167 Ga. 537 | Ga. | 1928
G.. L. Sims as guardian' of L. W. Sims, alleged to be insane, brought his petition against A. S. Sims, to have canceled a deed executed on February 15, 1926, by L. W. Sims, conveying a described tract of land to A. S. Sims, on the grounds that the grantor was insane at the time of executing the deed, and was therefore incapable of “acting or doing for himself, and did not understand the consequences of his act, which was well known to the defendant;” and (in paragraph 6 of the petition) that, “while said deed recites a consideration of $1500, petitioner charges that this sum was fictitious, and no consideration whatever was paid for the execution of the deed.” Upon the trial, and after evidence was introduced, the plaintiff offered the following amendment, which was allowed: “That the execution of the deed referred to in the 4th paragraph of plaintiff’s petition was procured by undue influence exercised by A. S. Sims, grantee, over the grantor, L. W. Sims, by taking advantage of the impaired mental condition of the grantor existing at the time and known to the grantee, and making him believe that grantor owed grantee for board in a sum equal to the value of the land conveyed; whereas, as a matter of fact, said grantee was in fact heavily indebted at the time to the
The original motion for new trial contains the usual general grounds. In the second ground of the amendment to the motion error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “If you believe from the evidence that L. W. Sims had been weakened by sickness and disease, and that defendant occupied a close and confidential position with L. W. Sims, and that A. S. Sims exercised sufficient control over L. W. Sims to destroy his full agency, and constrained him to execute this deed when he would not have done so if such control had not been exercised, and that such influence, if any, was of such power that it substituted the will of A. S. Sims for that of L. W. Sims, you should find for the plaintiff.” This charge was substantially correct. It stated a correct proposition of law applicable to a certain phase of the evidence introduced in the case. ' If the movant desired a further charge upon this subject, submitting to the jury other features of the evidence which would have authorized them to find that undue influence had been exercised by the defendant to bring about the execution of the deed in question, a timely written request for such charge should have been made.
In another ground of the motion error is assigned upon the refusal of a request to give in charge to the jury the following “I charge you, gentlemen of the jury, that when a man is not possessed of that degree of mind and reason equal to a full and clear understanding of the nature of his act — if he can not distinguish between a sale for value and a gift, for example, — and further, when he has no clear and full understanding of the consequences of his act, — for example, is not cognizant that it strips him of his property and vests it in another, or disinherits his children, he is to be held and taken as incapable of consenting, and is insane.
Grounds 6, 7, and 8 of the motion for new trial are as follows: (6) “Because the court failed to present to the jury the vital issue made by plaintiff in his petition, that the deed sought to be canceled was without consideration; it being undisputed that the only consideration for such deed was meals furnished and services rendered by the grantee in said deed, and the law raising the
(7) “Because the court failed to charge the jury that they were entitled to consider the want of consideration of said deed, in connection with weakness of mind of the said L. W. Sims at the time of the execution of said deed, and of his then confidential relation with his brother, the grantee, in said deed; weakness of mind accompanied by inadequacy or want of consideration and confidential relations authorizing the remedy of cancellation. Notwithstanding the vital and controlling character of such issue, the jury under the charge of the court as given was unable to pass mpon it. ”
(8) “Because the court failed to instruct the jury upon the controlling issue in the case, that where the grantor in a deed is weakened from disease in body, mind, and will power, and is under the influence of a relative who obtained the deed from him, it should be made to appear that the transaction was fair, honest, and free from any undue or improper influence of the controlling mind; and that a transaction under such circumstances will be scrutinized closely by the courts, and if there be the slightest scintilla of fraud, it will be set aside.” The failure of the court to charge more fully upon the issues referred to in these three grounds of the motion does not require the grant of a new trial. The essential issues referred to were sufficiently presented to the jury by the court’s instructions; and the court was not bound, in the absence of a written request, to present all collateral and subsidiary issues. The two vital issues in the case were, first, as to whether the grantor in the deed was insane at the time of the execution of the deed; and the jury could not'have failed to understand from the court’s charge that if he was insane at the time of the execution of the instrument, it was rendered void by that fact. And the other vital issue, as to whether or not the execution of the paper was induced and brought about by the exertion on the part of the grantee of undue influence, was also presented to the jury; and they must have understood from the charge that if the proof showed that the instrument was the result of undue influence exerted upon the grantor by the grantee, this latter deed would be
The rulings in headnotes 4 and 5 require no elaboration.
In another ground of the motion error is assigned upon the following excerpt from the charge: “The fairness and good faith and conduct of the defendant should have no weight or bearing upon you.” Standing alone, this charge might be objectionable; but it ought not to be separated from its context. When the court gave the instruction contained in the sentence just quoted, he was dealing with the contention of the plaintiff that the grantor in the deed was insane at the time of the execution of the instrument; and in dealing with that contention the court charged as follows: “I charge you further, that whether or not the other party to the contract knew that he was dealing with an insane person, and whether he as an ordinarily reasonable and prudent person could or could not have discovered such insanity or mental incapacity, would be immaterial and have no effect upon the contract and would not make it valid and binding. Likewise, the fairness and good faith and conduct of defendant should have no weight or bearing upon you. The deed of an insane person, though made without fraud and for an adequate consideration, may be voided.” It will be seen that the court was charging the jury upon the clear, well-defined issue as to whether or not the making of this deed was the act of an insane person. And it is true, as a matter of law, that the fairness and good faith and conduct of the defendant would not affect this precise question; for if the defendant took a conveyance to property from a person who was insane at the time of the execution of the deed, the good faith and conduct of the defendant could not affect the question of the validity of the instrument; it would be void though the fairness and good faith of the defendant was beyond question and his conduct unimpeachable. The conduct of the defendant was brought in question upon other issues made by the pleadings and the evidence, and was submitted
Another ground of the motion is based upon evidence alleged to be newly discovered. That ground is stated in the following language: “That said L. W. Sims, since the rendition of said verdict, or shortly prior thereto, has recovered his sanity, and is now totally unconscious of having executed the deed sought to be canceled, such evidence appearing from the affidavit hereto attached of the said L. W. Sims, and his restoration to sanity appearing from the affidavits of George L. Sims and M. M. Hurst hereto attached, and the credibility of said L. W. Sims, George L. Sims, and M. M. Hurst being attested by affidavits also hereto attached, and said affidavit of George L. Sims showing that he did not know and could not have discovered by reasonable diligence the restoration of said L. W. Sims to sanity before the rendition of said verdict, and the testimony and affidavits of J. B.' Burnside and F. A. McWhorter, being all of the counsel for the plaintiff on the trial of said case, being also attached, showing their like want of knowledge and inability to ascertain such restoration of sanity before the rendition of said verdict.” We do not think the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial so far as it is based upon this ground. The grantor in the deed, who, as it is contended, was insane at the time of its execution, does not depose positively that he did not sign such a deed, but merely deposes that he “has no recollection of having signed such a deed; . . that if he did sign the deed to the land, he was not conscious of so doing.” This testimony at most is cumulative testimony to the fact of the want of mind and understanding at the date of the execution of the deed. Other witnesses testified at the trial as to the insanity of L. W. Sims at the date of the execution of the paper; and we can not see that the addition of the testimony of the person alleged to have been a lunatic, to the testimony of other witnesses as to the fact of his lunacy or insanity, would probably have the effect of changing the verdict rendered in this ease.
Judgment affirmed on the main bill of exceptions; cross-bill dismissed.