Hoover v. Neff

59 S.E. 428, 107 Va. 441, 1907 Va. LEXIS 61
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 S.E. 428 (Hoover v. Neff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoover v. Neff, 59 S.E. 428, 107 Va. 441, 1907 Va. LEXIS 61 (Va. 1907).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

It appears that Emanuel Hoover, appellant, on or about the [442]*4421st day of January, 1903, intermarried with one Virginia C. Will, a widow, who then was and up to the time of her death remained without decendants. Her death occurred on the 16th day of March, 1904, about fifteen months after her marriage-, and in the early evening of the day preceding her death she executed a deed conveying to the appellant certain lands of value of about $1,000, the conveyance being made for the nominal consideration of $1.00, and the lands conveyed charged with the payment of $100 to Bessie Will, grantor’s niece, when she became twenty years of age, and in the event of the death of Bessie Will before she became twenty years of age, appellant was to retain the $100 as his own money.

The bill in this cause was filed by a portion of the next of kin and heirs at law' of tho grantor against the appellant and other parties named as defendants, to have vacated and annulled the said deed, upon the alleged grounds, that at the time of its execution, the grantor was mentally incapable of engaging in the transaction, and that the same was procured by the exercise of undue influence upon her by appellant. Upon a hearing of the cause on the pleadings and the proofs taken for both the complainants and the appellant, the circuit court made its decree, finding that the grantor was entirely capable of executing the conveyance, but that the conveyance was procured by undue influence, and vacated and annulled the same, except as to the charge thereby created upon the lands in favor of Bessie Will, amounting to $100, as to which the bill itself prayed that the deed be not disturbed. From that decree the appellant obtained this appeal.

The evidence discloses that, at the time of the marriage of appellant with the grantor in said conveyance, she had been for some years a widow, living alone in the country upon the lands in controversy, about a mile from the home of appellant, of whose first wife she was a relative; that her own kindred and heirs at law, or many of them, "were of half blood only, and for the most part resided a considerable distance from her; that [443]*443nearly all of her kindred ceased communication with her for some time prior to her intermarriage with appellant, and this situation seems to have existed for many years previous to that marriage certainly during the entire period to which reference is made, her kindred had wholly failed to render her any of those kindly attentions usually expected from relatives to one in her position, and had given her no assistance whatever m the conduct of her affairs. On the other hand, it is shown that appellant had been often, prior to his marriage with the said Virginia O. Will, of material assistance to her, aiding her in the cultivation of her lands, supplying her with fire-wood and other necessaries, and during the period of the marriage had completely discharged the duties owing from a husband to a wife, although, for reasons entirely satisfactory to themselves, they continued to reside at their respective homes. The disease which terminated in the death of the wife, was pulmonary tuberculosis, with-which she seems to have been affected for a period of two years and possibly somewhat longer, although she was never confined to her bed with it until Monday, the 14th day of March, the third day prior to her death. On that morning, about 7 o’clock, she had what the witnesses describe as a sinking spell, rallying therefrom after about half an hour or an hour and her death did not occur, as before stated, until the night of Wednesday, the 16th of March. It further appears from the testimony of three of the principal witnesses for appellees, that the grantor, at all times after rallying from her sinking spell of Monday morning, was fully aware of her impending dissolution; and that, recognizing her condition on Monday, after,the sinking spell, on Tuesday morning and on Wednesday, the day of her death, and at the very moment of the arrival of the scrivener who prepared the deed in question, she was engaged from time to time in stating her desires as to the disposition to be made of sundry articles of her personal property. In fact, counsel for appellees admit that the evidence fails to “indicate any actual mental derangement” in the grantor; the contention [444]*444being that, at the time of the execution of the conveyance, she was in such an extreme and desperate state of weakness as to be “a mere passive instrument in the hands of appellant.” In other words, the sole question for our determination is, whether or not this conveyance was obtained by appellant by undue influence. Here we have a capable grantor, as is admitted, and the inquiry is, what undue influence, if any, was brought to bear upon her to cause her to execute the conveyance in question ? It may be said, by way of narrowing the issue further, that it is admitted, as well as proven in the record, that at no time prior to the Monday on which her final illness began, which was one day before the conveyance in question was executed, was the grantor’s condition mentally or physically such as to admit of the successful exercise of undue pressure upon her, and there is no pretense that, ,up to that time, any had been attempted. It may'be further said in this connection, that the proof shows that the appellant had no opportunity to coerce the grantor in the execution of the deed between Monday morning and the moment of its execution, other than his presence in the room at that moment and for a short while prior. The evidence wholly fails to show that, for a single moment, he was alone with the grantor; on the contrary, it is shown that the only time they were together in the room with the door closed, Susan Hiser, a witness for the appellees, was in the room with them.

It is true, that appellant telephoned to the scrivener about a week or ten days before, that he wished him to come down and do some writing, and, the scrivener failing to come, the appellant, on the evening that the conveyance was executed, sent his son for the scrivener, and appellant met him at the house of the grantor and informed him that the title papers by which he would have to write the deed were down at appellant’s house, and the deed was actually written at the latter place. Every one of those who were present when appellant was with the grantor, from the time of her sinking spell on Monday up to the time of the execution of the deed, has been introduced as a [445]*445witness for appellees, and none of them testify that he endeavored in any way to coerce or even persuade her to convey the land to him in contravention of her own untrammelled desire.

We do not deem it necessary to consider at length the argument presented as to the burden of proof in such a case. In any case, whether the instrument sought to be overthrown and annulled, on the ground of undue influence or coercion, be a deed of conveyance or a testamentary disposition of property, the proof must be that the undue influence or coercion was such as to overcome the will and control the judgment of the grantor, in the one case, or the testator, in the other, and the burden of proof in such a case, as in a case where fraud is charged, is always on him who charges undue influence. Wallen v. Wallen, ante, p. 131, 1 Va. App. 351, 57 S. E. 596.

In Griffin v. Birkhead, 84 Va. 612, 5 S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.E. 428, 107 Va. 441, 1907 Va. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoover-v-neff-va-1907.