Hemenway v. Abbott

97 P. 190, 8 Cal. App. 450, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 456.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 97 P. 190 (Hemenway v. Abbott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemenway v. Abbott, 97 P. 190, 8 Cal. App. 450, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 168 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

*452 CHIPMAN, P. J.

This action was brought to cancel a deed to certain real property, made by plaintiff’s testate, George W. Proctor, to defendant. Judgment passed for defendant from which and from the order denying her motion for a new trial plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff was duly appointed administratrix of the estate of said deceased, with the will annexed, and brings the action as such administratrix. She alleges in her amended complaint : That on May 5, 1904, the said Proctor was the owner of certain described real property situated in Kings county; that prior thereto, to wit, on July 29, 1903, the said Proctor executed and delivered to defendant his power of attorney “to sell or negotiate for sale or rent,” the said lands above referred to and also certain other lands situated in San Luis Obispo county; that said power of attorney “was in full force and effect on said 5th day of May, 1904.” The foregoing facts are found by the court to be true.

It is then alleged that on said May 5, 1904, said Proctor conveyed to defendant by an instrument, purporting to be executed by him, the said Kings county land in which said deed is also described the said land situated in San Luis Obispo county; that on said May 5, 1904, the said Proctor was of the age of eighty-one years, and “was then and for many years prior thereto had been infirm in body and mind”; that he was practically deaf, blind in one eye and the sight of his other eye greatly impaired; “that he was easily influenced by flattery, especially at the hands of women, and was by reason of age, infirmities and mental weakness unfit to transact -business”; that defendant, “well knowing the condition, mental and physical, of said George W. Proctor, and at a time when she was occupying toward him the confidential and fiduciary relationship of his agent as aforesaid, did prepare or 'cause to be prepared, and did, by and through undue influence and for the purpose of benefiting herself, and for illegal and unlawful purposes and objects, cause, compel and have said George W. Proctor execute, acknowledge and deliver to her, said defendant, a certain instrument- of writing, purporting to be the deed of said George W. Proctor, conveying to said defendant the land hereinabove described, together with the said lands in San Luis Obispo County”; that said deed “was made ... if at all, by said Proctor to said' de *453 fendant for a grossly inadequate consideration, to wit, the sum of ten dollars; that no other or further consideration was paid to or received by said Proctor for said purported deed”; that said lands described in said deed are of the value of $2,000, and that the said consideration was fictitious and was, as plaintiff is informed and believes, afterward returned by said Proctor to defendant; that the said deed is void and a nullity “for the reason that the same was made ... if at all, for the purpose of creating and upon certain secret trusts, and to be held, retained and used for the use of said George W. Proctor and to enable said Proctor to sell, handle and dispose of said premises through and by his said agent, Sabrina L. B. Abbott”; that the said deed is void because the purposes for which it was made are not expressed therein; and is void because executed “by reason of the undue influence of said defendant over said Proctor, for a grossly inadequate consideration, through the fraud, importunities and duress of said defendant, and for unlawful and illegal purposes and objects”; that said deed was executed by said Proctor, “if at all, wholly without advice or assistance of counsel or relatives, and wholly by the direction, assistance and advice of the defendant”; that defendant has never carried into effect the objects for which said deed was executed, and it is now impossible for her to do so. The foregoing are substantially all the averments constituting plaintiff’s cause of action.

Defendant answered the complaint without demurring thereto, and denied specifically plaintiff’s averments of said Proctor’s mental and physical incapacity; denied that he was induced to make said deed through the undue influence, fraud and like alleged influences of defendant; denied that the consideration for said deed was fictitious or grossly inadequate, or was upon any secret or other trust or purpose other than expressed upon its face, or was made for the benefit of said Proctor; averred that said deed was made without any undue influence exercised by said defendant and without any fraud, and for the sole and only lawful purpose of conveying title to defendant to the property therein described.

The court made findings negativing all the alleged facts set up by plaintiff as ground for the cancellation of said deed and made findings affirming the truth of defendant’s allegations. The findings are challenged as unsupported by the evidence *454 and it is also claimed that the findings do not support the judgment.

We learn nothing of Mr. Proctor’s life from the evidence prior to 1902 nor as to his characteristics, mental or physical. Defendant was said to be related (a cousin) to the second deceased wife of Proctor, and is first mentioned in connection with his family when she visited at Petaluma a daughter of Mrs. Hemenway in the latter part of 1902. Proctor was living with his daughter, Mrs. Hemenway, at that time. Mrs. Hemenway testified that defendant came to her house quite often: “She treated my father very pleasantly during that time. At first she did not treat him in any way that a mere acquaintance would not; only toward the last it was different. She would some to the door and ask where he was; he would be puttering around; I had two and a half acres of ground and she would go out where he was and talk with him.” She was asked if she ever saw her “display any marks of affection for him at that time” and answered: “I have seen them stand in the yard with her arm over his shoulder.” This is the extent of her exhibitions of affection toward him at Petaluma, or elsewhere for that matter, so far as appears. The witness testified that her father and defendant went to San Francisco “several times and were gone a couple or three days and then came back.” It appeared that about this time, in the early part of 1903, defendant took a lodging-house in San Francisco and these visits may have had something to do with that; the evidence furnishes no other probable explanation of the purpose of the, visits, for it will not be presumed and is not suggested by plaintiff that they had an immoral purpose, and the evidence shows that he took considerable interest in defendant’s establishing a lodging-house in San Francisco. The witness testified that her father left her house, in March or April, 1903, “just simply because he preferred to live in the city; he could not see very well and he could see things in the city that amused him. . . . He did not have any means to invest in a lodging-house at the time he went to San Francisco; nothing that could buy a lodging-house; he had a little money that my brother Frank sent him.” It appeared that Mrs. Hemenway called to see her father while he was lodging at defendant’s house and was shown her father’s room by defendant with whom she said *455 ■“the conversation was on general lines.” Her father visited her several times, she testified, after he went to San Francisco.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 190, 8 Cal. App. 450, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemenway-v-abbott-calctapp-1908.