Atkeson v. Holly

482 P.2d 737, 258 Or. 276, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 445
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 482 P.2d 737 (Atkeson v. Holly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkeson v. Holly, 482 P.2d 737, 258 Or. 276, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 445 (Or. 1971).

Opinion

*277 McAllister, J.

This is a separate case, but is treated in tandem with Atkeson v. Evelyn E. Holly, because, by stipulation of the parties, all of the evidence in that case was considered by the trial court in this case. Because the two cases are so closely related, it will be more convenient to combine this opinion as a sequel to the other.

This suit seeks cancellation of a deed executed by Anthony on September 6,1967, conveying to Richard L. Holly and Evelyn E. Holly the 80-acre tract across the road from the house and the 3-acre tract that Anthony conveyed to them in December, 1965. There is no evidence of the value of the 80-acre tract. The trial court held that the Hollys did not obtain the deed by undue influence. Plaintiff appeals.

The Hollys testified that Anthony gave the property to them without any influence of any kind on their part. Richard Holly testified that Anthony first told him on September 2 or 3,1967, that he intended to give the Hollys the 80 acres. At about the same time Anthony told Mrs. Holly of the intended gift and asked her to arrange for the conveyance. Mrs. Holly testified that she went to the Pioneer National Title Company in Corvallis where in 1965 she had arranged for the conveyance of the 3-aere tract. At the title company Mrs. Holly talked to a Mr. Foster, who gave her the legal description of the property and directed her to a lawyer who drew the deed. Mrs. Holly left the deed at the title company and returned to Corvallis on September 6 with Anthony. He remained in the car and Mrs. Holly brought Foster out to watch Anthony sign the deed.

Foster testified that Mrs. Holly introduced him to Anthony, that they exchanged remarks about the *278 weather, and that Mrs. Holly said to Anthony: “Mr. Poster will watch you sign your name to the deed”, or “Sign your name” and that Mrs. Holly assisted Anthony when he signed. Poster had very little conversation with Anthony at that time and was not asked his opinion of Anthony’s competency or mental condition. Poster notarized Anthony’s signature and recorded the deed.

Mr. and Mrs. Holly’s testimony that the land was a gift, and that they had no prior knowledge of Anthony’s intention to give it to them, is supported by the testimony of Raymond Pamplin, who had known Anthony since about 1958, and who also knew Mr. Holly. He testified to a conversation with Anthony:

“* * * he was talking to me about them, he told me, he says, ‘I have a surprise for Dick,’ of course he did already know that he had give him the house there for care and he told me, he says that, ‘They have been so good to me and all,’ he says, ‘I have another surprise for them that he don’t know nothing,’ and I suppose I knew it before Mr. Holly did, so he told me about it. * * *
“He told me, ‘I have a surprise for him,’ he says, ‘I had this 80 acres saved back for him and I’m going to will that to him for the care that he’s given me here and,’ he said, ‘he’s given me a good home,’ and so I didn’t think no more about it, I knew that he was there.”

Pamplin also testified that on a later occasion, some time in September or October of 1967, he was at the Holly home and the following took place:

“* * * I went in and talked to him a little while and he told me, he said, ‘Well,’ he says, ‘I have done what I was going to do,’ he says, ‘I let Mr. Holly have the 80,’ and Mr. Holly, then he told me later that he did, so that’s all that I knew. I knew he told *279 me that he was going to before he ever let him have it.”

There is slight additional support in the testimony of Leroy Bnrkey, a friend of Mr. Holly, who testified that in about mid-September of 1967 he visited with Anthony and defendants, and that Anthony told him he had “let Dick have that 80 to go with his place.” Gary Holly, defendants’ son, also testified that Anthony told him, on about September 8 or 9, that he had “let your dad have the 80 acres to go with the home place.”

Plaintiff relies in a large measure on the deterioration in Anthony’s physical condition during the summer of 1967 and his condition on September 6. We have referred in the prior opinion to Anthony’s illness in late July. Dr. Varga testified that on July 26 Anthony was extremely weak, obviously had an infection, a temperature of 102, and could not respond to questions. The doctor saw Anthony daily until July 29 and then put him in the hospital where Anthony stayed until August 5, 1967. On August 12 Anthony returned to the hospital suffering with diarrhea, the flu and general weakness. He stayed in the hospital for 10 days and returned home on August 22.

Dr. Varga saw Anthony both on the day before and the day after he signed the deed, September 6. As to Anthony’s condition on September 5, Dr. Varga testified:

“Q * * * I think you indicated on the 5th of September, 1967 you had — he was having some kind of a heart problem?
“A Well, he was having increased evidence of his congestive heart failure manifested by the swelling of his legs, at that time his blood pressure *280 was 140 over 90 which.. wa,s a few points higher, than what is normal for him.” '

As to Anthony’s mental competence at that time, Dr. Marga further testified:

“Q Did you sée him on the 6th day or was it just the 5th?
“A I saw him on the 5th and I saw him on the ■ 7th. If I saw him on the 6th I have no record of this. '
“Q Was there any material change between the 5th day and the 7th day of September of 1967 in the condition of Mr. Anthony?
“A Nothing that was apparent to me. The only time that since I assumed his full, care after his stroke, after he left the hospital, the only times that he appeared to be having any difficulties with his mental faculties was when he was running that high fever and then the last, I would say, three, perhaps four days of his illness, of his terminal illness; otherwise, from one time to another that I would see him there was no essential change.”

The doctor further testified that by September 29 it was necessary to put Anthony back in the hospital where he remained until his death on October 17,1967.

As in the other case, there is no evidence directly indicating that the Hollys did anything to induce Anthony to deed the property to them, and no evidence to contradict their story that the idea for the gift originated with Anthony. If we are to hold that this deed was the result of undue influence, we must base that conclusion wholly on inferences drawn from the general situation.

This is a close case, but we are not convinced that this deed resulted from any improper influence on the part of the Hollys. In the first place, there is no evi *281 dence' that Anthony was not mentally competent at the time he told the Hollys about this gift and signed the deed conveying the property to them. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
482 P.2d 737, 258 Or. 276, 1971 Ore. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkeson-v-holly-or-1971.