Gerrish v. Chambers

189 A. 187, 135 Me. 70, 1937 Me. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 11, 1937
DocketNo. 106 — Equity; No. 105 — Law
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 189 A. 187 (Gerrish v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerrish v. Chambers, 189 A. 187, 135 Me. 70, 1937 Me. LEXIS 3 (Me. 1937).

Opinion

Sturgis, J.

These cases, the one at law and the other in equity, by agreement were heard together by a single Justice sitting in vacation as permitted by the laws of this jurisdiction. The action at law comes forward on exceptions and the equity suit on appeal. Numbers 105 and 106 have been assigned to these cases on the docket of this Court. They will be considered in reverse order.

Lester P. Gerrish, Executor vs. Marion M. Chambers and James E. Monroe.

The complainant, Lester P. Gerrish, in his capacity as executor under the last will and testament of Mary R. Smith, late of Lisbon, Maine, deceased, seeks in this action to impress a trust upon and recover thirty-five hundred dollars or property into which it has [72]*72been converted, which it is alleged the defendant, Marion M. Chambers obtained from the testatrix, Mary R. Smith, by fraud and undue influence. The sitting Justice hearing the cause on Bill, Answer and Replication ordered the defendants to forthwith pay the complainant the full amount claimed with interest, otherwise execution to issue.

The printed case shows that on July 2, 1934, Mary R. Smith, a widow, eighty-two years old, suffering from a rectal cancer of long standing and requiring constant nursing and regular medical attendance, through arrangements made by her family physician entered the private hospital maintained and operated at Lisbon Falls, Maine, by the defendant, Marion M. Chambers. It was arranged that the defendant Chambers, who was a trained and registered nurse, should personally care for the testatrix and that the charges for her board and care should be twenty-five dollars a week for the first two weeks and thirty-five dollars a week thereafter. Medical and surgical supplies were to be paid for by the patient. The nurse, Mrs. Chambers, was an entire stranger to the ’testatrix when she came to the hospital and her care and the charges to be made were arranged on a strictly business basis. Mrs. Smith then had property aggregating more than ten thousand dollars in value, the larger part of which was in the form of deposits in local or near-by banks. Receipted vouchers exhibited at the hearing indicate that she paid all her current bills, including the hospital and nurse’s charges, either in advance or as they became due.

After Mrs. Smith was admitted to this hospital, her disease, then in advanced stages, progressed rapidly. The evidence clearly indicates that there was a gradual and progressive weakening of her mental and physical processes. She realized that death was approaching. Within a few weeks after her admission, her condition was such that it was necessary for her to use opiates and tincture of opium was regularly prescribed by her physician in increasing doses and administered by the nurse.

From the time Mrs. Smith entered this hospital, she was entirely dependent upon the defendant, Marion M. Chambers, for care, attention and assistance in the few business matters which she undertook. Her nearest relatives were two granddaughters of whom she [73]*73had been very fond and had given substantial presents, who apparently continued in her good graces and were the sole beneficiaries of a substantial part of her property under a will she had previously executed and had never revoked, but they were young girls living in Methuen, Massachusetts, and unable to care for the testatrix or often visit her. She had cousins who called occasionally, but like her friends and neighbors were not regularly available for advice or assistance. The nurse Marion M. Chambers, her sister Gladys Nickerson, also a patient in the hospital, and a cousin James E. Monroe, named defendant in this action, all strangers, were the persons with whom Mrs. Smith was in regular contact and association.

On October 5,1934, Mary R. Smith signed an order drawn upon her savings deposit in the Manufacturers National Bank of Lewis-ton, Maine, for the sum of thirty-five hundred ($3500) dollars payable'to herself, or order. The body of the order was in the handwriting of the defendant Marion M. Chambers. It was signed, however, by Mrs. Smith, who also wrote below her signature, “October 5th, 1934. Lisbon Falls Maine. Please send me a cashiers check.” On the same day, Mrs. Chambers presented this order at the bank on which it was drawn, and when asked what Mrs. Smith was going to do with this money by the assistant cashier, as he says, replied, “I don’t know, but she is all right.” Obtaining the cashier’s check, Mrs. Chambers brought it back to the hospital where Mrs. Smith indorsed on it, “Pay only to Marion Chambers.” As soon as the check was indorsed, Mrs. Smith gave it to Mrs. Chambers who forthwith returned to Lewiston and deposited it in her own savings account which she carried in the First National Bank of Lewiston. On October 22,1934, Mrs. Smith died. Eighteen days later, on November 9, 1934, Mrs. Chambers drew thirty-five hundred ($3500) dollars from her savings account, purchased a house in Lisbon Falls, and caused a deed thereof to be given to her cousin, the defendant James E. Monroe, who on the same day executed a will devising the property back to her at his death.

The complainant charges that the money turned over to the defendant Marion M. Chambers by his testatrix was obtained by fraud and undue influence and the transaction was unconscionable. This is the ground upon which the learned Justice sitting [74]*74below rendered his decree. His findings of fact are not to be reversed upon appeal unless they are clearly wrong. The burden to show the error is upon the appellant. Savings Institution v. Johnston and Jose, 133 Me., 445, 180 A., 322; Meader v. Cummings, 131 Me., 445, 163 A., 792 ; Adams v. Ketchum, 129 Me., 212, 151 A., 146; Merryman v. Jones, 126 Me., 130, 131, 136 A., 667.

Fraud in equity includes all wilful or intentional acts, omissions or concealments by which an undue or unconscientious advantage is taken over another. Undue influence is a species of constructive fraud. Whenever two persons have come into such a relation that confidence is necessarily reposed by one and the influence which naturally grows out of that confidence is possessed by the other and this confidence is abused or the influence is exerted to obtain an advantage at the expense of the confiding party, the person so availing himself of his or her position will not be permitted to retain the advantage.

The term “Fiduciary or confidential relation” embraces both technical fiduciary relations and those informal relations which exist whenever one person trusts in and relies on another. And the rule is that whenever a fiduciary or confidential relation exists between the parties to a deed, gift, contract or the like, the law implies a condition of superiority held by one of the parties over the other, so that in every transaction between them by which the superior party obtains a possible benefit equity presumes the existtence of undue influence and the invalidity of the transaction, and casts upon that party the burden of proof of showing affirmatively by clear evidence that he or she acted with entire fairness and the other party acted independently, with full knowledge and of his own volition free from undue influence. Burnham v. Heselton, 82 Me., 495, 500, 20 A., 80; Eldridge v. May, 129 Me., 112, 116, 150 A., 378; Mallett v. Hall, 129 Me., 148, 153, 150 A., 531.

The defendants insist that the money which Mrs. Chambers received from Mary R.

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Bluebook (online)
189 A. 187, 135 Me. 70, 1937 Me. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerrish-v-chambers-me-1937.