Boggess v. Boggess

29 S.W. 1018, 127 Mo. 305, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 1018 (Boggess v. Boggess) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boggess v. Boggess, 29 S.W. 1018, 127 Mo. 305, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 253 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

G-antt, P. J.

This suit was instituted in the cir•cuit court of Ray county on the fifteenth day of December, 1891, by the heirs at law of Henry Boggess, ■deceased, to set aside two warranty deeds executed by .said Henry Boggess in his lifetime.

The first of these deeds was dated May 24, 1889, ■and purported to convey about one hundred and ninety •acres of land to his son William Yincent for life, remainder in fee to his two children, Henry P. and James K. Boggess; the second deed was dated on May 26, 1890, and purported to convey seventy-two acres of land to said Henry P. and James K. Boggess in fee .simple. Henry Boggess died on the seventh day ■of August, 1891.- At the date of the first deed Henry Boggess also conveyed to a grandson, Eli Frazier, forty [310]*310acres of land. These three deeds conveyed all the lands he owned, except one hundred and sixty-three-acres of timbered land. The lands in suit are well worth $40 per acre and the timbered land $20 am acre.

When the above.deeds were made, Henry JBoggess-had four children living, to wit: Wade Boggess, Sallie Graham, Nancy Mulnix and William Y. Boggess, and’ the following grandchildren, to wit: Alice Boggess, only child of Argyl T. Boggess, a deceased son; Ell Frazier and William H. Frazier, only children of' Margaret Frazier, a deceased daughter ; Price Boggess, William Boggess and Charles Boggess, only children of Joel Boggess, a deceased son, and the two defendants, Henry P. and James K. Boggess, sons of W. Y. Boggess.

The petition of plaintiffs, in the first count thereof, contains the following averment: “That at the time the said Henry Boggess undertook and attempted to execute said deed and convey the premises hereinbeforedescribed to said defendants, he was advanced in-years, being then about eighty-five years old, in feeble health, with greatly impaired physical and mental vigor, weak in mind and body, suffered from loss of memory and incapable of transacting his business and of comprehending the extent of his property and appreeiatingthe rights of those having claims upon his bounty; and' by reason of his advanced age and infirmity of body and impairment of mind he had not sufficient mental' capacity to make a valid deed, and the deed therefore-made, though in form and duly signed, acknowledged, and delivered, is not the deed of said Henry Boggess, deceased, and is without consideration, invalid and insufficient to pass title in the property attempted to be-conveyed from said Henry Boggess to said defendants.”

The second count in the petition for setting aside [311]*311the second deed contains substantially the same allegations, as to mental incapacity, and further seeks to have said deed canceled for the reason it was not delivered.

It is also alleged in the petition that the real estate attempted to be conveyed by said two deeds was worth about $11,000, and by such transfers, if valid, he would thereby leave some of his children almost wholly, unprovided for.

The minor defendants were duly served and Dr. William F. Tates was appointed guardian ad litem.

The circuit court submitted the following issues of fact to a jury.

“1. Did Henry Boggess, at the time of the execution of the deed signed by him, dated May 24, 1889, being the deed in controversy under the first count of the petition, have sufficient mental capacity to make said deed?

“2. Did Henry Boggess in his life time make a delivery to Henry P. Boggess and James K. Boggess, or to any one for them, of the deed dated May 26, 1890, signed by Henry Boggess, being the deed in controversy under second count in the petition?

“3. If the .jury find that the deed dated May 26, 1890, and signed by Henry Boggess, was delivered to Henry P. Boggess and James K. Boggess, or to some one for them, the jury will further answer 'whether at the date of such delivery the said Henry Boggess had sufficient mental capacity to make said deed?”

And for their guidance gave them the following instructions:

“1. The court instructs the jury that the issues submitted under the first count in the plaintiffs’ petition, is whether on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1889, Henry Boggess was of sufficiently sound mind to [312]*312render Mm capable of making the deed read in evidence of that- date.

“2. The issue submitted to the jury, under the second count in the petition of the plaintiffs, is, first, was the deed read in evidence, dated may 26, 1890, delivered by Henry Boggess to the defendants, Henry P. Boggess or James K. Boggess or to any person for them? second, was or was not Henry Boggess of sufficiently sound mind to render Mm capable of making the deed read in evidence of that date? If the jury find that said deed dated May' 26, 1890, was not delivered to either the grantees therein named nor to any person for them, then it will not be necessary to pass upon the mental, capacity of Henry Boggess to execute the same at the date thereof, but if said deed was delivered within the meaning of the law as declared in these instructions, then, and in that event, the jury must pass on his mental capacity to make such deed on the twenty-sixth day of May, 1890.

“3. The jury are instructed that, to incapacitate a party from making a contract or execute a deed, it is not necessary to establish the existence of insanity in such a person, in its technical meaning, but they are-instructed that weakness of intellect from extreme old age, or when the same arises from great bodily infirmity, which disqualifies the party from knowing or appreciating the nature, effect or consequence of the act he is engaged in, works such a disability as to render such a contract or deed void and of no effect in law.

“4. The declarations of Henry Boggess, either before or after making the deeds in controversy, are evidence before the jury, in so far as they may throw light upon the mental condition of Henry Boggess or his feelings or affections, but they are not evidence of the truth of the matters he states; they are admitted [313]*313as external manifestations of the condition of his affections and feelings.

“5. The jury are the judges of the: credibility of the witnesses, and of the weight to be given to their testimony. In weighing the evidence, the jury should take into consideration the manner of each witness upon the stand, his relations to the case as an interested party, or otherwise, his feelings of relationship toward any party to the case, his capacity and opportunities for observing and forming an opinion, the probability or improbability of his evidence under all the evidence and surroundings, and should give to the testimony of each witness such weight as, in their judgment, it is entitled to under all the facts and circumstances in the evidence.

“6. Upon the question of whether the deed dated May 26, 1890, was delivered or not, the court instructs the jury: A delivery of a deed must be made to the grantee, or to some one for the grantee, in the lifetime of the grantor, and is complete when the grantor parts with the dominion or control over the deed with the intention that it shall take effect as his deed in favor of the grantee, and the grantee or someone for him, accepts the deed, or assumes the dominion or control over it.

“7.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 1018, 127 Mo. 305, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boggess-v-boggess-mo-1895.