Karber v. Goldstrohm Et Ux.

157 A. 612, 305 Pa. 470, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1931
DocketAppeal, 192
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 A. 612 (Karber v. Goldstrohm Et Ux.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Karber v. Goldstrohm Et Ux., 157 A. 612, 305 Pa. 470, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 386 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

Plaintiff filed a bill in equity against the defendants, who are his only daughter and her husband, seeking to have reconveyed to him two properties which he had deeded to her. He alleged, inter alia, that the conveyance was obtained as the result of undue influence exercised over him by the defendants. This they denied, and asserted that it was made “in consideration of the home and care that he was to receive from them, as well as his natural love and affection” for his daughter. As testified to by defendants’ witnesses at the trial, the “home and care” which plaintiff was to have, were to last as long as he desired them. After a painstaking review of the evidence and of the law applicable thereto, the trial judge sustained plaintiff’s contention and reported a decree for a reconveyance and an accounting. Defendants’ exceptions were overruled by the court in banc, the decree reported was entered and from it this appeal was taken. As the decree necessarily followed the facts found, which were, as we view the evidence, supported by the weight thereof, ive might, for this reason alone, dismiss the appeal, especially as the trial judge, who saw and heard the witnesses, was better able than we are to determine what weight should be given to their testimony: Phillips’s Est., 295 Pa. 349; Werner v. Hillman Coal & Coke Co., 300 Pa. 256. Respect for the earnest argument of defendants’ counsel impels us, however, to consider the matter more at length, though necessarily somewhat briefly.

On or about April 20, 1929, plaintiff went to live with defendants. At that time he was 87 years old, and owned the real estate in dispute (which was worth $12,000 *473 and rented for $85 a month), had a bank account of about $2,000, and was insured in a relief association. About two years before that time, he had had a stroke of paralysis, as the result of an advanced case of arteriosclerosis, which was incurable and of a progressive nature; after that he frequently had what the witnesses called “spells,” during which he was childish and did not know what he was doing; and a year after the first stroke he had another, but a less severe one. His eyesight and hearing were much affected, he was subject to crying spells without apparent cause, and was readily susceptible to the influence of those surrounding him. Before he came to live with defendants he had resided with one of his sons, in whose favor he had made a will, but whether this was before or after he had had the first paralytic stroke does not appear.

When plaintiff arrived at defendants’ home, his daughter refused even to see him, but he stayed in the house until his son-in-laAV returned. At that time, according to the latter, plaintiff “came tottering in through the kitchen and he said, ‘Oh, I am here now. I was put out and was poisoned down there, and I ain’t got no home up there any more, and I want to stay with you.’ ” There is no evidence justifying his alleged statement as to his treatment at his son’s house, and we are convinced that, if he said it, it was not true. Indeed, one of defendants’ Avitnesses said plaintiff “told me it was like heaven......at his son’s home.” After talking over the matter together, in the absence of plaintiff, defendants agreed to take him into their home, and for awhile treated him kindly. Shortly thereafter, however, they learned of the will he had made in favor of his son, and at once their conduct changed. The son-in-law says he then said to plaintiff: “ ‘We made a resolution last night that I don’t think we are going to keep you any longer. Now we ain’t going to put you out. You look around. You’ve got lots of money, you’ve got property, you can go to a hotel or so. We’ll give *474 you lots of time to find a good home.’ He says ‘Why?’. I says, ‘Why, because Fred [the son] told me that Kate [the daughter] wasn’t to have anything in your will, and for her to tie herself down in her old days and have nothing from the will, you should go some place and spend your money.’ ” This had a great effect on plaintiff, due to his mental and physical condition, and about an hour later, “with tears running down his cheeks,” he said, according to the son-in-law: “Now, I tell you what I do. You get Preacher Green over and I make a new will, and I kill that will.” Following this the son-in-law says: “I just smiled and said, ‘Oh, grand-pap, I think you are too old to make a will.’ ” If that statement was true, then plaintiff was too old to make a deed for the property, since it requires less mentality for a person to know and understand what he is doing when making a will, than it does when transacting ordinary business: Novicki v. O’Mara, 280 Pa. 411; Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. Heidenreich, 290 Pa. 249. The same rule applies, of course, to the conveyance of a property. Plaintiff then said, still according to the son-in-law: “I am too old to make a will? I ain’t too old to sell. I own that property, and nobody is my boss. I can sell it,” and then said he would sell it to his daughter for “nothing at all.”

Apparently this is exactly what the son-in-law hoped and desired, for he had already been to the office of the recorder of deeds, without the knowledge of plaintiff, and had copied from the records thereof all the data necessary for the drawing of such a deed. This data he took to a lawyer of his own selection and had the deed drawn. When the son-in-law received it from the lawyer, he says he handed it to plaintiff, who was a German and could hardly read English at all, but who nevertheless, he says, read it down to the place where the size of the lot was stated, and then remarked it was “just like the old one,” to which the son-in-law *475 assented, and was told to get a notary public so that plaintiff could execute it at once.

When the notary came, he insisted on another witness being present, and the son-in-law selected one upon whose property he, the son-in-law, had an overdue mortgage, which he had agreed not to call in. Plaintiff was not present while these preliminaries were being arranged, so the son-in-law went upstairs to plaintiff’s room, “motioned my finger” to plaintiff, without telling him for what purpose he was wanted, and he at once obediently followed the son-in-law down stairs. The latter — not the plaintiff — then said to those present that plaintiff “was going to give this property over to his [the son-in-law’s] wife.”

Defendants’ witnesses disagree as to whether or not plaintiff attempted to read the deed after he came down stairs, but the weight of their opinion is that it was read aloud in his presence. Admittedly, during the half hour or so the parties were there, there was no “conversation loud enough that [plaintiff] could have heard it,” and “he did not say anything or answer any questions or engage in any conversation.” When it came to signing the deed he was told to and did practice writing his name on other pieces of paper, then signed the deed where he was told to sign it, and immediately returned to his own room. Plaintiff says that he was sick when the son-in-law took him downstairs, that the sickness affected his eyes so that he could not read anything, and that with the aid of some one, who steadied his hand, he simply signed a paper where he was told to sign it, without being advised that it was a deed and without knowing that it was.

The consideration of $1 named in the deed was not paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 A. 612, 305 Pa. 470, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/karber-v-goldstrohm-et-ux-pa-1931.