Holbrook v. Fyffe

175 S.W. 977, 164 Ky. 435, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 30, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 977 (Holbrook v. Fyffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Fyffe, 175 S.W. 977, 164 Ky. 435, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 393 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Hurt

Affirming.

This suit was brought in the Lawrence Circuit Court by Nancy Fyffe, through her next friend, Pleasant Skaggs, against her son-in-law, J. H. Holbrook, and the husband of her granddaughter, N. W. Fraley, and the Louisa National Bank. Nancy Fyffe is a woman near seventy years of age, and whose husband, Merideth Fyffe, about seventeen or eighteen years ago, having become enamored of other women, caused his wife, Nancy Fyffe, to be adjudged a lunatic, and sent to the Eastern Asylum for the Insane, and thereafter lived with another woman. Nancy remained in the asylum for the insane for about one year, when her son-in-law, J. H. Holbrook, procured her release as a harmless lunatic, and brought her back to the neighborhood of her old home, which was on the head waters of Blaine Creek, in Lawrence County. Her husband refused to'permit her to live with him, or to render her any aid or assistance in any way, and taking the strange woman with whom he lived, he went into another county, and has since resided there with the woman. To these circumstances and her husband’s treatment of her, by habits of drinking and association with lewd women, and by desertion of her, before she was adjudged a lunatic, is attributed her loss of rationality. Thirteen or fourteen years ago she returned to the asylum for the insane again, but it does not appear how long she was confined in the asylum at that time. Her husband owned a farm on Blaine Creek, where his son, Milliard Fyffe, lived, and sometimes Nancy Fyffe resided with him, and at other times with the appellant, Holbrook, and at other times with a son-in-law, whose name was Ferguson, and, also, with Pleasant Skaggs, another son-in-law, who is her next friend in this suit, and at other times among other relatives and friends, without any particular place of abode.

[437]*437Several years ago ber husband, for the purpose of enabling his daughter, Ida Holbrook, wife of appellant, to become a surety upon his bond in some, kind of a transaction relating to the sale or making of whiskey, for the alleged consideration of one dollar, conveyed the farm to Ida Holbrook. She, however, does not seem to have ever set up any claim to the farm, or to have made use of it in any way, by reason of the conveyance to her, and it really does not appear that she knew at the time of the conveyance, that it had been made. Several years ago the appellant, Holbrook, removed with his family from that neighborhood to G-reenup County, where he has since resided. Nancy Fyffe did not join in the conveyance to her daughter, Ida Holbrook, and it does not appear that she had any knowledge of such conveyance, and retained her potential right of dower in the land, probably lived upon it from time to time as her vagaries of mind might lead her to do. She, also, lived with her daughter, the wife of Pleasant Skaggs, two or three years at one time, and her son, Milliard Fyffe, paid her board.

In the year 1913, her husband came to the neighborhood, and there is some proof of some conversation he had with her, in which he was advising her to sell her interest in the farm. Milliard Fyffe and the appellant, Holbrook, and probably other members of the family, arranged among themselves to sell the land to one Noah Skaggs for $2,000.00. It being necessary to secure Nancy Fyffe’s signature to and acknowledgment of the deed to effect the sale, Holbrook made a promise to her, that if she would do so, that he would take care of her and treat her in a humane manner as long as she lived, and give her a decent burial at her death. While the exact facts in regard to the transaction are not shown by the record, it seems that it was arranged by her son, and probably her husband and Holbrook, that Holbrook was to receive $600.00 of the price to be received for the land, and which he was to receive and use in providing for Nancy Fyffe as long as she lived. The sale was effected to Noah Skaggs, and he paid over to Holbrook $600.00 in money, and gave notes to the amount of $700.00, which are held by Milliard Fyffe, but who received the other $700.00 of the purchase price of the land, does not appear. Holbrook insists that the $600.00’ was not all to be applied in providing for the appellee, Fyffe, but that some portion of it represented his inter[438]*438est in the land. It is, however, very apparent, that he nor his wife had any real interest in the land, hut on account of the conveyance by her father to his wife of the land, it was necessary for them to join in the deed to effect the sale.

Nancy Fyffe was taken to Louisa by Holbrook, and there executed the deed, but no money was paid or offered to her. Holbrook insists that he made a contract with the old woman to take care of and provide for her at his home in Greenup County, while it is contended upon her part, that it was not agreed that he should only provide her a home at his house. Holbrook took her, immediately after the execution of the deed, with him to his house, in Greenup County, and she remained there about two months. She became very much dissatisfied with residing at his home, and talked continuously of her desire to return to the neighborhood of her old home on Blaine Creek. Her conversation upon that subject was her continual theme, both to members of Holbrook’s family, and to him, and to such other persons as she came in contact with. She became so dissatisfied with her surroundings, that she went to the extremity of butting her head against the walls, and beating herself in the face with her fists. Holbrook, as he says, at her request, came to Blaine Creek to malre arrangements to find her a home, and with some one with whom she would be satisfied to live, and that he offered her son-in-law, Pleasant Skaggs, and his wife $300.00 to take care of her during her lifetime, but they would not agree to do so, unless he would pay them the $600.00, which he had received for that purpose. He then entered into an arrangement with N. W. Fraley, who had recently married a granddaughter of appellee, to provide her a home and care for her during her lifetime, and consummated this arrangement by paying to Fraley $300.00 of the $600.00 which he had received from the purchase price of the farm. He then returned home and informed Mrs. Fyffe of the arrangement that he had made, and the proof shows that she was very much pleased with it. When he brought her to Louisa, Fraley met them with a team to convey her to his house. She went very willingly with him, but when they had come to the home of her sister on Blaine Creek, she expressed the desire of spending two nights with her sister, which Fraley permitted her to do, promising to return for her at the expiration of that time. He did return, accompanied by [439]*439his wife, when she refused positively to go with him, and went to the house of her daughter, the wife of Pleasant Skaggs, where she has resided since that time.

The contention of appellee is, that Fraley did not have any house to which to take her at the time, and did not own any home, hut, it seems that he made an arrangement with his father, by which he procured a dwelling house on his father’s land, into which he very soon thereafter moved. Fraley deposited the $300.00, which he received from Holbrook, in the Louisa National Bank, and thereafter checked out $30.00 of it. The record shows conclusively that the appellee, from disease, old age, or grief, has been reduced to that state of mental imbecility which disqualifies her for the prudential management of her affairs, and that she is entirely incompetent to transact any business, or to deal with any one at arm’s length, and is clearly mentally unbalanced.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 977, 164 Ky. 435, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-fyffe-kyctapp-1915.