172 Ky. 80 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1916
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming in p.art and reversing in part.
The other action was against the appellee Elizabeth Lowe, widow of O. M. B. Lowe, and the appellees Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step, in which it was sought to set aside a deed conveying certain' lands, made to Elizabeth Lowe by the decedent December 14, 1900; the grounds of attack upon this deed being that he was mentally incompetent to make it, that it was without consideration and only invested the grantee with the title as trustee to the lands conveyed for the benefit of the grantor who, as alleged, continued until his death to claim the lands as his own and together with his wife conveyed parts thereof to their children, the appellees Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step by the deeds made them August 21st, 1909.
The material allegations of the petition in each case were denied by the answers filed thereto. By the judgment appealed from the petition in each of the consolidated actions was dismissed and appellees awarded their costs.
The evidence appearing in the record is voluminous and conflicting, that of appellants conducing to prove that at the time of the execution by the decedent, August 21, 1909, of the three deeds to the appellees Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step, respectively, /he was, if not of unsound mind, so weak of body and mind as to render him incapable of understanding the meaning of the deeds or the character or value of the
Down to the time of the paralytic attack the life of O. M. B. Lowe, according to the evidence, had been one of unusual activity. The fact that he reared and provided for the eleven children born to himself and wife and, in addition, accumulated a very considerable estate, consisting mainly of lands, convincingly shows that he was prior to the paralytic attack at least possessed of a fairly good mind, excellent judgment and strong willpower; and also, that he was both frugal and industrious. Several years before his illness and death he became involved in litigation with the heirs of one Golf over a large tract or several tracts of land, of which he and they both claimed to be the owners. The litigation extended over several years in the Pike circuit court and in the Court of Appeals, and though the action was won and the lands in controversy recovered by him in the end, it was not decided until shortly before his death. This protracted litigation put him to great expense, gave him much worry and doubtless helped to cause the paralytic attack and subsequent illness which resulted in his death. As he was more than seventy years of age when attacked by the illness referred to, the conclusion would not be unwarranted, even in the absence of testimony from medical experts, that the subsequent enfeebled condition of his mind was superinduced by the paralytic stroke of which he was the victim.
In addition to the evidence already mentioned, which was furnished in part by the appellants and in part by the neighbors and friends of O. M. B. Lowe, who have no interest in the property here in controversy, the circumstances attending the execution of the deeds must also be' considered. None of the appellants was present when the deeds to the appellees Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step were executed, or advised of their intended execution, but the latter were all present, and they alone were closely associated with their father
George M. Step, a deputy of the clerk of the Pike county court, who was called in by Tandy B. Lowe for that purpose, took the acknowledgments of the grantor and his wife to each of the three deeds. According to Step’s testimony, O. M. Lowe was lying on the bed when he g*ot there, where he remained during* the greater part of the time Step was in the house. He sat up, however, long* enough to sign his name to the deed to Tandy B. Lowe and make his mark to each of the other two deeds. When asked why O. M. B. Lowe had written his name to one of the deeds and signed the others by making his mark, Step testified that after so poorly writing his name to the deed to Tandy he was too weak and nervous to attempt to write it to the other two deeds, hence his mark was made to each of them. Step also testified that all of the three deeds were typewritten instruments, but they were not prepared in his presence nor did he know by whom they were prepared; that the three deeds embraced all the lands of which O. M. B. Lowe was the
The evidence for appellees, furnished by themselves and other witnesses, was all to the effect that O. M. B. Lowe was a man of strong mind and will-power who at no time permitted any interference with his business or plans. They admitted, without exception, that one side of his body was paralyzed in 1905 and that his physical health and strength were greatly impaired thereby,- but expressed the opinion that it did not seriously impair his mental faculties and that at the time of the execution of the deeds to the appellees, Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step, he had sufficient mind to comprehend the transactions and, in fact, dictated to Vanover, the draftsman of the deeds, the boundaries of the several tracts of land described therein. Other witnesses for appellees testified that in 1907, two years after he suffered the paralytic attack, he attended court at Pike-ville to be at the trial of his case against the doffs, travelled six miles horseback, the remainder of the long distance by rail, and after his arrival in Pikeville went upon the witness stand on the trial of his case and testified with great force and clearness. This, however, was two years before the execution of the three deeds to his children.
