Elzea v. Dunn

249 S.W. 933, 297 Mo. 690, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 332
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 6, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 249 S.W. 933 (Elzea v. Dunn) 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
Elzea v. Dunn, 249 S.W. 933, 297 Mo. 690, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 332 (Mo. 1923).

Opinions

Petition filed June 3, 1918. Suit in equity to set aside deed made by Henry S. Elzea for certain lands to defendant, Frances C. Dunn, Mr. Elzea died January 24, 1918, at the age of 86 years. The plaintiffs, some eighty in number, are the collateral heirs, nieces and nephews of said Henry S. Elzea. Defendant, Frances C. Dunn, is also a niece. The land described in the deed consists of three pieces, one containing about 25 acres, on which his residence was located; another piece of 20 or 25 acres, adjoining and across a creek and road therefrom; and a third piece, described in the evidence as the Courtney property, which was business property in the city of Hannibal. The acre property adjoins said city.

The petition charges that said deed was made "on December 28, 1914, or on some day between said 28th day of December, 1914, and the 28th day of December, 1915." That defendant, Frances C. Dunn, sustained a fiduciary relation to said Elzea, and secured said deed by fraud and undue influence, and that said Elzea was *Page 699 mentally and physically weak and incompetent from old age and sickness to make said deed. That by his will duly probated on January 28, 1918, he devised certain business property in Hannibal to said Frances C. Dunn, and ten acres of the land sued for to the Home of the Friendless, and, in effect, all the balance to his brothers and sisters, or if dead, to their heirs,per stirpes, except that defendant Dunn was to share equally with his brothers and sisters. That the property conveyed by said deed was worth $30,000, and constituted the major portion of all the property then owned by said Elzea.

The answer of defendant Frances C. Dunn admits that said Elzea died on the 24th of January, 1918, testate, a bachelor, and leaving, as his collateral relatives, the plaintiffs and defendants named in the petition, but denies that they were the next of kin. Alleges that the defendant Frances C. Dunn was duly adopted by said Henry S. Elzea, by deed of adoption, executed the 22nd day of December, 1915, and that as such she is his sole and only heir at law.

Said answer then puts all the other allegations of the petition in issue, and alleges: That said deed was made December 28, 1914, and not December 28, 1915, and was made to her pursuant to a contract with the deceased made fourteen years before his death to convey all the acre property described in said deed and "other property" to her, if she would live in his home and manage the same for him until he died. That she accepted and fully performed on her part the said contract, and was the absolute owner of the property so conveyed to her by said deed.

The cause was tried by a special judge, who, after taking it under advisement, found that the contract, as alleged by defendant Frances C. Dunn in her answer, was made by said Elzea, except that he only agreed to give Mrs. Dunn his home place, which consisted of his residence and the 25 acres of land on which it was located, but no other land. That she fully performed the contract on her part and was entitled to said residence *Page 700 and 25 acres, but not the additional property described in said deed. That the deed to her was made by Elzea, December 28, 1915, and not December 28, 1914. The court further found "that there was no fraud or undue influence on the part of said Frances C. Dunn, or her agent, to obtain the grant in said deed, as to said home place, but that said Henry S. Elzea knew he was conveying said home place, and did so in fulfillment of a promise made prior to said Frances C. Dunn becoming a member of his household and care-taker."

The court further found, however, "that from about the year 1914, down to the time of his death, the said Elzea was weak and infirm in body and mind by reason of old age, sickness and disease," and was easily influenced by defendant Frances C. Dunn, in his business affairs and disposition of his property, and she unduly and fraudulently influenced him to include the Courtney property and 25 acres adjoining the home place on the west in said deed, in addition to said home place, and that as to all property, except the home place, the deed was void.

Both parties appealed from the judgment of the learned chancellor.

There were 116 witnesses who testified at the trial, about 86 for the defendants and 30 for the plaintiffs. The abstract of the record is very voluminous, containing more than a thousand pages. It is impossible to undertake to set out the testimony. We can only consider it in discussing the questions raised on appeal.

I. The testimony was overwhelming that the deceased was never of unsound mind up to within a short period of his death. He died, after being sick only for a few days from paralysis, on January 24, 1918. Out of about thirty witnesses whoMental testified for plaintiff, only about eight expressedIncapacity. the opinion, and they were lay witnesses, that he was of unsound mind during the four or five years, or at all, preceding his death. These witnesses all testified that Mrs. Dunn so stated to them on divers occasions *Page 701 during said period, which, however, she denied, although not permitted to testify to any conversation or transaction with the deceased. Six of these witnesses so testifying to want of mental capacity on the part of Mr. Elzea, were plaintiffs and interested parties. They also based their opinions, for the most part, on such trivial circumstances as that he would collect rocks about the place, and claim there was mineral in them, and said to one of them that there was gold and silver and diamonds in them. The rocks glistened in the sun, but they contained no such precious minerals. He also claimed to others, that the rocks had petrified frogs and other small animals in them.

About thirteen of plaintiffs' own witnesses substantially admitted and expressed the opinion that the decedent was always of sound mind; three of these witnesses were plaintiffs in the case. The other witnesses for the plaintiffs did not testify as to the decedent's mental capacity. More than fifty witnesses for the defendants, including life-long friends and associates, neighbors, farmers, bankers, physicians, real estate and insurance men and others, not related to any of the parties, testified, in substance, that deceased never was mentally incompetent until he received a stroke of paralysis a few days before his death, and that he was more than an ordinarily intelligent, forceful, strong-minded and self-reliant man, of fine character and good business ability. There is no evidence in the case that he ever manifested any mental inability to do business until his last sickness.

A number of the plaintiffs themselves joined with him in selling lots in Elzea's Addition to the City of Hannibal nearly every year for eight or ten years before his death; the last deed made by him and them being dated January 2, 1917. He represented most of the Elzea heirs, consisting of himself and the plaintiffs or their fathers and mothers, as their attorney in fact in selling and conveying these lots. He fixed the price and sold the lots himself. He had settlements with the heirs *Page 702 each year, and paid them what was coming to them, for which he had them sign receipts in a book kept for that purpose. On December 4, 1914, the same month the deed in suit was made, he purchased the Courtney property for $10,000, because he considered it a good bargain and borrowed $8,000 from the bank to add to $2,000, which he had on hand, to pay for the property. All of the evidence showed that he made a good purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
249 S.W. 933, 297 Mo. 690, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elzea-v-dunn-mo-1923.