163 Ga. 553 | Ga. | 1927
Returnable to the June term, 1923, of the superior court of DeKalb County, Mrs. Helen E. Taitón and Miss Ruth M. Tuxworth, plaintiffs in error herein, filed their equitable petition against Mrs. Mabel T. Richardson and Robert Tuxworth, individually and as administratrix and administrator, respectively, of the estate of William Tuxworth, deceased, and J. J. Richardson, alleging that they, plaintiffs, and Mabel T. Richardson and Robert Tuxworth were brothers and sisters, being the children of William Tuxworth, deceased, and his sole heirs at law, and that defendant J. J. Richardson was the husband of Mabel T. Richardson and the son-in-law of the said William Tuxworth, deceased. In that peti
It was further alleged in the petition that although the deeds executed as above set forth each specified a consideration of $2,-500.00, no such consideration was paid to the grantor, and that in thus obtaining said deeds said defendants imposed upon the said William Tuxworth, took advantage of his weakened physical and mental condition at a time when he was unable to resist and incapable of understanding or knowing what he .was doing, and thereby perpetrated a fraud on the said William Tuxworth and upon plaintiffs in error herein, his heirs at law. Other allegations were made in the petition to show that the deeds were void and should be set aside. Plaintiffs sought cancellation of the deeds and to have the property conveyed by them declared to be the property of the estate of the grantor.
To this petition the defendants, who are the defendants in error here, filed their answer denying the facts alleged in the petition which tended to show the invalidity of the deeds and that they were executed while the grantor was mentally and physically incapable of contracting. In the answer it is averred that William Tuxworth was in control of his faculties and well knew what he was doing at the time of executing the deeds. Other facts and circumstances are set forth in the answer to meet the contentions of the plaintiffs and to show that they are not entitled to the relief sought. Subsequently to the filing of the suit the petition was
At the trial, after the introduction.of evidence and the charge of ■the court, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled and they excepted. The motion is based upon the usual general grounds and certain special grounds contained in an amendment to the original motion.
In the first special ground of the motion error is assigned upon the following charge of the court: “Gentlemen, I will read to you a section of the Code: ‘An incapacity to contract may coexist with a capacity to make a will; the amount of intellect necessary to constitute testamentary capacity is that which is necessary to enable the party to have a decided and rational desire as to the disposition of his property. His desire must be decided, in distinction from the wavering, vacillating fancies of a distempered intellect. It must be rational, in distinction from the ravings of a madman, the silly pratings of an idiot, the childish whims of imbecility, or the excited vagaries of a drunkard.’” In the second special ground complaint is made of the following charge: “I have read you, gentlemen, the section that gives you the amount of capacity to make a will; that is, the capacity of one to give away his property.” And in the third special ground error is assigned upon this excerpt from the charge: “I charge you, gentlemen, further, that in order for a party to have capacity to make a will, he must have sufficient mental ability to comprehend; that is, to know what he is doing, and to understand the nature, of his acts. If he had that, gentlemen, the law presumes that he had capacity; that is, if he knew what he was doing, if he had mental capacity to comprehend and know what he was doing, and the nature of his acts, he would be capable of making a voluntary deed.”
While the instructions just quoted might properly be .given to a jury in the trial of an issue as to whether or not a deed in question is valid or invalid, where it is contended, in a suit to have such deed set aside, that the grantor was mentally incapable of contracting, nevertheless it was error for the court to give such instructions without pointing out that these principles relating to
The ruling made in the second headnote requires no elaboration. Judgment reversed.