “being non compos — oí unsound mind — are certain terms in law, and import a total deprivation of sense. Now weakness does not carry this idea along with it; but courts of law understand what is meant by non compos, or insane, as they are words of a determinate signification.” Ex parte Barnsley, 3 Atk., 168. And where statutory provisions do not change this doctrine, the current of authority seems to .be uniform in sustaining the rule as above stated; and therefore in legal parlance, these terms mean in respect to the condition of the mind of a person, a total want of understanding.
Deeds of all such persons are void; but mere imbecility or weakness of mind, however great, will not avoid a deed or contract unless there be evidence to show a total want of reason or understanding, because, as is said in Blanchard v. Nestle, reported in 3 Denio, 37,
But it is said that under the rulings of the court, in the cases of Ridgeway v. Darwin, 8 Vesey, 66, and Ex parte Cranmer, 12 Vesey, 445, a different doctrine was laid down which now prevails. It seems that in these
We think that under the above rules of law, the evidence taken in the case at bar falls far short of showing a total want of understanding in the defendant at the time she executed the mortgage. B. Teed, the notary public, who is the subscribing witness, and who took the acknowledgment of the parties to the instrument, testifiés that he conversed with her at the time; asked her about her health; that lie put to her the usual formal questions in taking her acknowledgment, and that she answered in a natural manner, and just as she would when well. This evidence is not at all impaired by that of the daughter of the defendant, who thought her mother was at the time “childish,” which means simplicity, or weakness of mind. The term “childish” • certainly expresses a degree of reason or intelligence, and while this witness may have believed it was of a very low degree, others might have greatly differed from her opinion and placed it much higher; hence we see the necessity and the correctness of the rule, that there is no grade of understanding between the highest and lowest which incapacitates a person from making a contract, when no fraud is proven. In this case, neither fraud, delusion, nor undue influence was set up as ground-of defense, or attempted to be proved. Indeed, there .is not the slightest proof tending to show that any artifice, improper influence or fraud was practiced on this defendant to induce her at the time to execute the instrument.
Ag&init is said, and urged as ground of defense, that the
Decree affirmed.