Huguenin v. Adams

96 S.E. 918, 110 S.C. 407, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 90
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 10, 1918
Docket10090
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 918 (Huguenin v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huguenin v. Adams, 96 S.E. 918, 110 S.C. 407, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 90 (S.C. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Gage.

Action in equity to set aside a deed from Mrs. Mary A. Huguenin to Julius H. Adams, by which the grantor conveyed to the grantee 1,541 acres of land, confessedly worth nearly $50,000. The action was brought by Mrs. Huguenin, and with her was joined Dr. E. C. L. Adams, to whom she had made a deed of trust to the same land, in repudiation of the deed she had first made to Julius H. Adams. Mrs. Huguenin testified, but she died before the judgment of the Court was pronounced.

The master and the Circuit Court both found against the complainant, and so do we. Mrs. Huguenin was a ladjr of substance and of culture. Her only child had died in 1892, and'her husband, Dr. Julius Huguenin, had died before that year. She resided upon her landed estate in lower Richland, and in the summer time she went to her house in the Sand Hills. After the death of her husband and her child her brother, Harry W. Adams, lived with her until he died in 1903 ; * and then her brother, Joel H. Adams, the father of Julius, lived with her 14 years and until he died in 1914 Then Julius, who was named for Dr. Huguenin, and whose *411 mother was Dr. Huguenin’s sister, took up his residence with Mrs. Huguenin and managed her estate. He was a young unmarried man. Mrs. Huguenin owned a large landed property, aggregating about 2,300 acres. In 1911, the year in which the deed to Julius was made, the grantor was 73 years old. In 1906 Mrs. Huguenin had suffered a slight stroke of paralysis from which she recovered, in 1912 she suffered a second stroke of a serious character, and in 1915 she died. Before 1911 she had executed three wills, one in 1896, one in 1903, and one in 1907, and after 1911 she made yet another will in 1915. Such is the general setting of the case.

There are 26 exceptions to the decree of the Circuit Court, . of which 15 are to the major issue and 11 to the minor issues. The exceptions are redundant and argumentative. In the essence there are only two cardinal issues in the case—(1) the integrity of the deed, and (2) the correctness of the account betwixt Mrs. Huguenin and Julius for the years 1904-1915, both inclusive. The first is the major issue to be decided, and that which we now approach.

We shall compass the questions which are made by the appellants’ printed argument rather than follow the exceptions seriatim. The appellants suggest at the outset a “fundamental error” of the Circuit Court in stating the rule of equity applicable to a case like this. The Court held this:

“My understanding of the rule in such cases is that when it is made to appear by the person seeking to set aside an instrument that the maker was feeble-minded, infirm, or illiterate, and that the person to whom the conveyance is made occupied towards the maker of the instrument a position of trust and confidence, the burden is then upon the person to whom the conveyance is made to show the utmost good faith in the transaction. In this case, then, the plaintiff should show, in the first instance, that she was feeble-minded, infirm, or illiterate at the time of the execution of the instrument; but the testimony in this case establishes the fact that *412 Mrs. Huguenin was never feeble-minded nor illiterate, and 'that she was not infirm until after the execution of this instrument.”

That is hardly accurate.

1 The true rule is that when a relationship of trust and confidence is established betwixt the contracting parties—and such a friendship was admitted to exist in the instant case—then, without reference to the infirmity of one of the parties, the other party who has received a benefit by the transaction must prove that the transaction was fair. Way v. Ins. Co., 61 S. C. 506, 39 S. E. 742.

2 But the Circuit Court went further, and held that, granting that Mrs. Huguenin was infirm, the defendant proved by a preponderance of the testimony that the transaction was fair. So any suggested error of the Court did not operate to injure the plaintiffs.

This brings us to review the issue of fact, was the transaction a fair one? The appellants state their contention in these words:

. “In the present case (1) it is not contended by the plaintiff that false statements were made by the defendant as to the contents of the deed at the time of its execution, nor (2) that plaintiff relying upon these executed.the deed, nor (3) that there was active physical coercion or intimidation or overbearing-argument used; but the claim is made (a) that deception, just as actual and potent, and far more subtle, was used most successfully'in securing the'conveyance of 1,541 acres of plaintiff’s lands to. the defendant without consideration and without so much as the requirement from the defendant of a promise to take care of the plaintiff, or that she should have any rights whatever in the disposition of the lands so conveyed, in that (w) defendant led plaintiff to believe that she was to execute to him a paper giving him the management of her place and affairs, and not an absolute conveyance of her lands, and (x) that she was also to execute a deed which she had directed to be prepared, conveying *413 to her niece, defendant’s sister, Mrs. Seay, a tract of land that she had determined to convey to her, and (y) in presenting to her and getting her to execute a deed conveying the lands to him as aforesaid, instead of the paper which she had assented to execute, (z) the plaintiff relying upon Mr. Adams to have the paper prepared in accordance with her wishes, and having full confidence in him, executing the same at his request and without reading.”

The numerals and letters have been supplied.

The first, second and third noncontentions are admissions y the plaintiffs, and against them, that the defendant did not make to Mrs. Huguenin false statements as to the contents of the deed when the deed was executed; that Mrs. Huguenin did not .then rely on any such then supposed false statements; that Julius did not coerce or argue Mrs. Huguenin into making the deed.

The contention is (a, w, x, y, z) that Julius had aforetime prepared the way by guile to secure an apparently willing execution of the deed that was made.

So that the specific inquiry is, What deception did Julius exercise before the deed was made ?

Mrs. Huguenin’s testimony is very short. She did not testify to a word or to an act of Julius which was calculated to deceive her, nor did she testify that he did deceive her. She did testify that she did not intend to convey the 1,541 acres. She further testified that she signed a paper, but did not know what it was, for she did not read it. She never testified to what she thought were the contents of the paper which she did sign. The appellant’s printed brief charges that Mrs. Huguenin “thought she was’giving him a paper authorizing him to manage and control her property.” But there is no foundation in the testimony for that statement. There is a declaration to that effect by Mrs. Huguenin made at the house of Dr. Adams.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 918, 110 S.C. 407, 1918 S.C. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huguenin-v-adams-sc-1918.