Hayes, Conservator v. Candee

52 A. 826, 75 Conn. 131, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 52 A. 826 (Hayes, Conservator v. Candee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes, Conservator v. Candee, 52 A. 826, 75 Conn. 131, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 23 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

Tobbance, C. J.

The plaintiff, as the conservator of Mary B. Spencer, brings this suit against the defendant, individually, and as guardian of a minor. The complaint alleges in substance the following facts: In August, 1898, Mary B. Spencer, a woman mentally weak and incompetent, was the owner in fee of an undivided one-sixth interest in certain land in the town of Easton in this State; -the defendant represented to her that the selectmen of Easton intended to take that interest and use it for the support of her minor son, and requested her to give a deed of the property to Hilmer Bodine, a minor in the employment of the defendant; said representation was false to the defendant’s knowledge, and was made with intent to induce her to convey said interest to Bodine. “ Believing said representation to be true, and induced by said representation, and by reason of her said weakness and incompetency of mind, said Mary B. Spencer, on the 19th of August, 1898, gave a deed of the property aforesaid to said Hilmer Bodine,” without consideration.

The complaint further alleged that after this the plaintiff was appointed and qualified as conservator of Mrs. Spencer; that the defendant was appointed and qualified as guardian of said minor, Bodine, and as such in March, 1900, sold said property and gave a deed thereof for the consideration of of $466.66.

*133 The answer admitted that Mrs. Spencer owned the land as alleged, that the plaintiff was conservator as alleged, that the defendant was guardian as alleged, and as such had sold and conveyed the land as alleged. The other allegations of the complaint were denied. The court found the issues for the plaintiff, and rendered judgment in his favor against the defendant, individually, for -$500 damages.

The appeal record in this case seems to have been prepared, for the most part, as the basis of a futile attempt, on the part of the appellant, to retry here questions of fact conclusively settled in the trial court; and hence it contains a great deal of matter not only useless and unnecessary, but harmful, in that it tends to obscure the real questions in the case. The case before the trial court was a simple one, and the material facts necessary to a proper decision of it were few; yet the request for a finding contains eighty-six paragraphs. There are sixty paragraphs of exceptions to the finding; the reasons of appeal are stated in seventy-four paragraphs; and, added to this, all the evidence in the case is certified up. It will not be necessary, however, to consider the reasons of appeal separately. They may for convenience of discussion be divided into six groups, alleging respectively, in substance, that the court erred as follows : (1) in finding certain facts upon insufficient evidence; (2) in finding certain facts without evidence; (3) in refusing to find certain facts upon sufficient evidence; (4) in finding •certain facts from subordinate facts which do not support the finding; (5) in rendering judgment upon the facts found; (6) in rulings upon evidence.

The first three of these groups, comprising the greater part of the seventy-four reasons of appeal, deal with the claimed •errors of the court in making up its finding and in refusing to correct the same; and with respect to these groups it is perhaps enough to say that the allegations of error contained in them are not borne out by the record. It does not appear that the trial court found any fact without evidence, nor that it found the facts on which the judgment rests iipon insufficient evidence, nor that it erred in refusing to find certain facts *134 which the defendant says it ought to have found; indeed, as to this last matter, the trial court expressly says that although many of the facts which it refused to find were testified to in substance by the defendant or Bodine, or both, the court did not give credit to their statements; and this court cannot say that the trial court erred in failing to credit such statements. The result is that the finding as made must stand.

In the 4th and 5th groups of the reasons of appeal, the defendant claims that the trial court erred in drawing certain of its ultimate conclusions from the facts found, and in rendering judgment upon facts which do not support the judgment ; and whether these claims are well founded or not must be determined by a consideration of . the facts found.

The material facts found are in substance these: In August, 1898, Mrs. Spencer was and had been for sometime living in Easton in the family of the defendant, a farmer there, with whom there also lived as “ help ” a sixteen-year old lad named Bodine. Mrs. Spencer was fifty-seven years old, “ weakminded and far below the average in intellect,” although she could read, write and cipher some, make simple purchases, and perform ordinary housework. She was a widow with two children under age, one of whom, a boy named David, was an imbecile then living with his uncle in New Hampshire. She had no property except an undivided one-sixth interest in her deceased father’s farm, which interest was then worth about $500. Prior to August 19th, 1898, the selectmen of Easton had been asked to take care of the imbecile son, but had refused to do so on the ground that his mother had property which should be first applied to his support. They had also considered the question of appointing an ovérseer over her, but did nothing about it. The town never did support said son. A short time before August 19th, 1898, the defendant told Mrs. Spencer that the town intended to take her property from her to use for David’s support, and that it would be better for her to give a deed of it to Bodine and have no property, and that she would lose nothing by so doing. This was not true, and the defendant knew it was not true, and it was made to in *135 duce her to give such a deed. She, being weakminded, believed what he said, and relying upon the truth of it was induced on the 19th of August, 1898, to convey her interest in the farm to Bodine, for the sole consideration of $5, paid to her by the check of the defendant which was made payable to Bodine and indorsed by Bodine to her. In September, 1898, the defendant was appointed guardian of Bodine, and testified in the trial below that he, as such guardian, subsequently sold said property for $446, and had expended all the proceeds for said Bodine except $10, and had not yet been paid for his services as guardian. Bodine was in no way related to Mrs. Spencer, and she conveyed the land to him because she was led by the defendant to believe that it was necessary to do so in order to protect her interests, and that it was for her benefit to do so, and that it would be without loss to her. She had sufficient intelligence to comprehend that the deed conveyed her interest in her father’s estate to Bodine, and that the title thereto had passed to him, but she did not intend to make a gift of it to him, and was led by the defendant to believe and did believe that the transfer was made to benefit her. The deed to Bodine- was prepared at the direction of Mrs. Spencer by the town clerk of Easton at the time it was executed.

No direct evidence was given that the defendant profited by the giving of said deed, or that he consulted with or had any understanding with Bodine regarding the matter of said conveyance, or that the defendant profited or expected to profit by the same ;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 A. 826, 75 Conn. 131, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-conservator-v-candee-conn-1902.