30 N.E.2d 64 | Ill. | 1940
On September 22, 1928, Toliver L. Turley, conveyed 115 acres of land in Logan county and 15 acres in Sangamon county to his cousin Luther Turley, as trustee, for certain uses: (1) To mortgage or sell for the payment of any of *572 the grantor's debts; (2) to pay the net income to the grantor during his lifetime; (3) to use any portion of the principal for the support of the grantor; (4) to manage, invest, reinvest, etc., and (5) to convert into money at the grantor's death and divide equally, one-half to Francis Loren Turley, son of a deceased nephew of the grantor, and the other half in equal shares to Jessie May Turley and Marshal H. Turley, children of the trustee. The grantor, Toliver L. Turley, died intestate April 28, 1933, leaving neither widow nor children nor descendants of any child or children, but only collaterals and descendants of collaterals, all of whom are parties to this suit. A few days after the death of the grantor this bill was filed seeking to set aside the above deed of trust because of the alleged insanity of Toliver L. Turley, and the claimed existence of a confidential relation. Exceptions to a master's report were overruled and a decree entered in accordance with his recommendations that the bill of complaint was without equity and should be dismissed. This appeal is from that decree.
Several hundred pages of testimony were taken, but most of it is of a trifling and inconclusive nature. It is said on the one hand to prove hallucinations or delusions that Toliver Turley had wrong notions about corn rows being crooked and the existence of Canada thistles. On the other hand, there is evidence as to his exact knowledge of the price of corn and the condition of his bank accounts. The substantial evidence, which is not materially disputed on either side, indicates that in June, 1928, Toliver Turley's mind became impaired to such an extent that it was necessary to take him to the Norberry Sanatorium at Jacksonville, where he remained until a few days before the execution of the deed in question. It is to be inferred from the record that Turley voluntarily entered this institution to secure the dismissal of a petition for the appointment of a conservator, which was then pending. It is clear from the evidence that he was then suffering from delusions of *573 persecution; that he believed that he was being followed by various persons who had designs against him, none of whom, however, were believed to be any of his relatives. It seems that at various times he adopted devious routes and devices in going from one place to another from fear of his supposed persecutors.
Doctor Clark and Doctor Norberry and Miss Iva Lee Todd, the head nurse of the sanatorium, each testified at some length, and the substance of their testimony is that Turley was suffering from maniac depressive psychosis. The doctors at the sanitarium testified that his condition was improved when he left the hospital and returned home shortly before the date of the deed. Doctor Perry testified that he examined Turley a day or two after the date of the deed and that that examination disclosed little, but that in the following weeks he examined him further and found him to be suffering from the same kind of psychosis described by Doctors Clark and Norberry. The record is silent as to what happened between the approximate date of the deed and April of 1933, but it does appear on the latter date Toliver Turley went to Kansas to visit a cousin. While there he became violently insane and was placed in a padded cell where he beat his head upon a stone floor and was kept confined until he was brought back to Illinois, where he died the same month.
On the whole record, it is entirely clear that Toliver Turley suffered from a maniac depressive phychosis, which began sometime prior to June of 1928, followed a normal course and ended with his death in 1933. While there is a general presumption of sanity, yet, when a condition of insanity is shown to exist it is presumed that this continues unless the disorder is of such a character as to indicate that it was probably of a temporary duration. (Emery v. Hoyt,
The record shows that Toliver Turley's desire to benefit the children of Luther and one other son of a deceased nephew was of long standing and based upon real, even if vindictive, reasons entirely unconnected with any delusion or insanity. His troubles with his other relatives date back at least twenty years prior to the execution of this deed. In 1908, Toliver Turley was in trouble over a stabbing affair, which was disposed of in the Appellate Court of this State in Spenler v. Turley,
In Harrington v. Travis,
The decree is affirmed.
Decree affirmed. *576