Hardee v. Hardee

309 S.E.2d 243, 309 N.C. 753, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1466
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 1983
Docket381A83
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 309 S.E.2d 243 (Hardee v. Hardee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardee v. Hardee, 309 S.E.2d 243, 309 N.C. 753, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1466 (N.C. 1983).

Opinion

EXUM, Justice.

This is an action for damages and to set aside a deed conveying real property on the grounds of mental incapacity and undue influence. At trial the jury answered the mental capacity issue favorably to defendants and the undue influence issue favorably to plaintiff. The questions on appeal are whether the evidence is sufficient to be submitted to the jury on the undue influence issue and whether the trial court erred in admitting into evidence a certain conversation between plaintiff, Johnnie Hardee, and the deceased grantor. A majority of the Court of Appeals answered both questions favorably to plaintiff. Chief Judge Vaughn dissented on both questions. We hold that it was prejudicial error to admit the challenged evidence and the evidence was sufficient to be submitted to the jury on the undue influence issue. We, therefore, reverse the Court of Appeals in part and remand for a new trial.

I.

The following facts are either stipulated or uncontradicted:

Defendants Walton Hardee and wife, Lura, had four children: Lavelle Hardee, the deceased; Silas Elmer Hardee; and defendants, Odell Hardee and Verna Hardee Parrish. Plaintiff, Johnnie Hardee, is the only child of Lavelle and the grandson of Walton and Lura. In 1973 Walton divided his land among his four children, retaining a life estate. As a part of this division Walton conveyed to Lavelle a 49-acre tract which is the subject of this lawsuit.

When plaintiff Johnnie Hardee was about a year old, he left home with his mother who was estranged and ultimately divorced from his father, Lavelle. Thereafter Lavelle remarried. Johnnie did not get along with his father’s second wife, Betty, and never again after moving away lived with his father. He was estranged from his father until Betty Hardee died in March 1980. After her death Johnnie began to visit his father every week or so.

*755 Lavelle Hardee was a perfectly normal, healthy, outgoing, and friendly man until early May 1980 when he began to complain to family members and associates of severe headaches. His employer, David Stroud, who was also a close friend, noted Lavelle’s complaints about headaches and some unusual abnormalities in the manner in which Lavelle performed his work as an automobile mechanic.

On 25 May 1980 x-rays revealed that Lavelle suffered from a large brain tumor which was surgically removed on 26 May and diagnosed to be malignant. After the surgery Lavelle continued to be hospitalized until he was discharged on 16 June 1980. He died intestate on 21 September 1980. Plaintiff is the duly qualified administrator of his father’s estate.

While hospitalized post-operatively, Lavelle, on 9 June 1980, executed a power of attorney in favor of David Stroud which was filed in the Harnett County Registry on 10 June 1980. On 13 June, Lavelle executed and delivered to his parents, Walton and Lura Hardee, a deed to the 49-acre tract which Walton had earlier conveyed to Lavelle in 1973 and in which Walton had reserved a life estate.

On 10 July 1980 Walton and Lura Hardee executed and delivered a deed to this 49-acre tract to defendant Odell Hardee and Verna Hardee Parrish.

Other evidence in the case will be summarized below in our discussion of the legal question to which it relates.

At trial the dispositive issues were submitted to and answered by the jury as follows:

1. Did Lavelle Hardee on June 13, 1980 lack mental capacity to execute the deed from Lavelle Hardee to Walton E. Hardee and wife, Lura G. Hardee?
Answer: No.
2. Was Lavelle Hardee induced to execute the deed of June 13, 1980 by the undue influence of the defendants, or any of them?
Answer: Yes.

*756 The jury also, upon the trial court’s instructions, answered a damages issue favorably to plaintiff. Whereupon Judge Britt, presiding, entered judgment for the plaintiff setting aside the deeds dated, respectively, 13 June and 10 July 1980 and ordering that plaintiff have and recover the damages awarded by the jury.

II.

Defendants argue that their motion for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been allowed because the evidence was insufficient to support submission of the undue influence issue to the jury. A majority of the Court of Appeals concluded that the evidence was sufficient, and we agree.

We adhere to the well-settled principle that in determining the sufficiency of evidence relied on by plaintiff, it must be viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff and plaintiff is entitled to every reasonable inference arising from the evidence. See Cutts v. Casey, 278 N.C. 390, 411, 180 S.E. 2d 297, 307 (1971). Accord Daughtry v. Turnage, 295 N.C. 543, 246 S.E. 2d 788 (1978); Summey v. Cauthen, 283 N.C. 640, 197 S.E. 2d 549 (1973).

This Court has recognized the difficulty a party faces in proving undue influence in the execution of a document. In re Andrews, 299 N.C. 52, 54, 261 S.E. 2d 198, 199 (1980). Something must operate upon the mind of a person allegedly unduly influenced which has a controlling effect sufficient to destroy the person’s free agency and to render the instrument not properly an expression of the person’s wishes, but rather the expression of the wishes of another or others. “It is the substitution of the mind of the person exercising the influence for the mind of the [person executing the instrument], causing him to make [the instrument] which he otherwise would not have made.” In re Will of Turnage, 208 N.C. 130, 131, 179 S.E. 332, 333 (1935). No test has emerged by which we can measure with mathematical certainty the sufficiency of the evidence to take the issue of undue influence to the jury. See In re Beale’s Will, 202 N.C. 618, 163 S.E. 684 (1932). Several factors have been isolated which bear on the question. They include:

1. Old age and physical and mental weakness of the person executing the instrument.
*757 2. That the person signing the paper is in the home of the beneficiary and subject to his constant association and supervision.
3. That others have little or no opportunity to see him.
4. That the instrument is different and revokes a prior instrument.
5. That it is made in favor of one with whom there are no ties of blood.
6. That it disinherits the natural objects of his bounty.
7. That the beneficiary has procured its execution.

In re Mueller’s Will, 170 N.C. 28, 30, 86 S.E. 719, 720 (1915). This list does not purport to contain all facts and circumstances which might suggest the existence of undue influence. Such a list would be limitless. Furthermore, the difficulty in detecting undue influence is ordinarily enhanced by the often adroit and cunning tactics employed by those attempting to exercise it. Andrews,

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Bluebook (online)
309 S.E.2d 243, 309 N.C. 753, 1983 N.C. LEXIS 1466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardee-v-hardee-nc-1983.