Brown v. Brenner

161 S.W. 14, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 960
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 14 (Brown v. Brenner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Brenner, 161 S.W. 14, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 960 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

This suit was brought by appellee W. F. Brenner against Carrie Brown, O. Frosch, V. T. Watson, C. E. Heid-ingsfelder, and Camille Blue in the nature of a bill in equity for the purpose of securing the cancellation of a deed of conveyance of certain lots of land in the city of Houston, wherein plaintiff’s father, Henry Brenner, was grantor and Carrie Brown was grantee, and to secure the cancellation of various instruments subsequently executed, whereby the title to the grantee from Henry Brenner was conveyed to appellants. Cancellation was sought upon the grounds that: (1) Carrie Brown was a fictitious person; (2) the *15 deed to her was a forgery; (3) it was induced by active fraud; (4) that the grantor was mentally incompetent to make the conveyance at' the time he signed it; and (5) the appellants took with knowledge of his mem tal infirmity. After the institution of the suit appellee Brenner conveyed to Camille Blue an undivided interest in the lots, and thereafter she intervened in the suit, setting up the title thus acquired, and became plaintiff with Brenner as against the other named defendants. The defendants answered, setting up various defenses, the character of which, in view of the disposition we shall make of this appeal, need not be stated. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and, upon the coming in of the verdict, judgment was rendered for plaintiffs, and defendants have appealed.

One of the hotly contested issues of fact on the trial was whether, at the time Henry Brenner signed the deed conveying the property in controversy to Carrie Brown, he was mentally incompetent. The court submitted this issue to the jury as follows: “Sixth issue: If in answer to the first issue you find that the purported deed from Henry Brenner to Carrie Brown, therein inquired about, was not a forgery, then and only in such event you will answer this question: Did Henry Brenner have sufficient mental capacity to know and understand the nature and result of the transaction of making and executing the said deed at the time same was made and executed?” To which question the jury answered, “No.”

Appellants’ first assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in refusing to grant defendants Frosch, Heidingsfelder, and Watson’s amended motion for a new trial.” That this assignment is too general to authorize or require consideration is too well settled to require the citation of authorities.

The second assignment complains that the court erred in refusing to grant said defendants a new trial because the answer' to the jury to the sixth special issue, above quoted, is against the preponderance of the evidence, and there was no evidence, or not sufficient evidence, to warrant the jury in answering the question in the negative. Upon this issue the following is part of the evidence introduced:

Dr. G. W. Larendon testified: “My present profession is physician and surgeon. I have been so occupied since 1889, about 23 years, here in the city of Houston, practicing medicine since 1889. I am city physician at the present time. I have held that position 12 or 15 years. I have also been county health officer several times. My practice has brought me in contact with patients suffering from mental alienation to quite an extent, years’ experience with them. I am investigating cases of mental alienation every week or two throughout my work as city and county health officer; we see them. I knew Mr. Brenner during his lifetime very well. I have known Mr. Brenner about 20 years. I did have an opportunity during Mr. Brenner’s lifetime to observe him in his acts and conduct or business transactions. I was his physician. I attended to him during the life of my father and after his death continuously up to his last illness. I attended to him off and on for 15 years. I was attending him during his last few months of his lifetime; up to the last week, I lost track of him. I did notice peculiarities of conduct or of conversation which would indicate his mental condition. He was suffering with senile dementia, insanity due to old age. It had been coming on him for years. That is a progressing disease, the result of age. This disease does affect a man as to his soundness of mind; it makes them incompetent. My professional opinion in regard to Mr. Brenner, during the last three months of his lifetime, is that he was of unsound mind. He did not have sufficient mental capacity during the last three months of his lifetime to understand ordinary business transactions. T am a graduate of Jefferson College of Philadelphia, class of 1889. In the course of my work as health officer I have been called upon to examine hundreds of cases of insanity. I am still so employed in examining such cases as they come up, but not in court proceedings. I come in contact with them constantly as health officer. Old man Brenner died February 12, 1911, just a year ago. I make this statement under oath, as my judgment as a physician, from what I knew of him and my general knowledge of such cases, that he did not have mental capacity to transact business affairs understandingly; that he was of unsound mind then and a year prior to that. He was in my office every day for a year, most every day or every other day, for the past year. He never left me. In my opinion I think he was of unsound mind prior to his death in February, 1912, of such character that he was incapable of transacting any business or understanding any business transactions for about a year or 18 months. He was mentally unsound prior to that time. I could not say how long prior to a year or 18 months before his death, but he has been going from bad to worse for years. From actual observation with him for years that I know of, he has been of such mental condition. I do not think he did understand any business dealings. I do not think he was capable of transacting any business; not capable of attending to his own business.”

Judge J. A. Breeding, a practicing lawyer of the Houston har, testified: “I have resided in the city of Houston very 'close to 32 years. It will be 32 years in June. I am a practicing lawyer. I was acquainted with Henry Brenner in his lifetime. I first knew Henry Brenner, I think it was, about 1885. I was never very intimate with him, but frequently he would consult with me or come to my office on business, and we always spoke when. *16 we passed by. I never was at bis bouse, and be never was at mine, but I knew bim just like I know hundreds of other people that I meet' daily almost. He has consulted me on some of bis matters. I would not be accurate as to the time prior to bis death that I bad my last conference with bim, but it strikes me about five or six months. During my acquaintanceship with bim I did have occasion to ascertain whether he had any peculiarities or not. The old man in bis late years, well, I will say three or four years of his life, became to my mind very peculiar. He would come to my office and ask me questions or consult me about matters, and, when X would give the information that he wanted, he would sit there; he would pick at himself this way (indicating); and directly he would seem to wake up and go out of the office and come back and ask me what it was he was talking about when he was in before. I had him to do that three or four times. I know that the old man had a mania for making wills. I know of three he made, and he applied to me to make a couple more, but I told him I thought it was useless. Outside of those X had connection with I know of one that Mr. Heidingsfelder made, or attempted to make.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 14, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brenner-texapp-1913.