Blackburn, a witness for appellees, testified that in April, 1911, seven months before O. M. B. Lowe’s death, he as deputy clerk took his acknowledgment as one of the grantors to a deed conveying timber to one McCall and that he then had greater mental ability than he (Blackburn). O. M. B. Lowe’s capacity to execute the three deeds to his children at the time of their execution was also testified to by the appellee Elizabeth Lowe, his widow. Mr. Vanover also gave it as his opinion that O. M. B. Lowe was then competent to execute the deeds,
While tbe witnesses testifying in behalf of appellees were positive in their belief of O. M. B. Lowe’s competency of mind after tbe paralytic attack and down to tbe time of bis death, they failed to specifically contradict tbe positive testimony of appellants and their witnesses as to bis acts and conduct manifesting tbe peculiar delusions of mind to wbicb be was subject in tbe later years of bis life and, especially, about tbe time of tbe execution of tbe three deeds to bis children in question. Nor does any of appellees’ evidence tend to refute that of appellants as to the hostility of O. M. B. Lowe toward tbe appellants and bis partiality for bis son, tbe appellee Tandy B. Lowe, or tbe latter’s great influence over him. It is true that tbe evidence discloses few if any overt acts upon tbe part of Tandy showing tbe exercise of such influence, but it is shown by tbe unusual affection wbicb tbe father at all times manifested for him, bis praise of him to others, tbe fact that Tandy was entrusted for many years before bis death with the control of bis business, money and other property, and bis activity in procuring tbe execution of tbe deeds. In brief, it is our opinion that, considered as a whole, tbe weight of the evidence fairly leads to tbe conclusion that at tbe time of tbe execution of tbe three deeds to bis children, O. M. B. Lowe was mentally incompetent to know what be was doing or to understandingly dispose of bis property, and that in executing the deeds be was unduly influenced by bis son Tandy, whose constant attendance upon him and control of bis person and property afford
While it is true that the deed to the appellee Tandy B. Lowe contains a provision requiring him to support his father and mother for the remainder, of their lives and to pay his sister, Octavia Williamson, $400.00, the evidence shows that the father had abundant means for the support of himself and wife, consisting of money, a considerable amount of which was owned by him at the time of his death, and that the son did not in fact provide for his or his wife’s support after the execution of the deeds, as there was no necessity for his doing so. The $400.00 has not been paid by Tandy B. Lowe to his sister, Octavia Williamson, and if the deeds are set aside will not have to be paid by him. On the other hand, while the evidence shows that the appellants, prior tq the execution of the deeds in question, received advancements of money or property from their father, in no instance did the amount given to either of them, whether in lands or money, amount to more than a thousand or fifteen hundred dollars, whereas, by the deed of August 21, 1909, to Tandy B. Lowe, there was attempted to be conveyed him about 1,200 acres of land, worth from $50,000.00 to $75,000.00, by the deed to J. M. Lowe, 366 acres of land of the value of $12,000 or $15,000, and by the deed to Alice Lowe Step an equal quantity of land of like value. The inequality in the gifts thus made by O. M. B. Lowe to his children is a strong circumstance tending to show his hostile feeling toward the appellants, previously referred to in the opinion as being disclosed by other evidence appearing in the record.
In our opinion the facts here presented bring the conveyances to the appellees Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step from' their father clearly within the rule announced in King, etc. v. Burkhart, 167 Ky. 424; Miller v. Taylor, etc., 165 Ky. 463, and other cases in each of them cited, viz.:
“The law looks with suspicion upon the transfers of property by persons mentally or physically infirm to those having custody of them. Even when parties in good health stand in a confidential relation to each other, the burden is upon the stronger character who procures an advantage, to show that a transaction was fair; and relief will be afforded in equity in all such transactions in which influence has been acquired and abused, in which*88 confidence fias been reposed and betrayed. Allore v. Jewell, 94 U. S. 512. Tfie relief stands upon tfie general principle applying to all tfie varieties of relations in which dominion may be exercised by one person over another. Smith v. Kay, 7 H. L. Cas. 750; Tate v. Williamson, L. R. 2 Ch. 61.”
Tfie appellees named have failed in this case to relieve themselves of tfie burden imposed by tfie rule, supra. Tfie appellants’ attack upon tfie deed made to their mother by their father cannot, however, be sustained. That deed was made in 1900, five years before tfie grantor became paralyzed and eleven years before his death; and there is not a scintilla of evidence in tfie record that fie was then physically or mentally incompetent to make tfie conveyance. Tfie contention that tfie grantor was then threatened with debt and for that reason made tfie conveyance to defraud his creditors, and that it merely created a trust of which fie alone was tfie intended beneficiary, was not sustained by tfie evidence. But if these things were true, appellants, as the heirs at law of tfie grantor, could not complain of them. As fie could not have succeeded in setting aside tfie deed to his wife had such an attempt been made before his.death, appellants can have no greater right to do so than could have been exercised by him. Tfie claim of appellees that tfie gifts of money or property that were received by appellants from their father many years before his death were made by him and accepted by them with tfie understanding that they were in full of all they would be entitled to receive from his estate, if true, cannot be considered in determining whether tfie deeds here attacked should be set aside. Those are matters that cannot be determined until tfie father’s estate is distributed.
For tfie reasons indicated, tfie judgment is affirmed insofar as it dismissed tfie petition in tfie action brought to set aside tfie deed from O. M. B. Lowe to his wife, Elizabeth Lowe; but to tfie extent that it dismissed tfie petition in tfie action to set aside tfie three deeds from O. M. B. Lowe to Tandy B. Lowe, J. M. Lowe and Alice Lowe Step, it is reversed and tfie cause remanded with directions to tfie circuit court to enter a judgment cancelling and setting aside tfie three deeds last mentioned and for further proceedings consistent with tfie opinion.