English v. Porter

109 Ill. 285
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 109 Ill. 285 (English v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
English v. Porter, 109 Ill. 285 (Ill. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a bill in equity, by Joseph 0. English, as conservator of Robert L. Porter, to set aside certain conveyances of real estate to Ann N. Porter, on the grounds of the insanity of the grantor and the undue influence of the grantee over him. The circuit court decreed that the bill be dismissed, and the question to be determined on this appeal is, whether that decree is sustained by the evidence.

The burden was upon the complainant to prove one or both of these allegations of his bill by a preponderance of evidence. (Lilly v. Waggoner, 27 Ill. 395; Willemin v. Dunn et al. 93 id. 511.) We are not satisfied that this has been done. Appellant proved that the conveyances were executed on the 7th and 15th of April, 1881; that on the 12th of May, 1881, Porter was duly adjudged insane, and appellant was appointed his conservator, in a proper proceeding for that purpose in the county court of Vermilion county; and several witnesses testified, on his behalf, that in their opinion Porter was, by reason of his insanity, incapable of transacting business at the date of the execution of the conveyances. More numerous witnesses, however, on the other hand, and apparently equally entitled to credit, testified, that in their opinion he was at that time capable of transacting business.

We think the fair conclusion, from the evidence, is, Porter’s mind was affected by a form of dementia, slightly, for several months (perhaps longer) before the execution of the conveyances. This gradually increased, and some time after the appointment of the conservator it became such that he was incapable of self-control and the transaction of business. It may be, too, that the rate of mental impairment was accelerated towards the last; but Porter had a considerable amount of business, somewhat varied in character, of which he had the charge and direction until some time after the appoint-, ment of the conservator, and this he managed and directed with care and diligence, and at the dates of the execution of the deeds his mind was sufficiently strong and self-poised to enable him to comprehend all the details of what he was doing, and the effect of his acts, and to exercise his own volition with reference thereto. Drs. Lemon, Barton and More-house fix the period of their first observation of a marked decline in the mental powers of Porter, in the month of October, 1880, during the illness of one Peter Walsh, a foster-son of Porter, to whom he was warmly attached. Walsh died on the 9th of November following, and thereafter, in their opinion, Porter declined in mental power pretty rapidly. They noticed it, chiefly, as manifested by his grief for the death of Walsh, in incoherence in speech, and in apparent difficulty in continuity of thought upon any given subject. They give no instance of inability to rationally manage and dispose of property, and they show that he had the charge of his business,—which, as already observed, was pretty extensive, and which included a medical practice,—until after the appointment of the conservator. It is true, towards the last. the practice of medicine is not shown to have been extensive, but it is shown to have been carried on until the appointment of the conservator, and one apparently very intelligent witness, Dr. Woodbury, testifies that he regarded him capable of properly handling so dangerous a drug as morphine, even after the appointment of the conservator. Porter was the owner of a farm of eight hundred acres, and of other real estate, and some personal property, all of which, it is shown, he managed intelligently and carefully, even after the appointment of the conservator.

There were four witnesses present when the deeds were executed,—Norvell, (the scrivener,) Forbes, Alies and Terry. They were all intimately acquainted with Porter, and had long known him, and they unite in the opinion that he was then competent to transact business. Norvell says, about a week before the deeds were made Porter came to his office alone, and told witness he wanted him to prepare some deeds from him (Porter) to Mrs. Porter, as he had used some of her money; that Porter had spoken about this several times before; that at the time of making the deeds Porter again came alone to him, and indicated on the plat what lands he wished to convey to appellee; that his capacity for transacting business was good, and' he appeared to the witness as rational as he ever had since he had first known him, in 1867. He further says that Porter assented to the indorsement of the price of the lands as a credit upon the notes which appellee held against him.

Judge E. S. Terry says, that he had known Porter for twenty-five years, and that he was present when the deeds were made; that at that time Porter took him aside and told him that he had been receiving from his wife divers sums of money, and that he was then conveying to her real estate, and showed the witness the lands on the plat. Judge Terry further says that he had discovered some impairment of Dr. Porter’s mental powers previous to that time, but that such impairment was not, in his opinion, of such a character as to render him incompetent to do a valid act, either as to the disposition of his property, or otherwise. He says that Porter asked him if he did not think he was doing right in making the conveyances, and that he exhibited the map and explained to witness intelligently what he was conveying, and the purpose of the conveyance.

The conservator, Mr. English, testified that he purchased land of Porter two or three months before the appointment of himself as conservator; that he then discovered nothing wrong, and that Porter conducted himself in the transaction, in the way of looking after his own interests, just as any man would. He then uses this language: “We went down and looked at the land, and talked the matter over. He fixed his price, and I took it, and paid him the same price I had paid others in the same neighborhood. ” And he thus describes the condition of Porter’s affairs, and his conduct after he was appointed conservator: “I found his affairs in good condition after my appointment. He rendered me a great deal of assistance, (i e., in getting the run of his business, and the situation, location and condition of his property.) He went out to the farm with me, and looked all over, minutely, everything ; gave me to understand the run of his business at his farm, even down to the smallest piece of machinery. * * * He knew the boundaries and extent of his land perfectly, •x- wen^ ou^ -(¡o the farm every week or ten days, after my appointment, and looked after things there. I trusted him to do it. I didn’t see there was anything wrong, for a time, with him. ” He further says: “It must have been five or six months before he began to show particular trouble. ”

In addition to the four witnesses present when the deeds were made, twelve others, excluding the defendant, testify to an acquaintance with Porter for varying periods, and to some degree of business association, and all express the opinion that he was competent to transact business when the conveyances were executed, whereas on the other side but nine witnesses, including the son, the daughter-in-law and the daughter of Porter, testify to his incompetency. Mere numbers, alone, it is true, are not to control where the less number are more intelligent, more reliable, or in any material respect superior, as witnesses, to the others; but we are unable to say this of the witnesses in behalf of appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Ill. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/english-v-porter-ill-1884.