104 Ala. 642 | Ala. | 1894
The original bill filed by the appellants, the children and heirs-at-law of Reuben A. Pike, deceased, prays the vacation of a deed conveying lands, which he in his life time had executed to his brother, Joseph C. Pike, the appellee. The deed, as produced and exhibited by the appellee, is an ordinary deed of bargain and sale, bearing date December 17th, 1879, reciting as its consideration two hundred dollars paid to the grantor, the receipt of which is acknowledged, and conveys a tract of land containing one hundred and sixty acres, described according to the Governmental surveys. It purports on the day of its date to have been acknowledged before a justice of the peace, who appends a formal certificate of acknowledgment, and also bears the attestation of a subscribing witness.
The material allegations of the bill are, that at the execution of the conveyance, the grantor was insane, having become so some time prior thereto, and had been confined in the State Insane Asylum, from which he escaped. Subsequently, he was again confined in the asylum, and that his insanity was continuous until his death.
The answer of the appellee denies that the grantor was ever legally declared insane, but admits that he was twice confined in the asylum, and avers that he was discharged therefrom as cured. Avers that he was sane at the execution of the conveyance, affirms that he then had full capacity of contracting, the fairness of the transaction, and the adequacy of the consideration for the conveyance. There was much evidence taken by the parties, and on final hearing, on the pleadings and on the evidence, the chancellor rendered a decree dismissing the bill, from which the appeal is taken.
The general proposition on which the bill is founded, that a court of equity, at the instance of the heirs of an insane grantor, will intervene and vacate a deed conveying lands, which he may have executed while the insanity was existing, has not been controverted. In such controversy, the general rule prevails, that the presump-, tion is of sanity, and the burthen of proving insanity rests upon the party alleging it. But if insanity not connected with or traceable to a cause in its nature temporary ; general or confirmed insanity be shown; the presumption is of its continuance, and the burthen of
The fact is fully proved, if not undisputed, that prior to the execution of the conveyance, the grantor was insane. The insanity did not originate from, nor was it connected with or traceable to any temporary cause. He had not suffered from any violent disease ; nor had he been the victim of any bodily injury; nor had he “fallen into some frenzy, upon some accidental cause, which was afterwards taken away.” The first manifestation of the malady was early in the year 1875, when changes in his conduct attracted the observation of his wife. Soon he was tortured day and night by the apprehension that unknown persons were watching for an opportunity to take his life. The apprehension, unreal and unreasoning, intensified, until he was possessed with the belief, because his wife did not share in it, that she was in league with these persons, and he attempted to take her life. Eventually, he became so violent and uncontrolable, that the safety of his family and relatives was endangered, and by proceedings before the judge of the court of probate of the county of his residence, they procured his admission to the Insane Asylum, as an indigent patient. He remained in the asylum about six months, when he returned to his home. Whether he was discharged, or escaped from the Asylum, is a matter of doubt. Soon after his return from the asylum, a separation from his wife occurred, because of her apprehension of her personal safety ; and thereafter until his confinement in the asylum the second time, in June, 1882, he resided mostly with his father and mother, the object of their care, solicitude and watchfulness. The second time he remained in the asylum two years or more, until the death of his father, when the appellee went for him, and he came to the home of his mother, where he resided, suffering from bodily disease, lingering in a condition of languor, until his cleath some two
General, confirmed derangement being shown, the effect is to invert the order of proof and presumption. The burthen is cast upon the appellee, to show that at the execution of the conveyance, there was, as it is termed, a lucid interval, an intermission of the derangement, a restoration of the grantor to his faculties, enabling him to comprehend intelligently, the nature and character of the transaction in which he was engaged. The evidence must be addressed to the time of the execution of the conveyance. Evidence that prior thereto, at times subsequent to the existence of the general derangement, (if such evidence may be fairly collected from the record), the grantor was sane, or had intermissions of the derangement, is unavailing, and can not be made the basis of an inference or presumption that he was sane at the execution of the conveyance. — 1 Whart. & Stille Medical Jurisprudence, sections 61-62; Saxon v. Whitaker, 30 Ala. 237. A lucid interval is in its nature temporary, and uncertain in its duration, and there can be no legal presumption of its continuance for a month, a day, or an hour. — Saxon v. Whitaker, 30 Ala. 237, supra.
The protection of the insane, requires that the evidence adduced in support of a lucid interval be examined with jealous scrutiny ; otherwise, fraud and imposition will be practiced upon them with impunity. In Attorney General v. Pa/rnther, 3 Brown Ch. 444, supra, it was said.
There are three witnesses produced by the appellee to show the mental condition of the grantor at the time of'the execution of the conveyance. The first is the mother of the grantor, with whom he was residing, and in whose house the conveyance was executed. It is uncertain whether her evidence refers to this conveyance, or to another which was executed, (or she supposed was executed), to the appellee and his father. And the evidence is not confined to the time of execution, but is expressed in the general words : “About the time Andy Pike made the deed” ; and ‘ ‘so far as I know Andy Pike’s mind was right as it had been all along at the time he made said deed to my husband and Jos. Pike”. The fact is not a matter of dispute, that the mind of the grantor had not “been right all along and the contention in support of the conveyance rests exclusively on the proposition that at the time of its execution, there was a lucid interval ; a restoration to sanity. The appellee, and the justice of the peace who prepared the conveyance, taking and certifying the acknowledgment of execution, concur in affirming the sanity of the grantor at the time of execution. We may concede all that can be claimed, that their relationship to him, their long and familiar intercourse with him, their opportunities of observing his general conduct, manner and appearance, and the intelligence they manifest, entitle their evidence to much of consideration. Between this evidence, and the evidence of Bennett, whose attestation as a subscribing witness the conveyance purports to bear, and that of his wife and others, relatives of the grantor and of the grantee, having equal opportunity of observation, and of acquiring knowledge of the facts to which they testify, and manifesting equal intelligence, there is a direct conflict.
We pass from an examination of the manner in which the conveyance was executed, and the circumstances at
The appellee purchased of the father the lands which he had purchased at the sale by the sheriff, and states that there was a balance of the purchase money remaining after satisfying the execution, which he promised to pay the ancestor of the appellants. So far as is shown he never informed the ancestor of the fact — never made any offer of payment to him — waited in silence, until his death and then paid it to the guardian of his infant children. We cannot ascertain from the evidence what was the amount of this balance. The two payments which he now insists he made aggregate five hundred 67-100 dollars, and we incline to the opinion that the amount of the balance due the ancestor from the sale made by the sheriff was five hundred dollars. However this may be, it is not shown affirmatively and satisfactorily that the purchase money, the consideration of the conveyance, was paid to the guardian, or paid for the use'of the grantor. It is not necessary, therefore, to consider when a court of equity, as a condition upon which an executed contract of a person insane will be vacated, may require a restoration of whatever such insane person may have received as the consideration of such contract.
We are satisfied that at the execution of this conveyance the grantor was not capable of executing a valid deed, or making a valid contract. The presence of a lucid interval is far from being shown by that measure of proof which the law demands ; and demands upon the highest considerations of right, of reason and of policy, if the transaction itself were beclouded with fewer suspicious circumstances.
The decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and a decree entered granting the appellants the appropriate relief. .
Reversed and rendered.