24 S.E. 217 | N.C. | 1896
The plaintiffs alleged that one Lawrence Brown, late of the city of Wilmington, county and State aforesaid, died on 22 April, A.D. 1892, intestate, and that they were his only heirs at law; that prior to his death, to-wit, on 14 January, A.D. 1892, the said Lawrence Brown executed to the defendant a deed conveying certain real estate, therein described and fully set out in the complaint, and that on said day the said Lawrence Brown transferred and set over to the defendant all of his personal property without any consideration; that at the time of the execution of the said deed and transfer of the said personal property the said Lawrence Brown was mentally incompetent to make a deed or any other disposition of his property; and that the execution of said deed and the transfer of the said personal property was procured by undue influence exerted by the defendant and other persons named in the complaint over the mind and will of the said Lawrence Brown.
The defendant admitted the execution of the deed and (483) transfer of the personal property, and denied that the said Lawrence Brown was mentally incompetent to execute said deed or make a valid transfer of the personal property or that the same was procured by any undue influence.
The following issues were submitted to the jury:
1. "Are the plaintiffs the heirs at law of Lawrence Brown?
2. "Are the plaintiffs the only heirs at law of Lawrence Brown?
3. "At the time of the execution of the deed to the defendant, was Lawrence Brown of sound mind and disposing memory?
4. "Was the said deed obtained by undue influence exercised by the defendant Leo Haid, Daniel O'Connor, Rev. Father Dennen or any layman of the Catholic Church, or any of them?"
There was much testimony bearing upon the third issue.
Among the instructions prayed for by the plaintiff and tendered by the court on the third issue was the following: "That while old age itself or physical infirmity or mental weakness is not sufficient by itself to render a man incompetent to make a deed or execute a contract, yet old age, physical and mental weakness raise a strong presumption of incompetency; and if the jury believe that at the time this deed was executed Lawrence Brown was sixty-four years of age, was suffering from physical disease which had developed four years previous thereto, which had grown in strength and virulence up to the *296 time of the execution of this deed, and from the effect of which he died within three months thereafter, and that this old age and physical infirmity had weakened his mind, then, this deed and other disposition of his property being a bounty and made without consideration, there arises the presumption of law that he was incompetent to (484) execute said deed or make said contract, and the burden of proof is upon the defendant to satisfy the jury that he was competent; and if the jury are not so satisfied, then the deed and contract is null and void, and the jury must find the third issue `No.'" Defendant excepted.
The jury responded to the first issue, "Yes"; to the second issue, "Yes"; to the third issue, "No," and, under the direction of the court, made no response to the fourth issue.
The court refused defendant's motion for a new trial, and he appealed from the judgment rendered for plaintiff. We dispose of this case by considering the instructions of the court upon the third issue. That issue was in these words, "Was the said Lawrence Brown, deceased, at the time of making the said deed, of sound mind and disposing memory?" which the jury answered "No." After numerous witnesses were examined on the question, the court charged the jury that the burden of this issue was upon the plaintiff "to satisfy them by a preponderance of proof that Lawrence Brown, at the time of executing the deed to the defendant, was not of such a state of mind as to comprehend the nature of his act, to understand what he was doing and to know the direct consequence of his act * * *; that if the jury believe from the whole of the evidence that at the time of executing the deed he had sufficient mind or mental capacity to understand what he was doing, what property he was conveying, to whom he was conveying it, and for what purpose the conveyance was made, they should answer the third issue `Yes.'"
(485) In the latter part of the charge his Honor instructed the jury: "And if the jury believe that at the time this deed was executed Lawrence Brown was sixty-four years of age, was suffering from physical disease which had developed four years previous thereto, which had grown in strength and virulence up to the time of the execution of this deed, and from the effect of which he died within three months thereafter, and that this old age and physical infirmity had weakened his mind, then, this deed and other disposition of his *297 property being a bounty and made without consideration, there arises thepresumption of law that he was incompetent to execute the deed or to make the contract, and the burden of proof is upon the defendant to satisfy the jury that he was competent; and if the jury are not so satisfied, then the deed and contract are null and void, and the jury must find the third issue `No.'" The defendant excepted.
In the latter part of the charge quoted there is error. The capacity or incapacity to make a deed or contract is a question of fact to be ascertained by the jury and not one of law. The law does not presume that a man sixty-four years of age is incompetent to contract, nor that one suffering from physical disease from which he dies in a few months, even if his mind had been weakened by suffering, is incapacitated to contract or convey his property. His actual condition under such and similar circumstances is the matter to be inquired of by the jury. The law cannot declare or presume in the matter until facts are found or admitted. At what age, for instance, will the law presume incompetency? Would it do so at fifty, sixty or seventy-five years? How much physical suffering and what degree of weakness of mind would the law require to exist before it would presume incompetency?
It does not help the case to say that, although a part of the charge is erroneous, there is another part of the charge on the same point which was correct, and that as a whole there is no error, (486) because the jury would be presumed to have obeyed the correct portion. S. v. Fuller,
Venire de novo.
Cited: Edwards v. R. R.,