Jackson v. Gage

10 Mass. App. Div. 103

This text of 10 Mass. App. Div. 103 (Jackson v. Gage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Gage, 10 Mass. App. Div. 103 (Mass. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

This is an action of contract brought by the plaintiff against the defendant wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover $500.00 and interest thereon in accordance with the terms of a promissory note dated April 1, 1929, payable one year after date on which is given credit for payment of interest in the sum of $30.00 in 1931, and $11.00 payment on account of interest on October 20, 1942. The defense was general denial, payment, denial of signature, and Statute of Limitations; also that the defendant was an insane person and mentally incapacitated from transacting business, and was totally irresponsible for any business transaction both at the time the note was given and at the time payments were made thereon; payments were made by the defendant; the note was not a witnessed document.

It appeared from the evidence, and the court so found, that on May 27, 1930, which was subsequently to the date of the note and subsequently to the date of the first payment made of interest on said note, the defendant was adjudged insane, and the Probate Court for the County of [104]*104Essex appointed her daughter, Pearl M. Strong, her guardian, which appointment had been in effect since that date, to wit: May 27,1930, and subsequently to October 20,1942, and was in effect on October 20, 1942, when payment of $11.00 on account of said interest was. paid by the defendant to the plaintiff; that the plaintiff knew when she. received the payment of $11.00 that the defendant had been and was under guardianship as an insane person.

The evidence established the giving of the note by the defendant to the plaintiff for the sum of $500.00 and the payments made on account of the interest by the defendant to the plaintiff at the times alleged. If the plaintiff was mentally incapacitated as an insane person, then the- payment of the $11.00 on account was not binding as upon the defendant to prevent her taking advantage of the Statute of Limitations.

The plaintiff' filed in due season the. following Requests for Rulings of Law, all of which Requests the Court denied :

1. “The burden of proving that the defendant, at the time she executed the note set forth in the declaration, was an insane, person mentally incapacitated from transacting business and was totally irresponsible for any business transacted by her on ‘said date’ is on the defendant. 2. The fact that the defendant was adjudged insane and a .guardian appointed over her in May 1930 by the Probate Court, is not conclusive of the fact that the defendant was wholly incapacitated or totally irresponsible at that time or thereafter. 3. The appointment of a guardian over the defendant on the ground that defendant was an insane person, made May 1930 by Probate Court is only a presumption that she was on that date mentally incapacitated from transacting any business. 4. . As a matter of law a person adjudged insane by Probate Court and a guardian appointed over her, does not preclude the fact that she may be lucid enough about some of her affairs as to legally transact business therein. 5. A payment by the defendant, on the note set forth in the [105]*105declaration made after she was adjudged insane is not the making of a contract by an insane person and therefore void. 6. The making of a payment on the note of the defendant by the plaintiff by the defendant before the statute of limitations had run is merely waiving the statute and not the making of a new contract. 7. The making of a payment on the note of the defendant to the plaintiff by the defendant after the statute of limitations had run is not the making of a new contract but is merely waiving the statute. 8. Any promise made by the guardian of an insane person, to pay the debt of the ward contracted before the guardian’s appointment is not a promise to pay the debt of a third person and need not be in writing. 9. By virtue of the guardian’s position, in this case, her right to manage wholly the affairs of the ward, to bring actions, defend actions, pay bills, contract bills etc. she the guardian is not an agent ‘en pais’ to act in concurrence with the ward, the principal, but her agency controls and supersedes that of her principal or ward. 10. By virtue of the controlling power of the. guardian, in this case, over the assets of her ward has authority to settle, adjust and pay her debts or resist payment and defend suits, her acknowledgement and promise to pay the note of the ward is binding upon the ward. 11. The acknowledgement of and the promise by the guardian to pay the.note of her ward, made within six years is sufficient to take the case out of the statute of limitations, not only as her personal obligation, but acts as continuing the existing promise in force against the estate or party originally liable on the note in this case. 12. A payment on the note of the defendant by the defendant on October 20, 1942, by and with the consent of the guardian is sufficient to waive the statute of limitations on the note. 13. A payment on the note of the defendant by the defendant October 20, 1942 acquiesced and ratified by the guardian of the defendant is sufficient to waive the statute of limitations on the note. 14. Knowledge in the guardian of the defendant that the defendant made a payment on the defendant’s note on October 20, 1942 without the guardian afterward objecting and protesting the payment is an acquiescence and ratification of the payment by the ward and is a sufficient waiver of the [106]*106statute of limitations on the note. 15. Delivery of the sum of five hundred dollars to the defendant at her request as a loan, is an obligation of the defendant or the defendant’s estate and whether the defendant was or was not at the time legally or mentally able to enter into a contract to repay the same, the plaintiff is entitled to recover on a count for money had and received. 16. If the plaintiff enriched the defendant’s estate, by giving to the defendant at her request the snm of five hundred dollars, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the said sum with interest thereon minus credit payments thereon whether the defendant was mentally capable of promising to repay the same or not, at the time.
ADDITIONAL REQUESTS.
1. A payment by the defendant on a money obligation barred by the statute of limitations, even though the Probate records show insanity of the defendant is a sufficient payment to take the action out of the statute of limitations, if the defendant has shown by her conversation and actions at the time of making the payment, that she knows and understands that she is making a payment on the obligation. 2. A patient of an insane institution, released therefrom and not returned thereto at the expiration of twelve months from date of .such release is deemed to have been discharged therefrom. 3. A discharge from an insane institution is prima facie evidence and creates, a presumption of sanity. 4. The telephoning by the defendant to the plaintiff that she has some money for her and thereupon pays the plaintiff eleven dollars on the note, stating that it is not much but is something on account warrants a finding by the Court that the defendant had a capacity and mental faculty of understanding that she was making a payment on her note to the plaintiff and such a payment is a waiver of the statute of limitations. 5.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Leggate v. Clark
111 Mass. 308 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1873)
Willwerth v. Leonard
31 N.E. 299 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Mass. App. Div. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gage-massdistctapp-1945.