Farrell v. Nutter

107 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 639, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 564
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1961
DocketDocket 15, Calendar 48,639
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 N.W.2d 770 (Farrell v. Nutter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farrell v. Nutter, 107 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 639, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 564 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Souris, J.

On September 27, 1956, Elmer and May Farrell were both past 80 years of age. May *641 Farrell, in fact, was about 83, nearly blind and partially paralyzed. On this date she and her husband entered into an arrangement with their only son, Roy, and his wife, Myrtle. The parents conveyed to Roy and Myrtle their farms, reserving life estates, and conveyed, also, title to land held subject to a land contract. . In addition, they executed a power of attorney, giving Roy ample powers to “manage our affairs, including the power to exercise the general control and supervision over all our lands, tenements and hereditaments, pay taxes, effect insurance, sign, execute and deliver leases and for money and in our names, to grant, bargain and sell any part or parcel of all lands or interest in lands that we hold in the township of White Lake, Oakland county, Michigan, for such price and/or such terms as to him shall seem meet, and for us, and in our names to make, execute, acknowledge and deliver good and sufficient deeds and conveyances for the same, either with or without covenants and warranty, releasing any right, title or interest that we' may have in the same, including life estate, and to execute any and all deeds in pursuance to land contracts that we have heretofore entered into.”

Simultaneously therewith the parties executed an instrument entitled, “Agreement to Care and Provide For”, the opening clauses of which describe the family situation at that time, it reciting, in part, the parents’ “infirmities of age” and recognizing “the past work and services and loving attention of Roy M. Farrell and Myrtle L. Farrell, his wife, in the interests and welfare of the father and mother.” It was agreed that Roy and Myrtle should care and provide for the parents during their lives, and give them proper burial. This agreement closed with an additional acknowledgment of the “care and attention heretofore rendered by their son and his wife, * * * declaring that the consideration for this *642 agreement is not alone the property transferred, but the love and affection existing between the parties.”

Following the execution of these instruments, family affairs went on much as before, until the death of the senior Mrs. Farrell in July of 1958. Subsequent thereto the condition of Elmer Farrell, the father, steadily grew worse. (He is now adjudged incompetent.) A Mr. Parnell, also an elderly man, was first brought in by Boy to care for his father. He was told to get whatever Mr. Farrell wanted and send the bill to the son, Boy. The services, however, did not continue for long. Mr. Farrell’s appetite did not respond to Mr. Parnell’s cooking.

During this time Mr. Farrell’s health was failing. He had trouble controlling his bladder, but he would not permit Mr. Parnell to launder his underclothing. His son came often each week and would sometimes take his father out. The old gentleman’s faculties were obviously failing. He would turn on the television and watch it, yet, it was said, seem not to be aware of whether it was on or off. On one occasion Mr. Parnell and Mr. Farrell went over to the new house Boy was building. Mr. Parnell worked on the house and “Elmer set there in a chair.” The next day Mr. Farrell refused to return, stating that he was not going over there and work all day, as he had done the day before.

After Mr. Parnell left, Mr. Farrell’s physical and mental condition did not improve. He was ill-kfempt, feeble, and childish in his actions and reactions. He relied more and more upon the sympathy and ministrations of 2 neighbors, one of them, Mrs. Marble, a niece of the deceased Mrs. Farrell. It is just at this point that serious trouble arose between father and son, culminating in a series of legal actions. On March 7, 1959, Mr. Farrell first signed a revocation of the power of attorney formerly given his son and signed a new one in favor of Mrs. Marble. Two days *643 later the son filed in the Oakland county probate court a petition for guardianship of his father as a mental incompetent, and asked that he be appointed guardian. The next day he filed the present action, setting forth the above and praying an injunction (which was issued) restraining any withdrawing of funds. The father then, through counsel, answered the petition in the probate court, charging his son with failure to care and provide for him and charging conversion of his funds. He also filed a cross hill in the present action, praying for an accounting and asserting conversion and other wrongful acts by his son. On March 30th the probate court appointed Mr. Bartlette E. Nutter, attorney-at-law and the defendant and cross plaintiff herein, as guardian. By leave of court the guardian was substituted in place of the father and Myrtle Farrell, wife of Roy, was added as a party plaintiff and as cross defendant. The matter came to trial in the Oakland circuit on January 5, 1960. The father, through guardian and attorney, charged the son with abuse of the power of attorney, conversion of moneys, failure to pay the mother’s funeral and burial expenses, failure to account, and failure to care properly for the father. The son, and his wife, on the other hand, assert that the charges made are without foundation in fact and have arisen out of the malice of antagonistic and meddlesome neighbors. The trial chancellor held generally for the plaintiffs. The original transfers (of September 27, 1956, hereinabove set forth) were not found unconscionable, as charged, nor was there a finding of a conversion. Plaintiffs were, however, required by the chancellor to reimburse defendant for the mother’s burial expenses shown to have been paid by the father. An accounting was ordered and jurisdiction retained for the purpose of insuring full compliance with the care and provision agreement.

*644 The general principles controlling a case of this hind were correctly stated by the trial chancellor and may be found in Williams v. Williams, 198 Mich 1, 4, 5, quoted with approval in Spencer v. Hill, 336 Mich 22, 25, 26:

“That the presumptions are against transactions of this nature and they are critically scrutinized by the courts, putting the burden of proof upon those seeking to sustain them, requires no citation of authority. In view of plaintiff’s age, their kinship, and the confidential relations shown to exist between them at the time, it was incumbent upon defendants to show that the agreement with their father was not to his disadvantage, was fair to him and of his own free will, that no advantage was taken by them of his age, mental condition, or confidence in them, that they have fulfilled the terms of their agreement, in letter and spirit, so far as permitted by him, and are ready and willing to continue so to do.”

The application of the principles stated to the case at bar presents, as always, some difficulties. Much of the evidence relating to why certain actions were taken, and the dispositions of the funds therefrom, were equally within the knowledge of the now incompetent father, and testimony thereon was not taken. * But an even greater difficulty arose from the hostile attitudes of various of the witnesses. Their positions are irreconcilable.

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 639, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farrell-v-nutter-mich-1961.