Gridley v. Boggs

62 Cal. 190, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 723
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1882
DocketNo. 8,584
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 62 Cal. 190 (Gridley v. Boggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gridley v. Boggs, 62 Cal. 190, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 723 (Cal. 1882).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.:

The action, commenced by George W. Gridley in his lifetime, is prosecuted by plaintiff, appellant, as the administratrix of his estate, to obtain a decree setting aside a deed made by him September 4,1879, to certain of the defendants (John Boggs, E. B. Pond and C.W, Clarke), and also an accompanying [197]*197contract executed by them declaring trusts in favor of named creditors of said George W. Gridley and one D. M. Reavis.

The complaint alleges that for more than five years next before the first day of December, 1880, George W. Gridley was continuously feeble and diseased in body, and feeble and weak and unsound in mind, and by reason thereof during all that time “wholly incompetent to transact business.” That during such five years all the defendants had full knowledge of said Gridley’s feeble and diseased condition of body, and his said weak and unsound condition of mind, and that he was so as aforesaid “wholly incompetent to transact business.” That during said five years prior to December 1, 1880, and while the said defendants Boggs, Pond, Clarke and Reavis were each and all of them fully cognizant of said George W. Gridley’s said weak, feeble and diseased condition of body and his said weak, feeble and unsound condition of mind, “and of his said incompetency to transact business,” they conspired, confederated and colluded together to take an unfair and fraudulent advantage of him, “while in his said feeble and diseased condition of body, and while in his said weak, feeble and unsound condition of mind, and while he was so incompetent to transact business, to wrong, cheat, and defraud him out of his said property” (previously described), “and to that end, and with that intent, they wrongfully, fraudulently and falsely represented to said George W. Gridley that he was liable to pay to said Boggs, Pond, Clarke, and to certain other of the defendants, moneys due to them on certain promissory notes, all, or nearly all, signed by him and by said D. M. Reavis,” etc.

The fraud charged upon the defendants especially named is, that taking advantage of the weak, feeble and diseased condition of the mind of George W. Gridley, and of his consequent incapacity to protect his own interests, they induced him, by false representations, to execute the deed and enter into the contract sought to be annulled.

The representations alleged to have been made to Gridley (with the exception, perhaps, of the alleged representation that Reavis had conveyed all this property to Boggs, Pond and Clarke, in reference to which the Court below found upon evidence that no such representation was made, but, to the contrary thereof, that the fact as to conveyance from Reavis [198]*198to Boggs, Pond and Clarke was stated to Gridley), had relation to matters in respect to which he was fully informed, and must have acted responsibly, provided he was a person of sound mind.

The Court below found: “For the five years next before the first day of December, 1880, the plaintiff’s intestate, George W. Gridley, was not either feeble or diseased in body, or feeble, or weak, or .unsound in mind, and was not during all, or any portion of that time, incompetent to attend to, manage or transact business, but, on the contrary, was during all said time and up to the time of his death of sound, healthy and vigorous and unimpaired condition of mind and body, and fully competent to transact business.”

It is admitted that as to this finding, there was a substantial conflict in the evidence.

In argument counsel indulged in much criticism, some of it perhaps just, of the findings. It is obvious, however, in presence of the explicit findings that Gridley was of sound mind, and further, that defendants practiced no such arts or devices as constitute fraud when practiced upon a person of sound mind, the judgment must be affirmed, unless -errors occurred at the trial.

It is contended that the Court below erred in sustaining the objection to the hypothetical question propounded by plaintiff’s counsel on cross-examination to the expert witness, Dr. C. F. Buckley.

Dr. P. B. M. Miller, an expert witness called on behalf of the plaintiff, had testified that he had made a post mortem examination of the body of George W. Gridley, and as to the condition of the brain, pelvic viscera, and particularly the kidneys and bladder, and the prostate gland and the urethra; that he had found nitrate of urea in crystals in washing the membranes of the brain, and crystals of urea in the arachnoid sac, etc. That the kidneys were apparently in the normal state, except that they were engorged with blood; that the membranes of the brain, the pia mater, the arachnoid and dura mater were “thickened, discolored, adherent, and matted together.” That the prostate gland was enlarged, thickened, and indurated and its walls pressed together. In his opinion the deceased must have been of unsound mind for five or six [199]*199years prior to Ms death, by reason of the facts that the condition of the prostate gland had obstructed the elimination of urea, causing it to enter in the circulation and poisoning the branial membranes, and that the patient died of uraemic convulsions thus produced; that the thickened condition of the brain coverings established insanity, and that the thickening produced by the chronic uraemic poisomng must have been gradual, continuing several years.

In his direct examination on behalf of defendants, Dr. Buckley, after stating that he had been a practicing physician and surgeon since 1864, that he was a graduate of certain medical schools, and that he had been superintendent for about two years of an insane asylum in Lancashire, England, proceeded to testify in effect that he had never known crystals of urea to be found in the brain or any of its surroundings; that nitrate of urea is perfectly soluble in water; that uric and urea are specifically different. He added, that taking the condition of the coverings of the brain and the brain itself, and of the kidneys, the bladder, the prostate gland and the urethra, as described by Dr. Miller (and Dr. Caldwell, who assisted at the post-mortem), he could not understand how any such condition of his brain or its membranes could be attributed to uraemic poisomng, without disease of the kidneys antedating it, and declared that disease or unsoundness of mind could not be predicated on the condition of the coverings of the brain as described by Messrs. Miller and Caldwell.

It is apparent from the foregoing that the testimony of Dr. Buckley was addressed to the contradiction of the theory of Dr. Miller, that the diseased condition of the membranes of the brain was produced by slow uraemic poisoning, and such condition indicated insanity in Gridley, which extended backward from his death to a period of time including the acts alleged to have been done by him while incompetent to protect his business or other interests.

It is disputed between counsel for the respective parties whether there was any evidence in the case tending to prove some of the facts assumed to exist in the hypothetical question propounded, on the part of plaintiff, upon the cross-examina[200]*200tion of Dr. Buckley, the sustaining of the objection to which by the Court below is now here urged as error.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Cal. 190, 1882 Cal. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gridley-v-boggs-cal-1882.