Boyer v. Boyer

23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 279, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 305
CourtFairfield Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 279 (Boyer v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfield Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyer v. Boyer, 23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 279, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 305 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

VOORHEES, J.

The object of the plaintiff’s suit is to set aside a deed made by John Boyer to the defendant, John J. Boyer, on April 13, 1909. The grounds on which it is sought to set aside the deed are: :

First. That the grantor, John Boyer, at the time the deed was made, to wit, on April 13, 1909, was suffering from severe illness and was so greatly enfeebled, physically and mentally, because, of his age — he then being of the age of seventy-four years — that he was mentally incapable of transacting ordinary business, or the execution and delivery of any deed of conveyance of his real estate.

Second. That the defendant, intending and contriving to cheat and defraud the said John Boyer out of his farm, and [281]*281■without paying any valuable consideration therefor to the plaintiff or any other person for him and by the undue influence of the defendant and others in his employ, procured from the plaintiff a deed of conveyance in fee for his farm, and immediately thereafter caused said deed to be filed for record with the recorder of Fairfield county.

Third. That, at the time of the execution of said deed, the plaintiff did not know or understand the nature of his act in so making said deed, or the contents of the same, or that he was then parting with, the title to his farm; but, by the undue influence of the defendant and others in his employ, when the plaintiff was incapacitated, as the defendant well knew, the plaintiff was induced to execute said deed to the defendant, and he, the plaintiff, was then evercome by undue persuasipn, entreaties, and arts of the defendant and fraudulently coerced into signing said deed. '

The case was tried in this court on the testimony taken in the court below; and by agreement of the parties the transcript of the testimony so taken was submitted to the court on behalf of the respective parties, plaintiff and defendant, the same as if the witnesses were offered and _ examined in open court. Said transcript and évidence offered' by both parties on the trial was all the evidence in the case.

One of the contentions of the plaintiff is that, from the relationship existing between the plaintiff and the defendant, at the time the deed was executed, an undue.influence over the plaintiff by the defendant is presumed to exist. The plaintiff was the uncle of the defendant, and when the defendant was about nine years of age, the uncle took the defendant into his family, as a member thereof, where he lived until he was a man of about twenty-two years of age and upwards, when the defendant married and moved upon a farm of his own. The uncle never married and had no relatives other than brothers and sisters, and children of deceased brothers and sisters. The uncle and the defendant always .sustained friendly relations toward each other.

To state the contention of the plaintiff more concisely, it is [282]*282claimed that, where such relationship does exist, and a grantor is partially incapacitated by age, physical and mental infirmities, and the deed is without valuable consideration, the burden is upon the grantee to show affirmatively, that the grantor clearly understood the nature and effect of the transaction, and voluntarily executed the instrument.

It is true the law presumes, in the case of guardian and ward, trustee and cestui que trust, attorney and client, physician and patient, that their situation is unequal, and that relation appearing, itself throws the burden upon the party occupying such position of trust, in dealing with the trust, or the beneficiary thereof, to prove the fairness of his dealing. But the law does not presume fraud or undue influence from the fact that one party is old and an uncle, and the other is a nephew and young. The question as to parties so situated is a question df fact dependent upon the circumstances in each case. There is no presumption of inequality either way from these relations merely.

We think, in this case, there is convincing proof of facts and circumstances which show that when the deed in question here was executed and delivered, the grantor, John Boyer, was not misled by reason of any confidential relations existing between himself and the grantee, John J. Boyer, nor was there any act done by the grantee, ■ tending to show that the deed did not express the grantor’s intention at the time he executed and delivered it.

It is contended on behalf of the plaintiff, that he was, by undue persuasions, entreaties, and practices, used by the defendant and others, coerced into signing said deed.

This the defendant denies, and 'the proof shows, that on the day the deed was made to Elizabeth Looker, the defendant had a conversation with his uncle, in which he said to his uncle:

“Uncle John, while you are making this deed for Mrs. Looker, don’t you think it would be no more than right that you should do something in like manner for me?”

The plaintiff says, ‘ ‘ What is .it you want ? ’ ’

[283]*283“Why,” he replied, “make me a deed for this farm,” meaning the farm here in question, and the one on which the plaintiff: resided.

Plaintiff said, “No; -that is entirely too much.”

When the defendant said! to him, “Do as you see fit and I will be satisfied.”

The record shows that, at the same time this conversation occurred, the plaintiff and the defendant were on the porch at the plaintiff’s home, when the defendant made the suggestion for the plaintiff to do as he saw fit, etc. The plaintiff said, “Ask Mrs. Looker to come out.”

She was called, and the defendant repeated what he had before said to his uncle, viz.:

“While you are making the deed to Mrs. Looker for that farm, I don’t think it would be any more than right that you should do something in like manner for me.”

Mrs. Looker said, “Yes; I think you ought to favor him and his sister Wilda both.” The plaintiff made no reply'.

This transaction is given and urged as tending to show undue influence and coercion practiced by the defendant and Mrs. Looker, in procuring the deed from the plaintiff for the farm here in question.

Counts of equity will not vacate a deed obtained by means of influence and importunity, unless it has been unduly or improperly exercised. Fair argument and persuasion or appeals to the conscience or sense of' duty of the grantor, especially by those having claims upon his justice or his bounty, if fairly made, lay no foundation for vacating a deed, although the grantor would not have made the deed but for such appeal, argument, or persuasion. Truman v. Lore, 14 Ohio St. 144, 145.

The record shows that the grantor, John Boyer, made the deed in question, to the defendant, voluntarily and for reasons satisfactory to himself, and there is no evidence in the case that there was influence or persuasion used, either by the defendant or Mrs. Looker, to induce the making of the deed, other than what has been hereinbefore stated, and after the deed was executed and delivered, the plaintiff then stated that he had [284]*284done what he had wanted to do for some time, that one reason he had for making the deed to the defendant was that he desired- the farm in question to remain in the “Boyer” name, it having been in the Boyer name for nearly a hundred years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Ohio C.C. Dec. 279, 14 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyer-v-boyer-ohcirctfairfiel-1911.