Ansted v. Grieve

231 N.W. 912, 57 S.D. 215, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 94
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1930
DocketFile No. 6856
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 912 (Ansted v. Grieve) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ansted v. Grieve, 231 N.W. 912, 57 S.D. 215, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 94 (S.D. 1930).

Opinion

BROWN, P. J.

At the time of his death Thomas D. Williams was about eighty-five years of age and for more than forty years had resided in Jerauld county, and he owned four quarter sections of land there. He was a native of Wales, a bachelor, andi had no near relatives except a brother living in Wales, with whom it appears he had not kept up much correspondence for a long time. Defendant 'had for thirty-two years been a neighbor and acquaintance of Williams in Jerauld county and had often helped him with farm work and business matters. Williams was a frequent visitor at defendant’s home and defendant’s wife did many acts of kindness to him, such as washing, ironing, and mending his clothes, [217]*217baking and cooking for him, and defendant and his wife gave him some -care when he was ill and took him on several occasions to town to a doctor. In June, 1927, Williams was taken quite ill and defendant took him to Mitchell to see a doctor. On the 14th of the month Williams became a patient in the hospital at Mitchell, and on Sunday the 19th, George Sickler, in response to a phone call from Dr. Scholl, went to Mitchell and visited Williams at the hospital. He arrived about noon and stayed with Williams until about 11 o’clock at night, at which time he procured the signature of Williams to- a will which he prepared while there, whereby Williams gave all of his property of every kind to Junior College at Wessington Springs and appointed Sickler sole executor without bond. Sickler says they first talked about the will soon after he arrived at the hospital, that the will was not signed until about 11 o’clock, that he did not go there to get Williams to make a will, that he did not work on him to get him to sign the will, that it was no trouble to get him to sign the will, that Williams in the conversation, referring to defendant said, “I owe Walt nothing; he has been a traitor to me.” The will was duly admitted to probate, and, ■Sickler waiving his right to be appointed executor, Harry B. Ansted was appointed administrator with the will annexed. Williams remained in the hospital until about the 1st of August, when, being somewhat improved, he left and went to his home in Wessington Springs. On July 18th, while he was in the hospital, he made a deed of the real estate in controversy to defendant, which deed was recorded on October 21st, three days after the death of Williams. This action is brought by the administrator for the purpose of determining the adverse claim of defendant under the -deed, and from judgment setting aside the deed on the ground that it was obtained by undue influence of the grantee, and because it was never delivered, and from an order denying a new trial defendant appeals.

Williams was brought back to the hospital on October 8th, and remained there as a patient until his death on -October 18th. On October 16th, the doctor who attended him wrote a letter, at his request to Sickler, who was then in California, asking him to return the will, as there were some changes that he desired to make, and requested an immediate answer by airplane mail. The will was not returned. The doctor who attended Williams while he was at the hospital in June and July testified that in July, in a conversation [218]*218he had with defendant, defendant saidi that the college authorities were trying to get Mr. Williams’ property away from him and he was going to- see that they did not get by with it. In addition to the property owned by Williams in Jerauld county, he owned some land of small value in Minnesota, and there was testimony that defendant said, after the death of Williams, that if he had lived twelve hours longer he (defendant) would have had a deed to the Minnesota land also. The testimony as to the execution and delivery of the deed to defendant ior the Jerauld county land is substantially as follows: D. C. Wallace, an insurance agent at Mitchell, who had known both Williams and defendant for over thirty years, visited him at the hospital while he was there in June and July. During the conversation Williams said that he was worrying over -a document he had signed and given to Mr. Sickler, in which there was something said about the college at Wessington Springs, and that Williams did not seem to know what it contained. He told Wallace that he would like to have him get word to defendant that he wished him to come down to Mitchell because he wanted to see him. Wallace wrote defendant telling him of Williams’ desire and Grieve came to Mitchell and called on Wallace at his house, after which both of them went to the hospital and saw Williams. In the conversation that occurred at this time, Williams again said that he had signed some document and given it to Sickler and was not clear as to its contents and desired to execute some other document that would revoke what he had given to Sickler. Wallace told him that 'he might make another will, which would accomplish that purpose, but Williams said he did not desire to- do this, whereupon Wallace told him that he might make a deed of the property to any1' one he desired to give it to, and that would eliminate whatever was in the paper he had given to Sickler, and that Williams told him to go ahead with this; that thereupon he went down town and got his notary seal and defendant went and got a blank deed. When they returned Williams said to defendánt, “Walt, how will we fix this?” and that defendant said, “I haven’t a word to say, Tommy, you fix it to suit yourself and it will be all right with me,” and thereupon Williams told Wallace to make out the deed of the land to Walt, that he desired to give him all of the Jerauld county land; that he then wrote up the deed; that Mr. Williams read it and said that “That is all right,” and signed it; that he then [219]*219attached his certificate of acknowledgment and handed the deed to Mr. Williams, who then handed it over to Mr. Grieve saying, “Walt, take care of that, it is valuable”; that in the course of the conversation before the execution of the deed Williams said that he had signed the document .which Mr. Sickler got from him because Sickler had kept at him the greater part of the day and he finally signed it to get rid of him so he could rest. Wallace testified that he had known Williams’ mental condition during all of the thirty years of his acquaintance, and that at the time he signed the deed there was no difference in his mental condition than what it had been prior to his illness. Subsequent to the execution of the deed Williams paid the taxes on the land, and Sickler testified that subsequent to the execution of the deed Williams spoke to' him about going to California, and said that he might need some money and offered to give Sickler a mortgage on the land in that event. There was also some testimony on behalf of plaintiff to the effect that Williams, after the execution of the deed, had spoken of renting a portion of the land to certain parties, and on the other hand there was testimony that parties xvho had gone to him to rent the land were told to go and see defendant, that defendant was now the owner of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 912, 57 S.D. 215, 1930 S.D. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ansted-v-grieve-sd-1930.