Fisher v. Burgiel

46 N.E.2d 380, 382 Ill. 42
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1943
DocketNo. 26834. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 46 N.E.2d 380 (Fisher v. Burgiel) 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
Fisher v. Burgiel, 46 N.E.2d 380, 382 Ill. 42 (Ill. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Murphy

delivered the opinion of the court:

This suit was brought in the superior court of Cook county by the conservatrix of the estate of Nellie Hollingshead, an incompetent person, to set aside deeds to twelve pieces of real estate conveyed by Nellie Hollingshead to Irving Hoffman and which, as a part of the same transaction, he conveyed to Nellie Hollingshead and defendant Anthony K. Burgiel in joint tenancy. It included a request for an accounting of certain moneys and personal property alleged to have been given to the defendants, Anthony K. Burgiel and Mary Burgiel, husband and wife, by Nellie Hollingshead while she was mentally incompetent and while acting under the domination and influence of the defendants. The complaint charged that, at the time of the conveyances of the real estate and the giving of the personal property and moneys, Nellie Hollingshead was suffering from senile dementia, that she was incompetent and did not understand or comprehend the nature of her acts; that she was taken into the home of defendants pursuant to a conspiracy to obtain control and domination over her and her property and to defraud her of her estate. The complaint further charged that a confidential relationship existed between Nellie Hollingshead and the defendants; that no adequate consideration was given for the conveyances or the personal property; and that the conveyances and moneys were obtained by the defendants by the use of undue influence and duress. The answer denied the material allegations of the complaint and the defendants filed a jury demand which was stricken by the court.

The cause was referred to a master in chancery who heard voluminous evidence and made his report, finding that at the time of the conveyances and transfers of money and property to the defendants, Nellie Hollingshead was mentally incompetent and unable to understand the nature of her acts; that a fiduciary relationship existed between the defendants and Nellie Hollingshead and that the defendants acquired complete domination and control over the financial and business affairs of Nellie Hollingshead and abused and violated their position of trust and confidence, enabling them to acquire her property and money without adequate consideration. The master recommended that the conveyances of real estate be set aside, found that defendants should be required to account for the sum of $1972.75, and recommended that judgment be entered for that amount. The report and recommendation was approved and a decree entered.

The evidence shows that Nellie Hollingshead was a retired school teacher and that at the time of the transactions in question she was about 77 years of age. It is admitted that she was a well-educated, intelligent woman, and that prior to 1936 she was fully able to transact business and to care for her own interests. There is evidence that when she was normal she was eccentric in her dress and personal habits, but it is clear that in those years she was alert mentally, shrewd in her business dealings, economical in her expenditures and used the utmost care in her personal living expenses. Allegations of the complaint are that the real estate in question was worth about $20,000 and that said ward owned other real estate and personal property of about the same value. She retired from school work about 1930. For a number of years she had been a sufferer of arthritis, arteriosclerosis and rheumatism. She lived in a house only one removed from the defendants and had known the defendant Mary Burgiel for about thirty-five years, having been her instructor in school. In August of 1938, Miss Hollingshead went to live in the home of the defendants and continued to live there until a conservator was appointed. On March 11 and 23 of 1939, she executed the deeds involved in this case. From January, 1938, to August, 1939, she withdrew about $8600 from her bank accounts and the evidence shows that a large part of this money passed to the defendants. She was adjudged an incompetent person on August 16, 1939.

The evidence as to her mental competency during the years 1936, 1937, 1938 and 1939 is in conflict. Thirteen witnesses testified for the plaintiff as against twenty-two for the defendants. Most of these witnesses were neighbors, friends or business people who had good opportunities to observe her during the period -in question. The testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses is that a marked mental deterioration started about 1936; that they noticed she became forgetful, absent-minded, was dirty and unkempt in her house and personal habits, that she failed to recognize old friends and had hallucinations and delusions.

Dr. Stanley L. Brown, who had been her physician from 1910, testified that from 1936 she had a progressive senile dementia. He stated that one symptom of the disease was manifest in the degeneration of her attitude toward personal cleanliness, that in the years 1936-1939, inclusive, she became very dirty, ragged and unkempt and permitted her house to become filthy with the droppings of dogs, cats and birds that she kept as pets. This witness testified that from 1936 she frequently failed to recognize him, that her ailments were rendered more acute by her refusal to get the •proper food and that her principal diet was bread and coffee. He stated she had delusions that someone was trying to rob her; that she lacked orientation to her surroundings as to time and place. In July, 1938, he took her to St. Margaret’s hospital where she stayed for five days; that while she was in the hospital he saw her walking in the halls nude and that the hospital attendants complained to him of similar conduct at other times. The witness saw her again in the Burgiel home during the early part of the year 1939 at which time she was in bed. He said her mental condition was progressive and that she was worse on that occasion than when he saw her in the hospital in 1938. In his opinion she did not have sufficient mental capacity to understand ordinary business transactions in 1938 or 1939.

Dr. Stanley J. Mintek, a psychiatrist of considerable experience, testified that he examined Nellie Hollingshead on July 24, 1939, and was present and testified in court on August 16, 1939, when she was adjudged an incompetent person and the conservatrix was appointed. The witness saw her at a sanitarium and made another examination. In his opinion she was of unsound mind when he first saw her July 24, 1939, and continued so to the date of the last visit, August 16, 1939. He testified that her mental condition as he found it was of long standing. He said she was suffering from senile dementia, the symptoms of which were forgetfulness, childishness, lack of orientation, untidiness, delusions and incoherence.. He said it was progressive and incurable.

Dr. Carl A. Wilke testified he treated Nellie Hollingshead twice in June of 1938 and he diagnosed her case as of generalized arteriosclerosis, rheumatism, arthritis, general mental debility, senile dementia and general deterioration of mental and physical health. He stated that her mental condition was progressive and that there could be no rehabilitation at her age, and that in his opinion she was of unsound mind in June, 1938. He did not think there would be any change for the better after that date and that she would be mentally incompetent to transact any business or to transfer real estate in February or March of 1939.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E.2d 380, 382 Ill. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-burgiel-ill-1943.