Dodds v. Mayer Et Ux.

294 P. 1040, 135 Or. 43, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 1
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 294 P. 1040 (Dodds v. Mayer Et Ux.) 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
Dodds v. Mayer Et Ux., 294 P. 1040, 135 Or. 43, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 1 (Or. 1930).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is a suit to cancel a deed executed by John Bielli, now deceased, in which the defendants, husband and wife, are the grantees. One of the plaintiffs is the administrator of the estate of Bielli, the others are the beneficiaries named in his will. A cancelation is sought upon a charge that the execution and delivery of the deed were obtained by fraud and undue influences practiced by the defendants. Briefly stated the complaint alleges that April 7, 1928, while Bielli was confined by illness in a hospital, the defendants procured him to execute the deed; that at that time he was sixty-four years of age; that “his mind was so affected that he did not know what he was doing”; that the defendants were aware of his impaired physical and mental condition; that he was not told by the defendants or by any other person the exact nature of the instrument tendered for his signature “but the nature of said instrument was concealed from him;” that no consideration moved from the defendants to Bielli; that within a week after the execution of the instrument Bielli died “without having recovered his *45 mental or physical vigor, and without knowing or understanding the nature of the instrument claimed to have been executed by him.” Thus it is the theory of the complaint that when Bielli signed the deed he was not only physically ill but his mental faculties were so impaired that he was incapable of transacting business, and that the defendants, being aware of that fact, induced his signature after having concealed from him the nature of the instrument. The prayer prayed for a cancelation of the deed. The answer denied all charges of fraud and alleged that when Bielli signed the deed he was mentally capable of transacting business. It also alleged that the deed was founded upon a valuable consideration and that the transaction was fair throughout; we deem it unnecessary to review this pleading further. The decree of the circuit court was in favor of the defendants; plaintiffs have appealed.

We believe that the material question before us is the cogency of the proof. Due to the fact that the questioned deed was obtained from the deceased when he was lying ill in a hospital, upon what shortly developed was his deathbed, and due to the further fact that his early demise released the defendants from the further performance of the promises which constituted the consideration for the deed, and thus exacted of the defendants very little detriment, we have studied the evidence with painstaldng care so as to determine whether the questioned transaction was fair and just, or was the result of any fraud upon the part of the defendants.

John Bielli, the deceased grantor, at the time of his death, was sixty-four years of age. He was a native of Italy and although he could neither read nor write the English language possessed an alert mind, could think clearly, was gifted with some natural shrewdness in *46 business transactions, and could scrawl Ms signature. In Ms early life he had been a laboring man but approximately twenty years ago acquired eighty acres of irrigated land situated several miles out of the city of Bend, worth about $4,000, upon which he conducted farming operations. Our present suit has as its subject-matter this tract of land. Bielli had also accumulated about $6,000 worth of securities consisting of liberty bonds, notes, mortgages, etc. He was a bachelor and resided in a small hut upon the aforementioned land to which the witnesses referred as a shack. He was a companionable individual and maintained very friendly relationships with all of his neighbors.

The defendants in this case resided upon an adjoining farm and had known Bielli for approximately ten years. The latter visited at the Mayer home in the evening generally two times a week and in addition made occasional Sunday visits. Mrs. Mayer often provided Bielli with food articles prepared by herself. Bielli had also become well acquainted with Charles Schlenker, another neighbor, whom he regarded as a good adviser, and to whom he resorted for the writing of Ms letters. Bielli’s only living relatives, some nieces and nephews, resided in Minnesota; apparently none of them, with the exception of a niece, had displayed any interest in him.

About the middle of March, 1928, there developed on the back of Bielli’s neck a carbuncle- wMch refused to yield to the indifferent treatment which he administered to it. Finally it came to the attention of Mrs. Mayer (one of these defendants) who gave to it such ministrations as the gentle hand of woman was capable. But in spite of her efforts the carbuncle grew larger in size and more serious in its ill effects until, finally after *47 ten days of her treatments, it sufficiently affected Bielli’s health that he was forced to remain in his cabin. About this time Mrs. Mayer began to bring him his meals as a neighborly act, and aroused the interest of Mr. Schlenker. When the latter discovered his friend’s ill health he called a physician who removed Bielli to a hospital on March 28. April 5 Mr. Mayer visited Bielli in the hospital to inquire about his health. Before this visit had been concluded the later proposed that Mayer should lease Bielli’s eighty acres of land during the term of Bielli’s life, paying therefore $500 rental per year and also discharging all taxes, water charges, and similar items of expense so that the land would yield a net return of $500. Bielli also desired that the prospective agreement should require Mayer to maintain the place, its fences, etc., in good condition, and proposed that upon his death the land should belong to Mayer through the instrumentality of a deed to be placed in escrow simultaneously with the execution of a lease. Mayer promised that he would give the matter some thought, whereupon Bielli added that he had made a similar offer to another neighbor, Charles Williamson, and that if the latter did not accept the offer by one o’clock of the following day that he wanted Mayer to avail himself of it. Bielli was anxious that the transaction should be promptly concluded owing to the fact that there was work on the place which needed immediate attention. His proposal to Williamson contemplated that the annual rent should be paid in advance and that Bielli should have a home with the Williamson family. Williamson was indebted to Bielli upon a note for approximately $1,250; Mayer was almost free from indebtedness and had an income of $175 per month from outside employment. Upon Mayer’s return home he discussed with his wife Bielli’s offer and the two *48 decided to confer with him further before coming to a decision. After the evening chores had been performed Mr. and Mrs. Mayer called upon Bielli at the hospital; in the course of the discussion Bielli stated that he would like to make his home in a small shack near the Mayer home upon their farm and take his board with the family for a consideration of $25 a month. It developed that all of the foregoing was agreeable to the Mayers and thereupon the question arose how the transaction could be consummated; Bielli proposed that an attorney be employed to draft the necessary instruments. The name of H. C. Ellis, an attorney practicing his profession in Bend, and who had previously performed services for Bielli, was suggested. The proposal met with the latter’s favor.

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 1040, 135 Or. 43, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodds-v-mayer-et-ux-or-1930.