(After stating the foregoing facts.) We cannot agree with the plaintiffs that the evidence in this case demands a verdict in their favor. While it is true that in
Lankford
v.
Holton,
187
Ga.
94, 102 (
The record in this case contains testimony by the defendant, and by several witnesses introduced in her behalf, that, at various times shortly before and shortly after the execution of the deed in question, Earnest Pantone was not mentally capable of making a valid contract.
There was introduced in evidence the following excerpt from the report of an autopsy performed on Earnest Pantone after his death: “Since admission the patient’s diabetes has been most difficult to control and has required daily regulation of both *309 diet and insulin therapy. His general condition has generally gone down hill and the disease in his lungs has continued to spread. On May 1, 1948, patient had a mild pulmonary hemorhage, and since that time has had frequent bleeding at irregular intervals; he continues a steady down-hill course; failing to respond to any type of treatment, and his condition gradually became toxic and his condition was frequently irrational and semi-stuporous. On July 16, 1948, he was declared incompetent by a psychiatric consultant. Patient gradually went into a coma and ceased to breathe at four fifty-two p. m., August 2, 1948.”
There was also introduced a report dated July 17, 1948, made by Dr. John D. Campbell, to the Medical Director, Veterans Hospital, in part as follows “Psychiatric Examination of Earnest Pantone, 60, C2687383. Patient is a sixty-year-old ex-railroad worker lying quietly in -bed and earnestly doing his best to co-operate in this examination. He speaks slowly and frequently, admits frankly he does not remember certain dates. He states he worked for the Seaboard Railway from 1909 to 1918 when he went into the- army. Since 1918, however, he can give no accurate dates. For instance, he gives the month now as October and is unable to even guess the year. He does not know that Truman is President of the United States. On other subjects, the patient is confused and disoriented. At times he fabricates answers. He is unable to give a good discussion of his property and what he plans to do with it. He vaguely remembers doing some business recently with his brothers, but in doing this he says he slipped out of the hospital, went to Americus, did the business in a hotel in Americus, and slipped back into the hospital. Patient also states delusional ideas regarding procedure in the hospital; saying they ride the patients around in carts all night and bring them back in the mornings. He is utterly unable to perform even simple arithmetic problems. Diagnosis: Psychiatrically, Patient is psycotic. Psycosis should probably be classified as psycosis with organic disease. Mental illness is secondary to the disease, tuberculosis and probably also some arteriosclerosis. He is incompetent.”
Dr. Campbell testified by deposition: His examination of Earnest Pantone was made on July 16, 1948, 22 days after the execution of the deed in question, and: “I don’t think this illness *310 came on suddenly; as a matter of fact, this mental condition was considered to be an organic mental illness and secondary to a great extent to his physical diseases which were, as I was advised, diabetes, tuberculosis and some arteriosclerosis; his mental condition was based upon actual damaged brain tissue such as-results from poor circulation like to [you] get in arteriosclerosis and any mental mental disease that is organic would have to be based on some actual brain damage; I would say that a mental disease of that nature is progressive in its nature; my interpretation of incompetency is a man who is unable to carry on his business or take responsibility as a citizen in a responsible manner; it would be difficult for me to conceive of him having been in that condition at least relatively speaking for less than two or three months; usually these organic mental diseases are accompanied by mental deterioration which goes on over a long period of time, months or even years; to have reached the stage of mental derangement in which I found him, I would think in my opinion that he could have had this condition as long as a year or more in a relative degree; from a disease of that nature a man deteriorates slowly; . . I don’t think he was able to make an important business deal within a month from the time I examined him; . . I think it was very likely that his mental deterioration began several months and possibly a year or more than a year before the time I examined him, because I could not conceive of a person with this sort of mental deterioration getting that way in just a few weeks or even in two or three months;'cerebral arterioscleros[is] works slowly in producing its mental deterioration; the diagnosis I made the day I examined him was psycosis with organic disease; that means that we attributed his mental illness to the three organic diseases he had, diabetes, tuberculosis, and cerebral arteriosclerosis.”
There was also introduced in evidence excerpts from the doctors’ progress notes with reference to Earnest Pantone while in the Veterans Hospital Forty-Eight, and from notes kept by nurses attending him, showing that during practically all the time after May 8, 1948, he was a very sick man; that he was “confused”, “irrational”, “disoriented”, “incontinent”, “semistuporous”, or “talking at random” on the dates of May 11, 13, 15, 20, 21, 22, 26, June 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19,' *311 20, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, July 2, 8, 9, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, and 25.
The issue as to contractual capacity is to be determined by the condition of the grantor’s mind at the time the deed was executed
(Dicken
v. Johnson, 7
Ga.
484;
Terry
v.
Buffington,
11
Ga.
337 (
While it is true that this court has held — in a number of cases involving the probate of a will, including
Hill
v.
Deal,
185
Ga.
42 (
Under our procedure it is the province of the jury to pass upon issues of fact
(Carnegie
v.
Carnegie,
206
Ga.
77,
In view of the evidence in behalf of the defendant, which we have set out at some length, and under the rulings above announced, this court cannot hold that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial, for, if there be some evidence to support the verdict, the judgment of the trial court over
*313
ruling a motion for a new trial based on the ground that the verdict is contrary to the evidence will not be disturbed.
Stevens
v.
Middlebrooks,
77
Ga.
81;
Thompson
v.
Fouts,
203
Ga. 522
(
Judgment affirmed.
