78 N.Y.S. 189 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The complaint was dismissed upon the opening of the case by counsel. The action is for trover. The plaintiffs sue as the committee of Victoria Berger, ail incompetent person, and the complaint alleges that on the 22d day of October, 1900, the defendants unlawfully took and removed from her possession certain chattels then belonging to her, -for the value of which judgment was demanded. On the opening of the case the counsel for plaintiffs stated that the incompetent had been judicially declared insane during a period of time overreaching the transaction in question; that the property had been taken by the defendants pursuant to a conspiracy and under color of a chattel mortgage which the incompetent had executed to secure a loan of less than ten per cent of the value of the property; that when she executed the chattel mortgage she was “ wholly and absolutely insane and unable to understand the nature of any business transaction, and that the defendants knew this at the time the chattel mortgage was executed.” The dismissal of the complaint was based upon the theory that such a mortgage was not absolutely void, but was subject to the election of affirmance or repudiation by the insane person upon recovery, or by the committee when appointed; and that up to the time of such election, the instrument being valid and binding as to them, no act of the defendants authorized by the terms of the mortgage could be regarded as tortious. ■
While the authorities are not entirely harmonious on the question whether the cotitracts of a lunatic are absolutely void or merely voidable, I think it may' be said that where both insanity and the legal presumption of insanity exist, the act of procuring the possession of the property of the lunatic by one having full knowledge
The case of Van Deusen v. Sweet (51 N. Y. 378) appears to have been decided upon the theory that a deed executed by one non compos mentis is absolutely void independently of the nature of the presumption existing at the time. It was there held that where a defendant in an action to recover the possession of real property claims under such a deed, the fact of the incapacity of the grantor may be shown by plaintiff to defeat such claim, although no fraud is alleged and such incapacity had not been legally or judicially determined at the time of or prior to the execution of the deed. It was further held that the plaintiff was not obliged to resort to an equity action to set aside the deed. The court said (p. 384): “ The
Commenting upon this decision in the more recent case of Aldrich v. Bailey (132 N. Y. 85) the court said (at p. 87): “ The General Term held that, under the complaint filed in that action, it may be found that' Paine was insane at the time he executed the deed to Roble, and if he was, his deed was absolutely void and no title would pass, under the authority of Van Deusen v. Sweet (51 N. Y. 378). Assuming for the purposes of this case that the rule is there correctly stated, and that a deed would be not merely voidable, but absolutely ’ void when executed by an insane person, yet under the rule in that case a deed is absolutely void only when it appears that the person executing it was at the time so deprived of his mental faculties as to be wholly, absolutely and completely unable to understand or' comjarehend the nature of the transaction.” It is to be noted that in the case at bar the opening of counsel was broad enough to include the qualification to the rule in Van Deusen v. Sweet, as expressed in Aldrich v. Bailey.
In the case of Goodyear v. Adams (5 N. Y. Supp. 275) Van Deusen v. Sweet appears to be cited in support of the doctrine that a deed executed and acknowledged by an insane person is absolutely void at law, and if not taken in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, will not be upheld in equity, even in favor of a mortgagee of the grantee. This case was not only unanimously affirmed by the Court of Appeals (119 N. Y. 650), but was affirmed on the opinion delivered at the General Term.
In Brown v. Miles (61 Hun, 453) the court said (at p. 456): “ It
It would serve no useful purpose to analyze the cases where the contrary of the proposition under consideration has been apparently held. They may possibly be reconciled by the suggestion that the determination of the question depends upon whether or not the contract is executed under conditions in which the law presumes sanity or insanity. But in most, if not all of them, the qualification is made that to justify the assertion that the contract is not void, it must be made in good faith and without knowledge, either actual or constructive on the part of the individual contracting with the lunatic, of the existence of the mental incapacity. Here all that is really necessary to decide is that a conveyance of property at less than one-tenth of its value, procured from a lunatic who is totally incapable of understanding the transaction by one who knows of the infirmity and takes advantage of it in order to obtain the property, transfers no valid title; that the act of so acquiring the possession is tortious, and that an action of trover for its value may
The language of the court-in Baird v. Howard 51 Ohio St. 57, 65) seems applicable: “ It thus appeared not mérely that a contract had been made, but. that the defendant had secured the possession of the plaintiff’s property by knowingly taking, advantage of the latter’s temporary incapacity. Had possession been taken while the plaintiff’s senses were overcome by sleep, no one would deny that such a possession was wrongful. The difference between the character of a possession secured by- the latter method' and one deliberately obtained through the medium of an invalid contract, made with one whose senses the possessor knew at the time were Stupefied by excessive intoxication, is one of degree rather than principle. That in the former case the transaction would involve a trespass and present.none of the features peculiar to contracts, while in the latter case. it took the form of a contract, is a distinction possessing little, if any, materiality in • this connection. The fraud inhering in, the one should be deemed a substantial equivalent to the force. involved in the other method of obtaining possession. Each is wrongful. To secure the possession of property by means of a contract made, with its owner, by one who at the time knew him to be incapable of entering into a contract, constitutes a fraud.”
The complaint need not allege a demand, nor set forth the facts by .which the conversion was accomplished. (Thurston v. Blanchard, 22 Pick. 18; Green v. Russell, 5 Hill, 183; Decker v. Mathews, 12 N. Y. 313; Chapin v. Merchants' Nat. Bank, 31 Hun, 529; Schmidt v. Garfield Nat. Bank, 64 id. 298; Hutchinson v. Whitmore, 90 Mich. 255; Duggan v. Wright, 157 Mass. 228.). . ' _
■ The judgment and order should be reversed.
All concurred.
. Judgment and order reversed' and new trial granted, costs to abide the event. ■ •
L’Amoureux v. Crosby, 2 Paige, 422; Wadsworth v. Sharpsteen, 8 N. Y. 388; .2 R. S. 1094, § 10.— [Rep.
128 N. Y. 312.— [Rep.