Ennis v. Burnham

60 S.W. 1103, 159 Mo. 494, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 1103 (Ennis v. Burnham) 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
Ennis v. Burnham, 60 S.W. 1103, 159 Mo. 494, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

BRACE, P. L.

This is an appeal by the defendants, William B. Burnham and his wife Rhoda M. Burnham, from a decree of the circuit court of Howard county, setting aside and annulling a warranty deed executed by Ephraim Snavely and his wife Julia E. Snavely, parties of the first part, dated [499]*499April 24, 1895, by them duly acknowledged on May 6, 1895, and filed for record on June 5, 1896, whereby said Snavely and wife conveyed to the said William B. and Rhoda Burnham, parties of-the second part, a tract of land containing 189 acres, situate in Howard county and particularly described in the decree and petitioh, for the expressed consideration of “one dollar,” and the further consideration “that the said W. B. Burnham and Rhoda Burnham his wife are to support the parties of the first part for and during their natural lives. In the event of the death of the said Ephriam Snavely or his wife, the said Burnham, if only one be living, or both if both be living, to support the survivor. The said Burnham and his wife are to have possession of the premises from this date, and the support therein referred to begins this day. And both possession and support go together up to the death of the said parties of the first part,” upon the ground, as stated in the decree, “that said Ephraim Snavely at the time of the execution of said deed was an old and decrepit man, feeble in body and mind, and without sufficient mental capacity to fully comprehend the transaction in which he was then engaged; that said deed is not supported by a fair and adequate consideration, and that said deed was procured to be executed by the exercise of undue influence over said Ephraim Snavely by the grantees in said deed named.”

It appears from the evidence that the said Ephraim Snavely died intestate on July 1, 1896; that he had been twice married; that the plaintiffs are his children, and the children of a deceased child, by his first wife, and the defendants are his children and the children óf a deceased child, by his second wife. That for many years prior to April 24, 1895, the said, Ephraim had been the owner in fee simple of the land described in the deed aforesaid of that date, and had occupied the same as a homestead on which he had reared his numerous [500]*500progeny, consisting of ten children, five by his first, and five by his second wife, all of whom, before that time, had grown up, married, and removed from the homestead, leavipg him and his second wife, the said Julia, who was then an invalid and who died in the month of April, 1896, and their hired house-serva-nt, the only occupants of the homestead. That at the time of the execution of said deed the said Snavely was about 78 years old, that he had some years before ceased farming- the homestead, which w'as the only real estate he owned, and which was worth between six and eight thousand dollars, disposed of most of his stock and farming implements, and rented the land to tenants' — the income from which source, and from some money,probably about $1,500 which he had out at interest, provided a sufficient support for himself and wife. That he was then, and for some years previous had been afflicted with chronic diarrhoea, a kidney disease and inflammation of the bladder that necessitated the drawing of his urine by mechanical means most of the time. These physical ailments grew worse as he grew older, and finally resulted in his death. The effect that they had produced upon his mind and body, at the time the deed in question was executed, is illustrated by the following extracts from the evidence collated by counsel for the respondents:

Mr. Evans, one of his neighbors, testifies:

“I had known Mr. Suavely ever since I was a boy, and that would date back to his manhood in middle life, I suppose; and at that time he was a stout, active man. But two or three years before his death he became infirm, feeble, and very much changed in appearance and capability from what he had been before. He was stooped in form, very much stooped. His shoulders and neck drooped; he tottered in his walk; and his eye had lost its brilliancy and lustre; and he had a stare — I called it. lie would look at you — -and his eye w^as not quick in its.movement, as it had been before.”

[501]*501Concerning his mental condition, Dr. Hume says: “This old man’s mind seemed to me, until the last few years of his life, remarkably active. But during the last few years of his life I think he was in his dotage. I think for the last three or four years of his life he was evidently in his dotage; and he was debilitated from those diseases, as a man of his age naturally would be, suffering from those diseases.”

Dr. W. O. Harvey, who had known him for fifty years, testifies that up to four or five years before his death Mr. Suavely was a vigorous man; but that during the last three, four or five years his mind had become so much impaired through the diseases of his body,' that his mental as well as physical weakness was apparent to one who knew him, without having to converse with him. This witness fux’ther considered that Mr. Snavely could be easily influenced during the last years of his life.

Mrs. Evans, a daxxghter of Mr. Snavely’s first marriage, testified: “I noticed that in the latter part of his life he became very quiet, and seenxed to be in a deep study all the time, and he didn’t have but little to say. If anyone would speak to him, soxnetixnes he would wait a second or so befox'e he would answer, and he would look up just as wild out of his eyes. His conversation was just like a child. I noticed it aboxxt a year before his death, a little longer than a year — I guess it was two years before he died that I first noticed it. He didn’t talk but very little. He didn’t have very much to say; he seemed to be in a deep study pretty much all the time. He would sit still and say nothing and look down to the fire all the time. I noticed that in him so much. He paid xio attention to what was going on around him when I was there. Sometimes he woxxld sit in that mood as xnuch as an hour axxd longer, at a time. Then he would get xxp and go and lie down on the bed. He was xxot like the same man at all.”

[502]*502Mrs. Hopper, another daughter, testifies: “He had been failing really for four or five years, very fast. He was a stout man, and when he commenced to fail in health he failed very rapidly; very fast, indeed; and he suffered terribly. He began to fail four or five years before he died. I could see the difference the different times I saw him; that he was failing.” The witness then relates a number of incidents, beginning as early as 1894. At one time he would spend an hour in his stable on a hot day, painfully gathering up small wisps of hay from the ground to feed to a horse that already stood in eásy reach of a large quantity. At another time — “he would- sit down at the table with mother and me and the girls, and would take the meat dish up in his hands and pour all the meat out of the dish on his own plate, and then he would laugh like a real silly person.” On yet another occasion, in 1895, after an absence of a couple of weeks, Mrs. Hopper went over to see her father and he did not recognize her.

Mrs. A. D. Simmons, a near neighbor, testifies to a habit of roving which Mr. Suavely acquired a year or two before his death. She says: “None of the children lived there, but they looked after him all the time. And whenever he was out of his seat they would look after him; and if he was not in sight they would ring the bell, and the neighbors would come and help hunt for him.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 1103, 159 Mo. 494, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ennis-v-burnham-mo-1901.