141 Mass. 329 | Mass. | 1886
This is an action for money had and received, by which the plaintiff seeks to recover §2861, given as a gift inter vivas by the plaintiff’s intestate to the defendant, — between whom there existed confidential relations, not only of physician and patient, but also of adviser and friend, and of agent and principal, —upon the ground that the gift was obtained by the undue influence of the defendant.
1. The defendant first requested the court to instruct the jury that there was no evidence in the case which would warrant them in finding that the defendant solicited the gift, or used.any undue influence to obtain the same. The court declined to give this instruction. The evidence bearing upon the question of undue influence, introduced at the trial, is reported in full in the defendant’s bill of exceptions. It tended to show that the donor was eighty-four years old, and was sick much of the time, weak in mind and memory, and broken down; that the gift was of a large portion of the donor’s estate; that the defendant, who was not a relative of the donor, attended her as a physician, and
2. The jury were instructed as follows: “ When a fiduciary or confidential relation is established between a donor and a donee, a case arises for watchfulness on the part of those who have to pass on the validity of the gift, to see that this confidence has not been abused by the exercise of undue influence. The mere existence of such a confidential relation does not, as
The first part of the instructions given will find support in the current of English and American decisions. Rhodes v. Bate, L. R,. 1 Ch. 252. Mitchell v. Homfray, 8 Q. B. D. 588. Yosti v. Laughran, 49 Mo. 594. Garvin v. Williams, 44 Mo. 465. Cadwallader v. West, 48 Mo. 483. In re Welsh, 1 Redf. 239. Wilson's appeal, 99 Penn. St. 545. Todd v. Grove, 33 Md. 188, and the numerous cases therein cited.
At the trial, the jury had before them the fact that the defendant, at the time the gift was made to him, was the physician of the plaintiff’s intestate, her friend, adviser, and financial agent; and, under many of the cases cited, this relation would create a suspicion of undue influence, which might be considered by the jury, without any direct proof of such influence. Drake's appeal, 45 Conn. 9. In cases of probate of wills, it has been held that, where a stranger, charged with the exercise of undue influence, having no claims from relationship, derives a considerable benefit under the will, evidence of direct influence used at its making is not required. Boyd v. Boyd, 66 Penn. St. 283. It is often difficult
Undue influence must be exercised in relation to the gift made, and not as to other transactions, in order to invalidate a gift thus obtained. But if the jury find from the evidence that, at or about the time when the gift was made, the alleged donor was, in other important particulars, so under the influence of the person receiving the gift, that, as to them, he was not a free agent, but was acting under undue influence, the circumstances may be such as fairly to warrant the conclusion, from the absence of any evidence bearing directly upon acts done when the alleged gift was actually made, that, in relation to that also, the same undue influence was exerted. Boyse v. Rossborough, 6 H. L. Cas. 2.
The defendant contends that the instructions are in conflict with the rule laid down in Shailer v. Bumstead, 99 Mass. 112, wherein it is stated that two points must be sustained to establish undue influence; first, the fact of the influence exercised ; secondly, that the influence was effectual in producing the alleged result. The bill of exceptions shows that the court gave full instructions to the jury upon all the issues in the case. If any instructions pertinent to the trial were omitted, the defendant cannot now complain, as he did not ask to have them given. Those given were not in conflict with the law of the case referred to.
The last part of the instructions given left “ the whole matter ” for the determination of the jury, with the general burden
3. The evidence that the intestate’s sister had living with her a son, who was partially blind at the date of the alleged gift, and that the intestate then knew it, was properly admitted. It was offered after the testimony of Jemima Hall had been introduced, that she had a conversation with the donor in 1881, which disclosed the donor’s state of mind at that time towards her sister Eliza because of the condition of her son. We also think that it was admissible as bearing upon the unreasonableness and injustice of the gift to the defendant, and whether, under all the circumstances, it was reasonably consistent with the natural impulses of the human heart. Howe v. Howe, ubi supra. Whitney v. Twombly, 136 Mass. 145. Patterson v. Patterson, 6 S. & R. 55.
Exceptions overruled.