Johnston v. McCray

1927 OK 70, 254 P. 979, 122 Okla. 301, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 22, 1927
Docket16610
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1927 OK 70 (Johnston v. McCray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. McCray, 1927 OK 70, 254 P. 979, 122 Okla. 301, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 196 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

BRANSON, C. J.

Error is presented herein from th'e district court of Noble county. The plaintiffs in error were the plaintiffs. The defendant prevailed in the trial court, and the plaintiffs appeal. The plaintiffs are the administrator and five of the surviving children of Arthur McCray, deceased. The administrator and the said surviving children sued Lizzie C. McCray, the surviving widow. The cause was pleaded in equity. The relief sought was a judgment vacating, setting aside, and holding for naught a certain instrument which is referred to as a “contract of separation,” and that the title to the property which said instrument on its face purported to convey to the defendant be quieted in the plaintiffs.

The said so-called “contract of separation” bore date of June 4, 1&23. It was signed by Arthur McCray, and acknowledged by him before a notary public on said date. While so designated, the heart of the said instrument is in fact a conveyance of real estate as well as personal property; for that it recites, among its numerous other provisions: “That he (Arthur McCray) does hereby and by these presents give, grant, sell anil convey unto the said Lizzi'e C. McCray, * * *” — followed by a description of certain real estate alleged in the petition and shown by the evidence to be of considerable value, and also th’e household furniture, excepting only a piano, which the said instrument purported to convey to one Thelma Eerguson, daughter of the defendant and step-daughter of the said Arthur McCray.

The petition charges, as ground for the relief sought, that th'e said decedent was an aged man, and that he had married defendant some 12 years prior to his death, she •being a young woman. That the said decedent was possessed of considerable r'eal property, by far the most valuable of which was that described in the said contract so executed as aforesaid; that for a long time prior to the date of the execution of said contract the said decedent had been in a failing condition, both as to body and mind, and for more than 18 months prior to the execution of the said instrument he hád been confined to his b’ed, or, as his condition is ■referred to in the record, “bed-ridden,” suffering bodily infirmity, caused by an aggravated cancerous condition,. That during said time, and particularly for a considerable period of time prior to the 'execution of said instrument, strong drugs had been administered to him, under direction of his physi-' cian, in order to alleviate the pain his condition caused'. That during said time his mind had become so enfe'ebled that he was easily susceptible to influence, and that this mental condition was not only well known to the defendant, but she had designedly sought to take advantage of his said condition in ord'er to secure the instrument here sought to be vacated, and that eventually she did secure the execution of the same on the date aforesaid. It was executed Monday, and on the following Friday she left and separated entirely from the said decedent, taking with her the household furniture, with th'e exception of the bed on which the said Arthur McCray had been lying for months, and on the following Monday the said Arthur McCray departed this life.

Plaintiffs allege and charge, further, that by reason of this condition of the decedent, the procurement by th'e defendant of the said instrument was fraudulent as a matter of law, and should not be allowed to remain as a muniment of title on its face purporting to convey .the property therein described to th'e defendant, but that equity should decree same without legal force and' effect, and the title adjudged to be as - if the said instrument had never be'en executed.

We deem it unnecessary to detail herein the evidence adduced on the trial in support of the allegations made in the petition, summarized as above set out. We do perceive, however, that a synopsis thereof should' be given. The details and the reasonable infer'ence to be drawn therefrom could serve no useful purpose to the survivors, related either by blood or by affinity to the decedent. Both they and their counsel are familiar therewith.

Many witnesses were introduced on behalf of the plaintiffs. They were relatives, neighbors, friendsi, and acquaintances-, as well as the decedent’s physician. Their cum-ulated evidence is to this effect: That the said Arthur McCray was a man of advanced years; that the plaintiffs, other than the administrator, were his childx’en of a former marriage; that th’e defendant was a young woman; that the decedent was possessed of considerable land and other property at the time of his marriage to the defendant, and that the defendant was possessed of no prop *303 erty at time oí marriage. That for many months prior to the date of the contract, the defendant had repeatedly made the statement that the decedent was losing his mind. That the decedent had on several occasions indicated his intention of committing, suicide, and on more than one occasion had secured poison, apparently with the intention of tak.ng his own life; that thos'e well acquainted with him had observed a marked change in his mental condition, his attitude, actions, and conduct, from which they expressed the opinion that he was not competent mentally to understand the nature and effect of the instrument so executed. The physician who attended him testified that it had been n'ecossary to administer to him drugs, which materially affected his nervous system, depressed his mental condition; one of which drugs was morphine. That the decedent was not only suffering from an aggravated canee rous condition, but from uric acid poisoning and toxemia which at times rendered him delirious. It was further shown that lawyers on different occas ons had been sought by the defendant to come to the place and assist h’er in having this alleged contract executed, which was finally done.on thé date above set forth. The county treasurer of the county, who had been a resident near the decedent since 1893, testified that the defendant told him shortly before the execution of the said contract, in effect, that if she should call him, she wanted him (the witness) to hurry over, because McCray was going crazy, and that the witness replied that he d d not be'ieve that the decedent wou'd be violent. That some six weeks before McCray’s death, witness on one visit found him in a stupor, and that from the condition which he observed he did not think that the decedent was competent. Some 18 witnesses testified in substance and in effect as abbreviated above.

On the other hand, there was some evidence adduced from witnesses that, although he had been bed-ridden, and in the condition as plaintiff’s witnesses testified, for 18 months, he was mentally capable of knowing the natu 'e and effect of the document •executed Among them was one Mrs. Foster, who was a particular friend of the defendant. Sh'e testified that she saw the deceased on Friday before his death on Monday. which was the day on which the defendant separated herself entirely from him, and that although he was on that date unable to speak to her. and that she was the last person to bid him good-bye. the defendant and her daughter The’ma having already told him good-bye, she admitted that the deceased was crying when the defendant \l.eft him on the said date, three days before his death.

The trial court instructed the jury, concluding as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 70, 254 P. 979, 122 Okla. 301, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-mccray-okla-1927.