Fields v. Lewis

122 S.W.2d 746, 275 Ky. 765, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 494
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 9, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 S.W.2d 746 (Fields v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fields v. Lewis, 122 S.W.2d 746, 275 Ky. 765, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 494 (Ky. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming-

Thad Lewis, a citizen and resident of Laurel County, Kentucky, died in October, 1933. He was then 83 years of age, having been born and reared in Clay County, Kentucky, from whence he moved to Laurel County in January, 1932. He was married twice. There were two children by the first marriage — the appellant and plaintiff below, Katie Fields, and the appellee and one of the defendants below, Elhanan Lewis, whose wife is the appellee and defendant below, Sallie Lewis. Some 21 years before the death of Thad Lewis his first wife died, and in about a year thereafter he married the appellee and defendant below, Nancy Lewis, who was about 19 years his junior — she being 69 years of age at the time she gave her deposition in this case. No children were born of that union. The appellee and defendant below, Felix Lewis, is a grandson of Thad Lewis — he being the son of the defendant, Elhanan Lewis — while the appellee and defendant below, Margaret Lewis, is the wife of Felix Lewis.

In April, 1932, about three, months after Thad Lewis acquired and moved to the tract of land in Laurel county, he executed a deed, crudely drawn, whereby he conveyed it in remainder — after reserving a life estate .to himself — to his grandson, Felix Lewis, subject to a *766 life estate in remainder to one-half of it to his wife, if she survived him. It was provided in the deed that Felix Lewis would immediately construct a residence for himself and family on a portion of the tract and occupy it, with the right to cultivate portions of it in consideration of which he was to look after and manage the other portions of the farm not cultivated by him for and on behalf of Thad Lewis, his grandfather. He complied with the obligation so imposed upon him by con-strutting the new residence with the necessary outbuildings, which he and his family occupied continuously thereafter up to the death of Thad Lewis and since then. He likewise discharged his obligations with reference to managing and looking after the cultivation of the farm and the marketing of its produce for the years 1932 and 1933 preceding his grandfather’s death. The widow, Nancy Lewis, of course, continued to occupy the older residence on the Laurel county farm following the death of her husband.

In that situation an “in-law” of Thad Lewis (the appellant and plaintiff below, P. H. Fields) and his wife filed this equity action in the Laurel circuit court against Felix Lewis and wife, Elhanan Lewis, and his wife, Nancy Lewis, the widow of the decedent, by which they sought to cancel the deed executed to Felix Lewis conditioned as stated. In their petition they charged that Thad Lewis was mentally incapacitated to execute the attacked'instrument at the time he attempted to do so, and that the defendants had conspired' among themselves to fraudulently, coercively, unlawfully and corruptly induce him to do so, and by which he was unduly influenced to execute it, and but for which he would not have done so. Defensive pleadings denying the averments of the petition were filed by defendants, and upon submission, after taking more than '350 pages of depositions, the court dismissed the petition — to reverse which plaintiffs prosecute- this appeal.'

The sole question in the case is — whether or not the trial judge improperly appraised the testimony by which he concluded' that the averments of the petition were not sustained, resulting in its dismissal. In determining that question the' rule by which this court is guided in reviewing fact-findings of the chancellor should not be lost Sight of. ■ It-'is, that this court on appeal will review the testimony for itself, and if there is substantial preponderance, of the testimony against the findings of the *767 facts by the chancellor his conclusions thereon will be reversed; but if the testimony creates no more than a doubt in the mind of this court, then his findings will be affirmed. That rule is so thoroughly established as to require neither time nor space in substantiating it with a listing of former opinions. We take ..this from the judgment of the court expressing his ■ appraisement of the testimony relating to the facts:

“The Court is of the opinion and finds that the weight of the evidence in this case shows that Thad Lewis at the time of the execution of the deed complained of, although an old man, was of sound mind and fully capable of attending to and transacting his own business at all times, and he was especially of sound mind and fully capable of transacting his own business at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed sought to be cancelled. In fact, the Court finds that many of the witnesses whose depositions were taken for the plaintiff herein and who were close relatives of the said Thad Lewis, and who had known him all their lives, admit that they saw nothing wrong with the mental condition of Thad Lewis. It is true that he was an old man 'at the time of the execution of this deed but was rather active physically up until a very short time before his death.” We unreservedly approve that summation of the court.

Nearly all of the witnesses who testified for plaintiffs were their relatives, some of whom were members of the Fields family, but the most active one was the son-in-law, the appellant and plaintiff below, P. H. Fields, who strained himself and told all he could for his side of the case, but whose testimony, when weighed in the scales to test its probative force, is found to be almost entirely wanting, .as some few illustrations will demonstrate. He was asked and answered:

“From your association with Thad Lewis for forty years or thereabouts as you have mentioned and your acquaintance with him at or about April 1932, tell the Court whether he at that date or about that date had sufficient mind to know the extent of his estate, A. Don’t think so.
“Q. Tell the Court from that knowledge whether at that_ time or about that time he had sufficient mind to realize or know what disposition he really wanted to make of his property? A. Don’t think so.••
*768 “Q. Knowing Thad Lewis as you knew him during the time that you have spoken of, if he made the deed which it is purported he made to the defendant, Felix Lewis, were the making of said deed were really the acts of the said Thad Lewis or the defendant, Felix Lewis. A. Felix and Nancy’s I think.
“Q. After Thad Lewis and his grandson, Felix Lewis, seemed to take up together, is it a fact that you always saw the two together wherever you saw one the other was there? A. I think so, I don’t think I ever saw him but what Felix was with him.
“Q. And during the time beginning with the time you say that Felix and Thad Lewis became chummy with each other did you ever know him from that time until his death to do anything against the will of Felix Lewis? A. No sir.”

The questions were objected to but overruled with exceptions. They were very suggestive, even if the competency of the witness (husband of his wife) should be admitted. He was but a nominal party, since he had no interest in the subject matter of the legal controversy except potential courtesy in whatever portion of the land his wife would inherit from her father if the.

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Related

Crowley v. Ballard
131 S.W.2d 463 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W.2d 746, 275 Ky. 765, 1938 Ky. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-lewis-kyctapphigh-1938.