Hooker v. Board of Directors of Wittenberg College

2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 353
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJanuary 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 353 (Hooker v. Board of Directors of Wittenberg College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooker v. Board of Directors of Wittenberg College, 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 353 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1873).

Opinion

Yaple, J.

This is a proceeding upon petition in error, asking to reverse a judgment rendered by this court, at Special Term, in favor of the board of directors of Wittenberg College, against Hooker, as administrator of Samuel Startzman, deceased, for $2,931 and costs.

The cause was tried to a jury, which rendered a verdict against the administrator for the above sum; a motion for new trial was made and overruled; a bill of exceptions taken, which does not set out the evidence; judgment rendered upon the verdict, and a petition in error filed here.

The action was brought upon a sealed instrument (a bond), dated September 1,1864, made by Startzman to the above-named board of directors, in the sum of $2,000, conditioned, “that, whereas, the said Samuel Startzman and sundry other iversons, having undertaken and agreed to and. with the said hoard of directors to endow Wittenberg College, and the said Samuel Startzman having subscribed for that purpose the sum of two thousand dollars, payable to said board of directors, or to its assigns, within one year after his decease, with interest from the date hereof, payable annually during the natural life of said Samuel Startzman. [355]*355Now, if the said Samuel Startzman shall, during the term of his natural life, well and truly pay the said interest annually, and if the personal representatives of said Samuel Startzman shall also, within one year after his decease, pay to said board of directors, or its assigns, the said sum of two thousand dollars, then this obligation to be void. Provided always, that the said Samuel Startzman, his heirs, executors, and administrators, shall have the right, at any time before the said principal sum falls due, to be released and discharged from the obligations of this instrument, by paying to said board of directors, or its assigns, the said principal and all interest that shall have accrued thereon up to the time of such payment.”

The amended petition states the facts and circumstances under which said bond was executed and which were well known to the parties. It avers that Wittenberg College was incorporated by the legislature of this state, by special act, passed March 11, 1845 (43 Ohio L. L. 375), for the promotion of scientific and theological knowledge, with express power to hold property acquired “ by purchase or donation;” that, to accomplish its purposes-the college was dependent wholly upon voluntary “subscriptions” and donations; that the college was located in Clark county, Ohio; that Startzman’s and other similar bonds were executed to the college directors, to carry out the objects of the charter; that, relying upon the payment of such obligations, the plaintiff was induced to and did accept said trust, a^id undertook to execute the same, which it continues to do, by the employment of officers and teachers for the college; and that, in the execution of such trust, the plaintiff has incurred, and is now incurring liabilities, for the payment of which this and similar bonds are relied upon by it.

Except the charter, etc., the defendant, by answer, denied these facts, and we do not know whether they were proved' or not.

The bill of exceptions merely states that • there was [356]*356evidence given at the trial tending to “show that the defendant’s intestate, at and about the time of making the instrument in writing, upon which the plaintiffs’ action is founded (a copy of which is hereto attached and made part hereof, marked “A”), was of diseased and unsound mind,” and that such bond was put in evidence. .

The charges given and refused in relation to the evidence tending to “ show ” that Startzman, at and about the time he executed the bond, was of “diseased and unsound mind,” and in relation to the validity of the bond as a debt against his estate, are all that the plaintiff' in error complains of.

As to the first,, the court charged the jury :

“That the law presumes mental capacity to contract, and it would devolve on the defendant to rebut that presumption by satisfactory proof of insanity; and that, in regard to insanity, when there is no frenzy or raving madness, the legal and true character of the disease is delusion, or, as the physicians express it, illusion or hallucination

To this, the defendant below excepted.

And the defendant below asked the court to instruct the jury:

“First. That the bond sued upon may be void of itself for want of consideration; and if void, an action can not be maintained thereon, unless- the same be rendered valid by virtue of statutory provision.” '

This charge the court gave as requested.

“Second. That the charter of Wittenberg College authorizes it to acquire property, for its purposes, either by ‘ purchase or donation,’ and not otherwise; and that a donation or gift is not valid without delivery of the thing donated or given, and that ‘ donation ’ and £subscription’ are not words of the same import.

Third. And that there being here no delivery, but merely a promise to give a donation in the future, such promise is not binding for want of consideration and for want of statutory provision making such promises binding-under the charter to the present plaintiff.”

[357]*357The last two instructions asked, the court refused; and the plaintiff excepted.

The court then charged the jury:

“That the delivery of the instrument sued upon was, of itself, a donation, and, under the plaintiffs’ charter, would sustain the plaintiffs’ present action.”

When a case comes before a court upon error based upon a bill of exceptions, like the one in this case, viz., that there was evidence merely “ tending to prove,” etc., it must expressly state all that the -evidence tended to prove — nothing can be inferred. “We can, in such cases, infer nothing beyond what the bill of exceptions expressly states the evidence tended to prove.” U. S. Express Co. v. Bachman, 2 Superior Court Rep. 256; Leach v. Church, 10 Ohio St. 148.

This bill of exceptions does not state that Startzman was incompetent to contract by reason of a diseased and unsound mind. It simply states that at and about that time the evidence tended to “ show ” that his mind was diseased and unsound, leaving it to mere inference that he was not, for that reason, competent to make a valid contract, which does not necessarily follow in all cases of diseased or unsound mind. Cases have been known where persons whose minds were, beyond question, diseased and unsound— who were in a lunatic asylum, under treatment therefor— have yet been perfectly rational upon their business affairs, and competent to manage them, and who have, while so confined, directed their management by letter. 'Of course, if incompetency to contract for such cause be claimed, such diseased and unsound condition of the mind must be carefully considered. Startzman may have had a diseased brain, causing, by lesion, partial paralysis of the body, and yet he may have been shown, by evidence given to the jury, to have been competent tp conduct business, both public and private, in a most rational and efficient manner.

No defense of insanity, or incapacity to make the bond in suit, by reason of diseased or unsound mind, was set up [358]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooker-v-board-of-directors-of-wittenberg-college-ohsuperctcinci-1873.